While every case is different, Wylie residents often experience delays in similar real-world settings:
- Abnormal test results not meaningfully followed up. Lab or imaging findings can be released to a patient portal or placed in a chart without clear, timely next steps.
- Fragmented care across urgent care, primary care, and specialists. One provider orders the test; another reviews it; a third is supposed to act—then the handoff breaks.
- Short visits that don’t match a worsening symptom pattern. When symptoms persist or change, clinicians should reassess, escalate testing, or refer appropriately.
- Administrative gaps that affect medical decisions. Missed orders, slow referral processing, incomplete transfer of records, or unclear “return if worse” instructions can create dangerous time gaps.
A Wylie attorney looks for these decision points in your chart—because delayed diagnosis claims often turn on what was known, when it was known, and what should have happened next.


