Delayed diagnosis claims aren’t only about emergency room mistakes. In and around Granbury, they often show up in patterns like:
- Abnormal labs or imaging with no timely follow-up: results are documented, but the next step—call, referral, repeat testing, or escalation—doesn’t happen when it should.
- Follow-up referrals that stall: you receive a recommendation, but communication breaks down, paperwork is incomplete, or the referral isn’t acted on promptly.
- Persistent symptoms after an initial “rule-out” workup: you return with worsening complaints, but the diagnostic path doesn’t adapt to what’s changing.
- Care transitions between facilities: records arrive late, reports don’t match what you were told, or key findings aren’t carried forward.
Residents may also experience delays tied to vacation seasons and high patient volume, when follow-up appointments get pushed back. While delays can happen for many reasons, legal evaluation turns on what the provider knew at the time, what they did with that information, and whether earlier action likely would have changed your treatment course.


