While every case is different, Johns Creek residents often find that delays come from predictable “pressure points” in healthcare workflows:
- Abnormal results not acted on quickly enough: Labs, imaging, or specialist recommendations may be generated, but follow-up doesn’t happen in time—or the patient isn’t clearly notified.
- Missed urgency during high-volume visits: In urgent care or primary care settings, short appointment windows can lead to incomplete symptom review, especially when patients are juggling multiple concerns.
- Care handoffs that don’t connect: It’s common for patients to move between urgent care, imaging centers, and specialists. If one facility doesn’t pass along key findings promptly, the delay may be system-wide rather than a single “bad decision.”
- Persistent symptoms that were treated as “routine”: If symptoms continue (or worsen) but the diagnostic plan doesn’t escalate—repeat testing, referrals, or reassessment may be delayed.
If you’re thinking, “I kept showing up and something still wasn’t caught,” that pattern matters. Lawyers focus on the timeline: what was known, what was documented, what was recommended, and when action should have occurred.


