In many communities, diagnostic delay claims revolve around one office visit. In Nanticoke, it’s common to see a more fragmented path to diagnosis—because care may start in one setting and continue in another.
You might have:
- A primary care visit where symptoms were treated as “routine”
- Urgent care or walk-in evaluation that didn’t escalate appropriately
- Imaging ordered (or not ordered) with results that weren’t followed through
- Referrals that took time due to scheduling or coordination
That “handoff gap” matters legally. If a provider didn’t act on abnormal results, failed to communicate next steps clearly, or didn’t reassess when symptoms persisted, the timeline becomes crucial.


