Kenner patients often move between settings: a quick urgent-care visit after work, an imaging appointment scheduled days later, and then follow-up with a specialist. That “handoff” pattern can matter legally.
In real life, a delay may come from:
- a symptom that should have triggered urgent escalation
- abnormal test results that weren’t acted on promptly
- referral instructions that weren’t followed through (or weren’t communicated clearly)
- incomplete information transfer between facilities
When your condition worsens during that gap, the key questions become: what information the provider had at the time, and what a reasonable clinician would have done next.


