In a suburban community like Prairie Village, diagnostic problems often don’t come from one dramatic mistake. They come from patterns that are common in day-to-day care:
- Care fragmentation: You may see a primary care provider, then urgent care, then a specialist—sometimes with records arriving late or incomplete.
- Result follow-up bottlenecks: Lab or imaging findings may land in a portal or report system, but follow-up instructions can be unclear, delayed, or missed.
- “Return precautions” that don’t trigger re-evaluation: Providers may document that you should watch for worsening symptoms, but your case may require a documented reassessment step that didn’t happen.
- Time pressure during high-volume visits: Busy clinics and imaging centers can move quickly, and important red flags can be overlooked when symptoms are evolving.
When these issues occur, the legal question becomes practical: what was known at each point in time, and what should have been done to avoid avoidable harm.


