Diagnostic errors rarely occur in a single moment. They often show up as a chain of decisions—especially in settings common to the Ridgeland area:
- Multiple visits close together (symptoms persist, but the early diagnosis doesn’t fit)
- Abnormal imaging or lab results that aren’t acted on quickly enough
- Triage and routing decisions made under time pressure
- Clinician reliance on automated “risk” or “suggested diagnosis” outputs without adequate verification
- Follow-up breakdowns, including missed calls, unclear discharge instructions, or delayed referrals
In Mississippi, the strongest cases depend on timing: what was known at each visit, what should have been ordered next, and whether the care team responded appropriately once test results came in. When families are trying to coordinate appointments around school, shift work, or weekend schedules, it’s easy for critical follow-up to slip—then the harm compounds.


