In and around Canton, it’s common for patients to receive care across multiple settings—an urgent-care visit one week, a specialist referral the next, and imaging or lab work that may be read days later.
The friction isn’t just medical. It’s practical:
- Scheduling gaps between appointments and follow-ups
- Paperwork handoffs (referral instructions, discharge summaries, imaging CDs/records)
- Communication delays about abnormal results
- Busier clinic workflows that can slow reassessment when symptoms persist
When a diagnosis arrives later than it should have, the evidence often lives in small details: the exact wording of visit notes, the presence (or absence) of follow-up instructions, and how quickly abnormal findings were reviewed and communicated.


