In Lauderhill, people often receive care across multiple settings—primary care, urgent care, imaging centers, hospital departments, and specialist follow-ups. That’s where diagnostic delays can quietly happen:
- A lab result flagged as abnormal but not acted on promptly
- Imaging that indicates a concern, but follow-up is delayed or unclear
- Referral orders that exist on paper, yet the patient never gets timely next steps
- A patient reappears with worsening symptoms, but the workup doesn’t expand appropriately
In real cases, the key issue isn’t simply that the outcome was bad. The issue is whether the diagnostic process met the reasonable standard of care at the time, given the symptoms and information available.


