In the Bartlett area, it’s common for patients to move between providers and settings—urgent care visits, primary care follow-ups, imaging appointments, specialist referrals, and sometimes multiple facilities over weeks or months. That kind of “handoff” pattern matters in delayed diagnosis cases because liability often turns on what was known at each step and what was done with abnormal results.
A timeline-first review helps uncover details like:
- whether abnormal labs or imaging were actually acted on (not just “noted”)
- whether follow-up instructions were specific enough to be medically meaningful
- whether symptoms were acknowledged as worsening during the waiting period
Even if you’ve already pulled a few documents, it’s easy for key items to be missing—like the final report from an imaging center, the referral note, or the record of who communicated results to you. That’s where AI-assisted organization can help your attorney move faster without skipping the evidence.


