Diagnostic delays don’t always occur in dramatic ways. More often, they show up through everyday patterns common to our region:
- Busy primary care or urgent care schedules where symptoms are treated as “common” at first, but aren’t reassessed when they don’t resolve.
- Follow-up gaps after abnormal tests, especially when patients are told to “watch for symptoms” or to return later, but the abnormal finding isn’t clearly tracked.
- Referral and handoff problems—for example, when Parkersburg-based care recommends imaging or specialty consultation, yet communication breaks down before the next step.
- Work and commute constraints that make it harder to return quickly for re-checks, increasing the importance of clear instructions and timely action by providers.
If your care involved multiple visits or transfers between facilities, the timeline matters more than most people realize. A lawyer can help rebuild that sequence and identify where the diagnostic process may have gone off track.


