Delayed diagnosis often isn’t caused by one obvious mistake. More commonly, it’s a chain of events—something like:
- You visit urgent care after symptoms begin, but the results aren’t communicated clearly or don’t trigger timely follow-up.
- A lab or imaging report returns, yet the follow-up plan is vague (“call if no improvement”), even though red flags were present.
- You return because symptoms persist or worsen, and the clinician continues the same working diagnosis without escalating testing.
- A specialist appointment is delayed due to scheduling, and a primary provider doesn’t ensure the abnormal findings are acted on.
In a suburban area like Deltona, gaps in continuity are common: patients bounce between facilities, primary care offices, and imaging centers. Those handoffs matter legally because the case often depends on who had what information, on what date, and what they did with it.


