Delayed diagnosis cases often don’t start with a single dramatic mistake. They commonly develop through a chain of “almosts,” especially in high-traffic healthcare settings where patients are moved between providers, urgent care, imaging centers, and follow-up appointments.
In the Highland area, residents frequently experience diagnostic delays in scenarios like:
- Abnormal test results not reaching the right person quickly (or not being clearly communicated)
- Imaging done, but the next-step plan doesn’t happen—or happens weeks later
- Persistent symptoms treated as “typical” while a more serious condition is still forming
- Follow-up appointments delayed due to scheduling gaps, referral backlogs, or incomplete records transfer
- Work or commute constraints that lead patients to reschedule visits—creating a timeline defense that insurers sometimes use
A lawyer’s job is to build the timeline accurately: what was known at each visit, what should have been ordered or escalated, and how the delay affected your outcome.


