While every case is different, Englewood patients often experience diagnostic gaps that follow predictable real-world patterns:
- Multiple handoffs between providers: A common scenario is starting with a primary care visit, then switching to urgent care or a specialist, with information arriving late or incomplete.
- Busy imaging and follow-up bottlenecks: Imaging may be ordered quickly, but abnormal results can sit until a follow-up appointment—sometimes longer than the clinical situation required.
- Symptoms that don’t fit the first impression: In outpatient settings, persistent complaints (pain, weakness, abnormal bleeding, worsening shortness of breath, neurological symptoms) may be treated as “expected” without escalating the workup when red flags continue.
- Administrative friction: In a dense, commuter-heavy area, delays can also be paperwork-driven—missing reports, unclear referral instructions, or failure to document that a patient was told what the results meant.
If any of these sound familiar, it doesn’t automatically mean malpractice—but it does mean you likely need a careful record review to understand what was known, when, and what should have happened next.


