Diagnostic delay cases often arise from real-world care patterns common across North Jersey:
- Short-staffed urgent care or after-hours visits where symptoms are treated as temporary, but follow-up doesn’t happen quickly enough.
- Imaging and lab workflows where results are “released” to the chart but not clearly communicated, or recommendations aren’t tracked.
- Specialist handoffs that take time—during which a condition may worsen because the next step wasn’t ordered or scheduled promptly.
- Multiple facilities involved (e.g., ER, imaging centers, outpatient clinics), creating gaps in how information gets transferred.
In New Jersey, these cases typically require careful documentation and timing. The goal isn’t to argue that the outcome was bad—it’s to show that the care team’s actions (or inaction) fell below what a reasonably careful provider would have done, and that the delay contributed to the harm.


