In Hamilton, people commonly move between care settings—an urgent care visit after work, an ER evaluation during a busy week, follow-up testing ordered by a primary care provider, and then results that sometimes don’t get acted on quickly enough. When the diagnosis comes late, the story often doesn’t look like one clear mistake. It looks like a chain of handoffs.
You may remember symptoms persisting while you were told to “watch and wait,” or you may later learn that an abnormal test result was not communicated clearly. Sometimes it’s not that anyone ignored you—it’s that the system didn’t connect the dots in time.
An attorney focused on diagnostic delay can help you rebuild the timeline the way courts and insurers expect: what you reported, what clinicians documented, what tests were ordered (or not), what recommendations were made, and what happened next.


