In many Union-area cases, care doesn’t happen in a single place. You might receive initial evaluation at a local clinic, then be referred to a specialist, then undergo imaging or lab work, and later return because symptoms persist. The legal question often turns on what each provider knew, when they knew it, and what follow-up should have occurred.
Common Union-area patterns include:
- Abnormal test results not communicated clearly (or not communicated at all)
- Imaging reports filed without an effective plan for review or next steps
- Urgent care or ER visits where symptoms were treated, but the underlying cause wasn’t pursued
- Progressive symptoms that continued after discharge instructions, but the follow-up didn’t happen in time
Because Missouri claims depend heavily on documentation and timing, the strongest cases are often built from a clean chronology—starting with the first visit where red flags appeared and ending with the eventual diagnosis.


