In Burnsville and the surrounding Twin Cities area, it’s common to move between care settings:
- Primary care visits with limited time to dig deeper
- Urgent care for symptoms that don’t immediately fit one diagnosis
- Imaging and lab orders that take time to return
- Specialty referrals that can be delayed by scheduling
Those handoffs can matter. A diagnostic delay case often turns on a specific “decision point,” such as whether abnormal results were acted on promptly, whether follow-up was arranged when symptoms persisted, or whether a provider re-evaluated a worsening clinical picture rather than treating it as routine.
If you’ve been told, “We missed it,” “It was unclear at the time,” or “It just happens,” that doesn’t automatically end the inquiry. What matters legally and medically is whether the care you received was reasonable under the circumstances—and whether that failure played a role in your later outcome.


