Even when everyone intends to do the right thing, delays can occur at multiple points in the healthcare chain—especially when people move between providers or facilities. In the New Braunfels area, common real-world patterns include:
- Urgent-care to specialist handoffs: A patient may be told to “follow up” after tests, but the next appointment—sometimes scheduled weeks later—doesn’t happen fast enough.
- Imaging and lab follow-up gaps: Results may arrive, but communication and documentation can be inconsistent, particularly when patients have multiple caregivers or change contact information.
- Travel and scheduling pressures: Families who are coordinating work and childcare may miss follow-up windows, and that can complicate both medical decision-making and later legal review.
- Return visits that don’t escalate appropriately: Symptoms can persist while the initial working diagnosis doesn’t change, even when a reasonable clinician would have broadened the differential.
A New Braunfels delayed diagnosis case often turns on timing: what the provider knew at each visit, what information was available (but not acted on), and whether the next step should have happened sooner.


