
There’s a moment in our healthcare journeys that doesn’t get talked about enough. It’s the space between “something feels off” and “this is serious.”
Not because the signs aren’t there, but because they haven’t fully connected yet.
Providers describe a pattern they see repeatedly: patients arrive in care after small signals have already been building for weeks (or months) without recognizing them as part of a larger issue.
Sometimes it’s a lab result that seemed ‘fine’ at the time.
Sometimes it’s a symptom that gets mentioned quickly—“Doc, I’ve got this weird bump on my hand”—and then set aside.
Sometimes it’s a change in the body that doesn’t clearly fit any category, so it gets ‘watched’.
By the time care is fully provided, the situation may appear more advanced than it would have if it had been caught earlier.
We asked Black clinicians a different question for this second part of the series:
What do you consistently notice before a patient’s condition becomes serious?
Here’s what they said.
One of the first breakdowns clinicians point to is not the absence of symptoms—it’s how early signals are separated instead of seen together.
Dr. Danielle McCamey, DNP, ACNP-BC, FAAN, FAANP, FCCP, FADLN, Assistant Professor and Associate Dean for Clinical Partnerships & Innovation at the University of Maryland School of Nursing, explains that interpretation shapes what gets acted on in real time.
“Clinical judgment gets impacted by bias that influences what a provider considers, what they offer, and ultimately what care is provided.”
What matters here is not just bias in a general sense, but how quickly decisions are made under pressure. In real clinical environments, providers are not reviewing one clean signal at a time. They are synthesizing fragmented information: partial histories, incomplete records, rushed conversations, and nonverbal cues that may or may not be interpreted correctly.
McCamey also points to how communication itself becomes part of the diagnostic process:
“Assumptions made in real time interpreting silence as understanding, or stoicism as comprehension or consent… directly influence how a provider shapes their thoughts, feelings, and behaviors in the moment and that impacts care.”
That means early-stage conditions don’t only depend on biology. They also depend on whether what a patient says—or doesn’t say—is correctly understood in the moment it matters.
And when those early signals are treated as separate rather than connected, the opportunity to step in earlier is often lost without anyone realizing it.
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Another pattern clinicians describe is the gap between lived symptoms and what standard evaluation tools are built to detect.
Dr. LaKeischa Webb McMillan, integrative OB-GYN, hormone specialist, and known as The International Menopause Whisperer™, explains how this becomes especially visible during hormonal transition periods like perimenopause and menopause.
“Most physicians are trained to think in clinical algorithms, essentially flowcharts that help determine diagnosis and treatment. The challenge is that perimenopause and menopause symptoms don’t always fit neatly into those boxes.”
This is where many patients get stuck in a loop: symptoms are real, but the system is waiting for confirmation that doesn’t arrive through traditional channels.

“So when labs are ‘normal,’ many women don’t land anywhere in that system, and their symptoms can be minimized or treated in isolation instead of being recognized as part of a hormonal transition.”
What gets missed here is not severity, it’s context.
A symptom in isolation can look insignificant. The same symptom as part of a pattern tells a different story entirely.
And when that larger pattern isn’t recognized, patients are often left carrying both the symptoms and the doubt.
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When conditions develop suddenly and severely, or in surgical settings, timing is one of the strongest predictors of complexity.
Alain Raymond, PA-C, a U.S. Navy veteran and cardiothoracic surgical physician assistant at Aya Locums, describes how delays in care affect what happens next.
“Some patients wait too long to seek care.”
By the time patients arrive, the clinical picture has often shifted from early intervention to urgent management. That shift changes not just treatment options, but risk.
Raymond also notes how much information is lost once patients enter high-stress environments:
“Most patients probably retain 25% percent, IMO, of what they are told.”
That loss of retention matters because follow-up care depends on what patients actually understand and act on after leaving the encounter.
He emphasizes preparation as part of prevention:
“Know your health history. Know what meds you take and why.”
In fast-moving settings, clarity from the patient becomes part of clinical safety.
“They must be their own advocate.”
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Across specialties, clinicians are describing different versions of the same underlying issue.
What should be one pattern appears instead as separate, unrelated concerns: a symptom here, a lab result there, a brief mention that doesn’t get expanded, a “wait and see” that feels reasonable in the moment.
Dr. McCamey highlights how interpretation shapes what gets elevated or dismissed in real time.
Dr. McMillan shows how structured systems can fail to categorize what doesn’t fit neatly into expected frameworks.
Raymond shows how delay and retention affect outcomes once patients are already inside the system.
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What Black clinicians consistently emphasize is not that patients are ignoring symptoms or failing to recognize their bodies.
It’s that early symptoms rarely arrive in a unified form.
They appear as fragments that don’t immediately look connected in real time.
And only later—once the pattern becomes visible in hindsight—does the full picture make sense.
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What these clinicians are really pointing to is something most of us already know in our bodies: things rarely start out feeling serious.
It’s the symptom you mean to mention but don’t, or the constant tiredness you chalk up to life being life.
So, like most of us, you keep going.
And the truth is, early signs don’t usually show up as one loud, clear warning. They come in pieces. Small shifts. Quiet changes.
But those pieces matter because when they’re recognized early, there’s usually more room to figure things out, more options on the table to benefit our health.
When signs or symptoms are missed or minimized, things can get harder to figure out later.
We’re not saying everything needs urgency, but not everything should be pushed aside either.
Sometimes the difference between “we’ve got this” and “this is serious” is simply how long it took the full picture of our health concerns to come into focus.


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