In suburban communities like River Grove, it’s common for patients to cycle through:
- urgent care visits for worsening symptoms
- primary care follow-ups that get delayed by scheduling or referrals
- imaging or lab work done at one facility, with results communicated later
- handoffs between clinicians who don’t always see the same documentation
When those handoffs break down—or when an abnormal result isn’t acted on quickly enough—it can create a “gap” where your condition progresses. That gap is often the heart of a diagnostic delay case.
If you’re dealing with this now, you’re likely asking the same practical questions River Grove residents ask every day:
- “How long is long enough to follow up?”
- “Was this missed symptom something they should’ve recognized?”
- “What did they know at the time, and what did they do with it?”
A lawyer can help answer those questions using your actual records, not assumptions.


