In a community like Binghamton, NY, medical care often involves a mix of emergency visits, urgent appointments, imaging referrals, and follow-up across different clinics. That “handoff” reality matters because diagnostic delay claims frequently turn on what was known at each step—what was ordered, what was communicated, and whether follow-up happened on time.
It’s common for residents to describe a timeline that feels frustratingly disconnected:
- symptoms started after work, school, or travel,
- a first visit didn’t lead to the right diagnosis,
- abnormal findings were mentioned later—or not acted on quickly,
- the condition worsened while appointments and paperwork kept stacking up.
When that happens, the goal is not to relive every painful moment. The goal is to build a defensible medical timeline that matches how care actually moved through the system.


