In a suburban coastal community like Lighthouse Point, diagnostic problems often show up through patterns—especially when care is split between urgent care, primary care, emergency departments, and specialists.
Common situations include:
- Abnormal imaging with delayed follow-up. A report may show a concerning finding, but the patient doesn’t receive timely instructions—or the referral doesn’t get acted on quickly.
- Results “in the system” but not communicated. Lab work (blood tests, cultures, pathology, or other studies) may be marked abnormal without a clear, trackable plan for contacting the patient.
- Worsening symptoms during the wait. You may return with the same complaint while the provider reassesses slowly, even as your condition trends worse.
- Care transitions and information gaps. Records can be incomplete when moving from one clinic to another, or when a specialist appointment is delayed due to scheduling.
If you’re thinking, “I kept being told it would improve,” you’re not alone. The legal question is whether the medical team’s actions fell below what a reasonably careful clinician would have done given what they knew at the time, and whether the delay contributed to the harm.


