In Massapequa Park, people often cycle through a predictable pattern: primary care visits, urgent care when symptoms flare, imaging ordered “next,” and specialist referrals that can take weeks. That timeline is workable when everything is communicated and acted on promptly—but it becomes dangerous when a result is buried in a chart, a follow-up appointment slips, or a provider assumes another office will handle the next step.
Common local scenarios we see in diagnostic delay cases include:
- Abnormal imaging or lab results that were documented but not escalated to the patient or not followed by timely action.
- Specialist referral delays where symptoms continued, but the original provider did not re-check, re-evaluate, or adjust the plan.
- Hand-offs between facilities (urgent care to primary care, imaging center to ordering clinician) where key findings didn’t translate into a clear clinical next step.
- Missed red flags during repeat visits—especially when a patient’s symptoms were “explained away” instead of reworked into a broader differential diagnosis.
If your care involved multiple offices and handoffs, that doesn’t automatically weaken a claim. It often means the case turns on exactly what each provider knew, when they knew it, and what a reasonable clinician would have done next.


