In and around Lynn Haven, delays often show up in patterns tied to real-world schedules and care pathways:
- After-hours ER or urgent care visits where symptoms improve briefly—or seem “less urgent”—but serious conditions continue developing.
- Referral handoffs where imaging or lab results are available, yet follow-up appointments, specialty scheduling, or communication lag.
- Work and school constraints that make it hard to return quickly, leading to gaps between abnormal test results and the next step.
- Coordinating care across multiple providers (primary care, urgent care, specialists, hospitals), where key details can be buried in separate records.
A delayed diagnosis case isn’t about proving someone was wrong. It’s about identifying whether the care provided fell short of what a reasonably careful clinician would have done under the circumstances—and whether that gap contributed to harm.


