In many Dayton cases, the issue isn’t that a provider “guessed wrong once.” It’s that the process broke at a specific point—often during busy stretches such as:
- After-hours ER visits where you were stabilized but not properly monitored or rechecked
- Outpatient imaging/lab workflows where results were available but follow-up didn’t happen
- Specialist handoffs delayed by scheduling backlogs or incomplete referral packets
- Abnormal findings that were noted but not escalated to the level your symptoms required
Your goal isn’t to prove you were unlucky. It’s to determine whether a reasonable clinician, given what was known at the time, would have acted differently—and whether that difference likely mattered.


