Diagnostic delay isn’t always a single dramatic mistake. In real-life Lynden scenarios, it may involve:
- Abnormal lab or imaging results that weren’t communicated clearly, documented properly, or followed up in time.
- Persistent symptoms after urgent care or primary care visits—follow-ups that were scheduled too late, or reassessment that didn’t match how your condition was changing.
- Referral handoffs that stalled—when you were told to see a specialist but the process, timing, or documentation didn’t support timely diagnosis.
- Work and commuting disruptions that affect care continuity—missed appointments, delayed testing, or gaps in records that can complicate how causation is explained later.
Because these cases often turn on what was known at each step, the timeline matters.


