In the Quad Cities area, many patients receive care across multiple settings—primary care offices, urgent care, hospital emergency departments, and specialist follow-ups. That’s normal, but it can create gaps when the timeline of symptoms, test results, and follow-up isn’t handled consistently.
Common East Moline scenarios we see in delayed diagnosis claims include:
- Abnormal lab/imaging results that were documented but not acted on promptly (or not communicated clearly to the patient)
- Follow-up recommendations that were given, but the next step didn’t happen in time due to scheduling, handoff issues, or unclear instructions
- Persistent or escalating symptoms after an initial visit—especially when the patient returns because the problem is getting worse
- Cases involving industrial workforce stressors (fatigue, heavy lifting, injuries, and “it’s probably just work-related” assumptions) where symptoms may be dismissed too early
When you’re trying to keep up with daily life, it’s easy for details to blur. That’s why the early phase matters: records and chronology determine what can be proven.


