Diagnostic delay often starts with a familiar experience: you report symptoms, you get reassurance, and then the real diagnosis arrives later—after the condition has progressed.
In Leesburg, these situations can show up in real life when people:
- Visit urgent care or a walk-in clinic and are told to monitor symptoms
- Receive imaging or lab results but don’t get clear follow-up instructions
- Are referred to a specialist, but the referral doesn’t move quickly enough
- Return for repeat visits, yet the workup doesn’t expand when symptoms persist or worsen
A lawyer’s job isn’t to “argue you feel worse.” It’s to evaluate whether the care team met the standard of care for the information they had at the time—and whether the delay contributed to the harm you experienced.


