In a community like Bowling Green, many diagnostic delays start the same way:
- You visit urgent care or the ER with symptoms that are easy to mistake early on.
- You receive an initial impression, a plan for outpatient follow-up, or discharge instructions.
- Tests come back later—imaging reads, lab results, or consult notes—but follow-up doesn’t happen the way it should.
- The condition progresses, sometimes rapidly, before the correct diagnosis is reached.
Ohio law doesn’t treat every bad outcome as malpractice. But when the timeline shows that clinicians missed meaningful red flags—or failed to communicate or act on abnormal results—there may be a basis to evaluate a delayed diagnosis claim.


