In Groves and nearby communities, it’s common for people to seek care when symptoms first flare—sometimes during evenings or busy periods—then follow up later when testing is completed. The problem is that diagnostic delay doesn’t always happen at one dramatic moment. It can happen in the gaps:
- abnormal test results that weren’t communicated clearly or quickly
- a discharge plan that didn’t include meaningful follow-up steps
- a referral that was made, but the next appointment never happened on time
- symptoms that persisted across visits, yet the workup didn’t expand when it should have
When you’re dealing with a timeline stretched across urgent care visits, primary care, and specialists, your records can feel like they’re telling different stories. Your attorney’s job is to connect the dots—using the actual dates in your charts—so the case is evaluated on evidence, not frustration.


