In Norridge, many diagnostic delay problems follow predictable real-life patterns:
- Urgent care or ER discharge with next steps that weren’t followed soon enough (or were unclear), followed by worsening symptoms.
- Abnormal imaging or lab results that were filed, communicated late, or not tied to the right clinical urgency.
- Persistent symptoms after multiple visits—for example, a condition that should have triggered further workup, specialist referral, or additional testing.
- Hand-offs between providers (primary care, urgent care, specialists) where key information didn’t transfer cleanly.
Even when everyone involved was trying to help, the legal question is whether the diagnostic process was reasonable given the information available at the time.


