In Highland, people often manage healthcare through a mix of primary care, urgent care, and specialist follow-ups. That creates real-world risk: information can move slowly between offices, imaging centers, and hospitals, and abnormal findings can sit in the system while life keeps moving.
Many delayed-diagnosis cases start the same way:
- You were told to “monitor” symptoms.
- Lab or imaging results were discussed, but follow-up didn’t happen when it should have.
- You returned with worsening symptoms and felt like the earlier information wasn’t fully used.
- The diagnosis arrived later—after complications, progression, or additional procedures.
If any of that sounds familiar, it’s worth getting legal guidance early. The sooner records are gathered and organized, the better your attorney can evaluate what was known at each step—and what a reasonable clinician would have done next.


