In our area, delayed diagnosis issues often surface after patterns like these:
- Multiple handoffs between primary care, urgent care, and specialists—especially when test results arrive after you’ve already left the appointment.
- Imaging or lab results that are noted but not acted on quickly—sometimes because follow-up is scheduled later, communicated unclearly, or gets lost in portal notifications.
- Work- and school-driven symptom gaps—people may delay returning for re-checks due to commuting, job schedules, or campus commitments, while the medical record still needs to show how symptoms progressed.
- Construction and industrial workforce injuries where symptoms may be mistaken for musculoskeletal issues at first—until the condition declares itself.
You don’t have to prove “they were careless” to start. You need a credible record-based story of what was known, what was done, what should reasonably have been done next, and how the delay affected your outcome.


