Many Knightdale residents don’t experience care in a single setting. You might start with a primary care visit, then move to urgent care, then be referred to imaging or a specialist—often with results that arrive after you’ve already returned home, gone back to work, or assumed “someone will call.”
In real life, delays frequently show up as:
- Abnormal imaging or lab results that aren’t clearly communicated or acted on promptly
- Follow-up gaps after a referral recommendation (especially when the next appointment slips)
- Persistent symptoms that continue through multiple visits without escalation to the right workup
- Care transitions—between providers, facilities, or health systems—where records don’t move quickly enough
Even if you understand that medicine can be complex, you still deserve a reasonable diagnostic process. The legal question is whether the care decisions in your case were within what a reasonably careful clinician would do under similar circumstances.


