In Mission, Kansas, delayed diagnosis problems often show up through patterns like:
- Follow-up got lost in the shuffle after imaging or lab work—especially when families are coordinating multiple doctors and schools/activities.
- Abnormal results weren’t acted on quickly enough, or the “next steps” were unclear, causing a late return appointment.
- Symptoms were treated as routine (or attributed to something less serious) while they continued to escalate.
- Care was fragmented between urgent care, primary care, and specialists—creating handoff gaps where key information didn’t land at the right time.
These cases are highly record-dependent. Small documentation gaps—date stamps, wording in discharge instructions, referral notes, or whether results were actually reviewed—can become central to the legal analysis.


