In the Clinton area, delayed diagnosis claims often stem from real-world bottlenecks: limited appointment availability, follow-up instructions that weren’t clearly acted on, and referrals that take time to schedule—especially when you need imaging, lab rechecks, or specialist evaluation.
Common patterns we see in cases from residents include:
- Abnormal results not acted on quickly enough (lab values, imaging findings, or pathology reports)
- A plan that depended on follow-up but the follow-up didn’t happen—or wasn’t tracked
- Symptoms that persisted across visits where the next step wasn’t escalated
- Communication gaps between urgent care, primary care, and specialists
- Care transitions where records didn’t reach the next provider in time
If you were told “everything looks fine” and later learned something was missed, the key question for your attorney is whether the diagnostic approach was reasonable given the information available at the time.


