Bainbridge Island is close-knit, and that can be a strength—until it affects how quickly information moves. In real cases, the delay isn’t always “in the exam room.” It can be in:
- Referral handoffs and how promptly results are routed between clinics
- Follow-up availability after urgent-care or ER discharge
- Specialist scheduling when symptoms don’t clearly match the first working diagnosis
- Imaging/lab communication across systems
When a diagnosis is delayed, the consequences may compound: treatments may start later, conditions may progress, and families may lose the “window” where earlier intervention could have changed outcomes.
Our job is to map those real-world delays to the legal questions that matter: what should have been done, when it should have been done, and how the deviation contributed to your harm.


