In a suburban community like West Jordan, diagnosis problems often begin with real-world friction:
- Fragmented care: symptoms start with a primary care visit, then urgent care, then imaging or referrals.
- Busy clinic workflows: follow-up instructions can get lost in portals, paperwork, or handoffs between providers.
- Result communication gaps: labs or imaging may be “available” without being clearly communicated to you with appropriate urgency.
- Work and school constraints: patients may delay follow-up because they can’t get appointments right away—creating complicated causation questions.
A lawyer’s job isn’t to blame anyone automatically. It’s to determine whether the timing and actions taken by specific providers were reasonable under the circumstances—and whether earlier diagnosis or treatment likely changed what happened next.


