In smaller communities and regional care settings, diagnostic delays often happen through a chain of events: a first visit, an imaging or lab order, a follow-up that gets rescheduled, a result that isn’t acted on quickly, or a referral that takes longer than it should.
For Mexico-area patients, these delays can be compounded by real-life factors:
- Longer travel for specialists and follow-up care
- Scheduling gaps after urgent symptoms
- Multiple facilities involved in the same episode of care
- Communication breakdowns between departments (and sometimes between systems)
A lawyer’s job is to turn that chaos into a clear, evidence-based timeline—because in delayed diagnosis cases, timing is often the difference between “unfortunate outcome” and “avoidable harm.”


