Many delayed diagnosis problems aren’t a single “miss.” In real life, the failure often shows up after the visit—when results are released, when referrals are recommended, or when a patient is told to “watch for symptoms” without a reasonable plan.
In Lincoln, common patterns we see in injury claims include:
- Abnormal imaging/lab results posted to a portal without a timely call or documented follow-up.
- Referral delays after urgent care or primary care, where the next appointment doesn’t happen quickly enough.
- Multiple providers and handoffs (clinic → specialist → hospital) where key findings don’t travel with the patient.
- Construction-season and shift-work realities that affect how soon people can return for rechecks, increasing the importance of clear instructions.
When the timeline is messy, the legal question becomes: what did the medical team know at each decision point, and what should a reasonably careful provider have done next? That’s where local record organization and quick action matter.


