Seabrook residents often move between care settings—especially during busy stretches when symptoms “can’t wait.” A typical timeline might look like this:
- You’re seen at an ER or urgent care after symptoms begin.
- Initial testing is done, but the provider’s plan relies on follow-up that doesn’t occur fast enough.
- Imaging or lab results arrive later, and the record shows limited documentation of who reviewed them and when.
- Referrals are made, but the next appointment takes weeks—during which your condition worsens.
- Additional providers treat you based on incomplete history or outdated test interpretations.
In many delayed-diagnosis cases, the legal issue isn’t that the provider made a “wrong guess.” It’s that the decision-making process—what they did with the information they had, what they documented, and what they did (or didn’t do) next—failed to meet the standard of care.


