In Akron, diagnostic delay claims commonly begin with the same pattern: people enter the system through one setting, then get bounced between departments, facilities, or follow-up channels.
For example:
- Busy urgent care and ER triage: symptoms may be documented, but follow-up instructions or re-evaluation plans aren’t executed quickly enough.
- Referral handoffs: a specialist may receive the referral, but the patient doesn’t get clear direction on when and how abnormal results must be reviewed.
- Imaging/lab follow-through: results can sit in the chart without the right action, especially when a patient is juggling work schedules, transportation, or multiple appointments.
- Complex care timelines: conditions with evolving symptoms can appear “unclear” at first—until the delay allows progression that later requires more intensive treatment.
Your case gets stronger when the timeline is organized: what was known, what was ordered, what was communicated, and what should have happened next.


