Many delayed diagnosis situations don’t come from a single dramatic mistake. They often show up as practical breakdowns that are common in real-world care:
- Abnormal results not acted on quickly enough (lab work, imaging reports, follow-up orders)
- Discharge instructions that weren’t followed due to confusion or timing
- Referral delays—when you’re told to see a specialist, but the next appointment takes weeks
- Symptoms that were treated as “something else” first, even after return visits
- Care split across urgent care, primary care, and emergency settings, creating gaps in the record
In Perry—and throughout Middle Georgia—patients frequently move between providers and facilities. That’s when missed communications can have outsized effects. If critical information wasn’t reviewed, escalated, or communicated properly, it may be possible to seek accountability.


