In real life, diagnostic delays often happen in the gaps—between urgent care and follow-up visits, between lab work and communication, or between imaging performed and results reviewed.
Common East Texas scenarios include:
- Abnormal labs that weren’t communicated clearly or quickly enough for you to seek timely treatment.
- Imaging reports that referenced findings needing further evaluation, but follow-through didn’t happen as expected.
- Persistent symptoms after a first visit—where reassessment should have occurred sooner.
- Referral and scheduling breakdowns, where the next step was recommended but not arranged, tracked, or communicated.
A lawyer can’t undo the past, but they can help you determine whether the delay likely contributed to worsening health—and whether the facts support accountability under Texas law.


