Blacksburg’s mix of students, healthcare access points, and seasonal traffic patterns can create gaps that affect medical continuity. You might see how the delay happened when:
- Symptoms were treated during a busy ER/urgent care window, and follow-up wasn’t tight enough for your risk profile.
- Results arrived after you left (lab/imaging/pathology), but the system didn’t route the abnormal finding quickly—or didn’t document that you were properly notified.
- A referral was recommended, but you couldn’t follow up fast due to scheduling, travel time, or unclear instructions.
- Your care was split between providers, and key context didn’t make it into the next visit.
In these situations, the question isn’t “did something go wrong?” It’s whether the diagnostic process and follow-up were reasonable for your condition at that time—and whether the delay contributed to the harm you later experienced.


