Many cases begin like this: you went in for a problem that seemed manageable, you received labs or imaging, and you were told to watch symptoms or wait for results. Later, you learn something was misread, not acted on, or not communicated—and by the time you returned, the condition had progressed.
In Claremont and the surrounding region, it’s common for care to move across settings—primary care, urgent care, emergency departments, and specialist follow-ups. Diagnostic delay claims often turn on the handoff points:
- abnormal findings not clearly documented
- results not reaching the right provider
- referrals delayed or not completed
- “come back if worse” instructions that weren’t paired with adequate monitoring
When those steps fail, the timeline matters as much as the medical facts.


