In Florence, diagnostic delays and misdiagnoses often surface in everyday care situations—especially when patients are seen multiple times, transferred between services, or triaged quickly due to time pressures.
Common patterns we see in the Lowcountry-and-Pee Dee region include:
- Repeat visits with symptoms that weren’t treated as urgent (leading to worsening before the correct diagnosis was considered)
- Abnormal results that weren’t escalated quickly enough (for example, imaging or lab findings that should have triggered follow-up)
- Transitions of care—from urgent care to emergency care, or from emergency care to outpatient follow-up—where information can be incomplete or fragmented
- Automated intake and triage systems that affect how symptoms are categorized, routed, or documented in the record
- Work- and commute-related barriers (missed follow-ups, transportation limits, scheduling delays) that can compound the harm when a key result isn’t acted on
These are not “just mistakes.” They’re often evidence of breakdowns in standard diagnostic processes—breakdowns a lawyer can investigate and explain.


