In Westchester County, medical care often moves quickly on paper but can stall in real life due to handoffs between providers, scheduling constraints, and communication gaps. Diagnostic delays may look like:
- Abnormal test results not acted on promptly (labs or imaging reported, but follow-up is delayed or unclear)
- Symptoms that persist after an initial visit—especially when you’re told it’s “likely” something temporary, then reassessment doesn’t happen quickly enough
- Referral and follow-up breakdowns—the plan exists, but appointments are pushed, records aren’t transmitted, or instructions are incomplete
- Emergency or urgent care discharge with insufficient safety-netting—you’re sent home, but the chart doesn’t reflect adequate instructions to return or escalate if symptoms worsen
- Multiple facilities involved—a primary care visit, an outpatient scan, then a specialist later, with gaps in who had what information and when
Because these scenarios depend on timing and documentation, early record organization matters.


