In Mount Juliet, it’s common to see a pattern like this: you start with a primary care visit, then urgent care or an imaging center, then a specialist referral—sometimes with results sent to a patient portal or delivered to one office while another office is expecting different information.
When diagnosis is delayed, the problem is often not “one bad day,” but a chain of communication and follow-up breakdowns, such as:
- An abnormal imaging or lab result not acted on promptly
- A referral recommendation that wasn’t tracked to completion
- A follow-up appointment that was missed due to scheduling delays or unclear instructions
- A clinician reassessing symptoms too late after new red flags appeared
A lawyer’s job is to translate that chain into a case timeline that experts can evaluate.


