In a smaller Texas community like Sanger, many people first learn about potential malpractice issues through:
- a family doctor’s referral chain (urgent care → imaging → specialist)
- weekday work disruptions and follow-up appointments that get delayed by schedules
- hospital or clinic records that show treatment was handled “by protocol,” but the outcome was still serious
Those realities can affect settlement discussions because the evidence usually lives in multiple places—clinic charts, hospital records, lab/imaging reports, and sometimes EMS or urgent-care documentation. Before anyone can estimate value, an attorney typically needs to connect the timeline of care to the injury you ultimately suffered.


