In practice, diagnostic delay cases often start the same way:
- You’re seen after symptoms begin—sometimes at urgent care, sometimes through a primary care office—then told to monitor, repeat testing later, or follow up with a specialist.
- Tests are performed (labs, X-rays, CT/MRI, ultrasounds), but a key abnormal result isn’t clearly communicated, documented, or escalated.
- A referral is suggested, yet follow-up doesn’t happen because instructions are vague, appointments slip, or records don’t transfer cleanly.
- Symptoms persist or worsen, and the diagnosis comes only after you push for answers—or after the condition advances.
On Long Island, it’s also common for medical records to be fragmented across multiple facilities, providers, and electronic systems. That fragmentation can matter legally: the timeline of what was known, when it was known, and what was done with it is often the difference between a strong and a weak case.


