In the Tri-Cities area, it’s common for care to be split across urgent care, primary care, imaging centers, and specialists—sometimes with scheduling gaps. When an abnormal result isn’t communicated quickly, when follow-up slips, or when symptoms keep worsening but the workup doesn’t escalate, the delay can become more than “unlucky timing.”
People often discover the problem after:
- A follow-up visit that happens weeks later than expected
- Imaging reports that weren’t acted on promptly
- Lab results that weren’t reviewed or explained clearly
- A referral that was provided, but not followed through in time
- Repeat visits where the clinical approach didn’t match the trend of symptoms
If you’ve been stuck trying to piece together dates from portals, phone calls, and printed paperwork, you’re not alone. The timeline matters in Washington malpractice cases—so organization isn’t optional.


