In Mount Prospect, many patients move between primary care, urgent care, hospital outpatient services, and nearby ERs. Each stop can add another handoff, another portal upload, and another opportunity for abnormal results to be overlooked or treated as “routine.”
Diagnostic errors often show up in real-world patterns like:
- Abnormal imaging or lab results not flagged for timely follow-up after a visit
- Symptoms treated as minor or routine even after red flags were present
- Results acknowledged late (or not acknowledged at all) before symptoms progressed
- Documentation errors that make the timeline look different than what patients actually reported
- Automated triage or risk scoring influencing urgency—without adequate clinician verification
Because care can be fragmented across providers and systems, the legal question is rarely just “what was the final diagnosis?” It’s whether earlier decisions met the standard of care given the information available at the time.


