In and around New Franklin, it’s common for patients to move between settings—primary care, urgent care, imaging centers, and sometimes hospital emergency departments—before a diagnosis is made. Diagnostic delays frequently occur not because a clinician “ignored everything,” but because critical follow-up didn’t land the way it should.
Local patterns that can matter in real cases include:
- Abnormal test results not escalated fast enough (especially when multiple providers touch the record)
- Imaging findings that were communicated without clear next steps or urgency
- Referral delays—when appointments take weeks, but symptoms worsen sooner
- Missed re-checks after persistent complaints during return visits
When you’re trying to connect these dots, even a helpful “AI” summary can’t substitute for a lawyer’s evaluation of what should have happened next and what changed because it didn’t.


