In and around Justice, many cases begin the same way: a patient tries to get answers quickly—often during evenings, weekends, or after a long commute—then waits for test results, referrals, or follow-up that doesn’t happen when it should.
Diagnostic delays frequently occur when:
- ER triage moves too fast and the patient isn’t re-assessed as symptoms evolve.
- Urgent care treats the “first impression,” but follow-up imaging, lab interpretation, or specialist referral is delayed or unclear.
- Abnormal test results aren’t acted on promptly, or instructions are vague and not documented clearly.
- Multiple visits occur (sometimes across different facilities), but key findings aren’t properly connected into a single clinical picture.
- Work and family obligations affect follow-through, and the system relies on the patient to chase results rather than ensure timely communication.
These are not “gotcha” moments. They’re the kinds of breakdowns that can determine whether a condition was caught early enough to reduce severity, complications, or long-term impact.


