In a suburban community like Hermitage, patients often experience “care handoffs” that can complicate timelines:
- A first visit at an outpatient clinic or urgent care, followed by imaging orders
- Results delivered electronically, but follow-up depends on scheduling and communication
- Specialist appointments delayed by availability, insurance approvals, or transportation
- Work and caregiving responsibilities that make repeat visits harder
When a diagnosis is delayed, the harm isn’t always dramatic at first. Sometimes it shows up as gradual deterioration—worsening mobility, increasing pain, repeated ER visits, or a condition becoming harder to treat once it’s finally recognized.
A lawyer focused on diagnostic delay looks for the exact moment the medical process should have changed—such as failing to act on an abnormal report, not communicating urgency, or not arranging appropriate follow-up.


