In College Station, many people receive care through a mix of urgent care visits, primary care follow-ups, and specialist appointments. That “handoff” pattern matters legally because diagnostic errors often happen when:
- abnormal lab work isn’t communicated quickly enough,
- imaging findings aren’t recognized as requiring urgent action,
- referrals aren’t completed or tracked,
- a patient is told to “watch and wait” even as symptoms persist,
- or a clinician doesn’t re-evaluate when your condition trends the wrong way.
The key question is not whether you eventually got a diagnosis—it’s whether the earlier information you had at the time should have prompted a more timely and appropriate diagnostic response.


