Sandy Springs is a suburban hub with high patient volume, multiple referral patterns, and a lot of people cycling through primary care, urgent care, imaging centers, and specialists. That structure can create real-world risk points in diagnostic delay claims, such as:
- Abnormal results not reaching the right person (or not reaching you promptly), especially when you see more than one provider.
- Imaging or lab findings that get documented but not acted on—for example, a radiology report recommending follow-up that never becomes a scheduled visit.
- Care interruptions due to scheduling—when “we’ll recheck” turns into weeks or months because follow-up is hard to coordinate.
- Miscommunication during transitions between urgent care, emergency departments, and outpatient clinics.
These aren’t “gotchas.” They’re common ways delay can occur—particularly when people are trying to manage health while juggling work, family, and transportation.


