Many local cases start with a familiar pattern: symptoms appear during a busy week—work schedules, school pickups, beach outings, or a late-night urgent care visit—then the diagnosis arrives later than it should have.
We commonly see diagnostic-error claims involving:
- Abnormal test results not acted on quickly enough after an ER or urgent care visit
- Follow-up failures—missed referrals, unclear discharge instructions, or delayed specialist evaluation
- Misreading imaging or lab outputs in ways that affected treatment decisions
- Care teams relying too heavily on automated risk scoring or decision support, without adequate verification
The goal is to clarify the timeline: what was known, what should have been done with that information, and how the delay or mistake contributed to harm.


