Many delayed diagnosis cases don’t come from a single dramatic moment. They come from the “in-between”:
- You’re seen in one setting (urgent care, a family clinic, or an ER) and told to follow up.
- Records are sent—or not sent—across facilities.
- Imaging or lab results are filed but not clearly communicated.
- A specialist visit is scheduled, but the follow-up happens after your symptoms change.
In a community where people may rely on multiple providers over time, the timeline matters. A lawyer reviewing your case will focus on the decision points: when results came in, what the provider did with them, and what a reasonably careful clinician would have done next given your symptoms.


