In and around Palestine, it’s common for care to be split across settings—urgent care visits, primary care follow-ups, referrals to specialists, and imaging/lab work that may not land back in the right hands quickly.
When that chain breaks, problems often show up as:
- Abnormal results not acted on promptly (or not documented as reviewed)
- Follow-up referrals that get delayed while symptoms continue
- Hand-off gaps between facilities (who received what, and when)
- Re-triage issues when someone returns with worsening symptoms
These are the types of fact patterns attorneys look for when residents ask about delayed diagnosis legal help.


