Many Bexley residents don’t experience delayed diagnosis as a single dramatic moment. It often shows up through the way care moves between locations and providers—urgent care to primary care, imaging centers to specialists, or routine follow-ups that quietly drift.
Common scenarios include:
- Abnormal lab or imaging results not reviewed quickly (or not clearly communicated) before symptoms worsen.
- Follow-up orders that don’t get acted on—for example, referral timing slips or the next appointment isn’t scheduled as recommended.
- Persistent symptoms that get treated as “routine” even after a reasonable clinician would reassess.
- Reports that exist, but weren’t acted on—such as a clinician not escalating concern despite “red flag” findings.
Because suburban patients often coordinate care efficiently—sometimes with multiple providers in a short window—records may exist, but the “handoff” between steps can be where the problem occurs.


