While every case is different, delayed diagnosis claims often trace back to predictable breakdowns in real-world care—especially when patients are seen across multiple settings.
In and around Seven Hills, residents frequently experience care that may involve:
- Urgent care or ER triage during busy days, holidays, or peak hours, followed by incomplete follow-through.
- Primary care handoffs where symptoms persist, but follow-up labs, imaging, or specialist referrals don’t get coordinated in time.
- Communication gaps—for example, abnormal results that appear in a portal but don’t trigger a documented callback, or discharge instructions that aren’t clear about what should happen next.
- “Schedule drift”—when an appointment is booked “soon,” but the next step (recheck, escalation, additional testing) happens later than it should have given your symptoms.
When these problems occur, the legal question is not whether the outcome was bad—it’s whether the care team’s actions (or inaction) fell below what a reasonably careful provider would do under similar circumstances.


