In communities across the Rio Grande Valley, it’s common to see patients cycling through different care settings—primary care, urgent care, imaging centers, specialist referrals, and follow-up visits that can be delayed by scheduling or paperwork.
That matters legally because many diagnostic-delay cases aren’t about one “moment.” They’re about what happened between visits:
- abnormal results not acted on quickly enough
- imaging readouts that weren’t followed by timely next steps
- referrals that were recommended but not completed
- symptoms that persisted while the workup stayed incomplete
When those gaps occur, the delay can compound—especially when people are trying to keep up with daily responsibilities rather than repeatedly returning to the clinic the moment a symptom changes.


