Many diagnostic delay cases don’t involve a single dramatic mistake. More often, they involve a sequence of decisions—each one looking reasonable on its own—until the timeline shows the bigger problem.
Common Corsicana-area examples include:
- Abnormal lab results that weren’t reviewed promptly or weren’t tied to a clear plan for the patient to follow.
- Imaging findings that were documented but not acted on with appropriate urgency or referral.
- Persistent symptoms from an initial visit that weren’t escalated when your condition didn’t improve as expected.
- Discharge instructions that didn’t match the seriousness of the findings, leaving you to “watch and wait” longer than a reasonable provider would.
Your goal isn’t to prove doctors were “wrong.” It’s to show that their diagnostic process and follow-up decisions didn’t meet what a reasonably careful provider would have done—and that the delay mattered.


