In our experience with Ohio medical-injury matters, diagnostic delay often follows predictable patterns—especially when people are juggling time and transportation.
Common Oregon-area scenarios include:
- Work- and commute-driven “wait-and-see” decisions: symptoms were documented, but follow-up testing or escalation wasn’t timely, even as symptoms persisted.
- Follow-up gaps after imaging or lab work: abnormal findings were recorded, but the patient didn’t receive clear instructions—or the instructions weren’t followed up as the results required.
- Escalation missed after repeat visits: you reappeared because the problem didn’t improve, yet the workup stayed too narrow for the full picture.
- Care transitions that break the chain: referrals, outside records, or handoffs between urgent care, primary care, specialists, or hospital systems weren’t coordinated quickly enough.
These situations aren’t about hindsight. The key question is whether the provider’s decisions were reasonable based on what they knew at the time.


