In Morris, many residents rely on a mix of urgent care visits, primary care appointments, and specialist referrals. The problem is that diagnostic delays often don’t come from one obvious mistake. More often, they come from handoff failures:
- A clinician notes a concerning symptom but doesn’t trigger the next step.
- Lab or imaging results are documented without a clear plan for communication.
- A referral is placed, but the follow-up doesn’t happen on the timeline your condition required.
- Worsening symptoms are treated as “expected” instead of prompting reassessment.
If you’ve been stuck wondering whether a “wait and see” approach cost you critical time, the legal question usually turns on whether the provider acted like a reasonably careful clinician would have under similar circumstances.


