In suburban communities like Farmers Branch, many people rotate between primary care, urgent care, and specialists—sometimes across different facilities or electronic systems. A common pattern we see in delayed diagnosis claims involves:
- Abnormal lab results that weren’t communicated clearly (or weren’t acted on promptly)
- Imaging reports that were filed but follow-up wasn’t completed
- Referral recommendations that weren’t tracked, scheduled, or escalated
- Repeat visits where symptoms persisted, but reassessment didn’t happen quickly enough
The key difference between a “bad outcome” and a legally actionable delay is whether the provider’s process fell short of what a reasonably careful clinician would do given the information available at the time—and whether that shortfall contributed to harm.


