In suburban communities like Lansdowne, people often move between providers—primary care, urgent care, imaging centers, and hospital follow-ups. That “handoff pattern” is where diagnostic mistakes can multiply:
- A test result lands in the system, but follow-up doesn’t happen on time
- Symptoms are attributed to a more common condition because visits are short
- Imaging is reviewed with automated assistance, but human verification is incomplete
- Referrals occur, but the referral is delayed or the wrong information is sent
When time is lost, the harm isn’t only medical—it’s practical: missed work, rescheduled appointments, caregiver strain, and mounting bills. A lawyer’s job is to connect those real-world impacts to the legal question: what should have happened when it was knowable, based on the information available at the time.


