In our region, people commonly move between urgent care, primary care, imaging centers, and specialist appointments. That creates more handoffs—between facilities, physicians, and scheduling systems. Diagnostic delay cases often hinge on moments like:
- Abnormal results not acted on quickly (or not communicated clearly)
- Follow-up orders getting buried during busy clinic days
- Imaging/lab reports arriving late or being interpreted inconsistently
- Persistent symptoms being treated as “routine” when they needed escalation
In practical terms, the question isn’t just whether you eventually received a diagnosis. It’s whether the medical team responded reasonably to the information available at the time, and whether the delay measurably worsened outcomes.


