Columbus patients often receive care through multiple settings: primary care offices, urgent care, hospital emergency departments, imaging centers, and specialist follow-ups. Diagnostic delay problems frequently occur at the “handoff” points—where information gets lost, delayed, or misread.
Common local scenarios include:
- Abnormal lab or imaging results not escalated after an ER/urgent care visit (or escalated too late for your condition).
- Follow-up referrals given but not completed because instructions weren’t clear, timing wasn’t urgent enough, or the results weren’t communicated directly.
- Persistent symptoms after discharge where the record doesn’t show appropriate reassessment when you returned to care.
- Work and commute disruptions that affect whether you could attend prompt follow-up—sometimes the medical plan didn’t reflect realistic access.
If your medical record reads like a series of “almost” answers, that doesn’t automatically mean there was malpractice—but it does mean the timeline matters. A lawyer’s job is to pinpoint the decision points where the standard of care may have fallen short.


