Endometriosis affects thousands of women across the island of Ireland, yet many still face years of pain, uncertainty and dismissal before receiving a diagnosis. Both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland continue to struggle with long waiting lists, stretched gynaecology services and limited specialist centres. While slow pathways are undoubtedly frustrating, a delay in diagnosis alone is not always medical negligence. However, there are situations where the standard of care falls below what is reasonably expected — and where a legal claim may be appropriate.
The Reality of Endometriosis Care in the North and South
Women in Northern Ireland often wait long periods for gynaecology appointments, imaging and surgery. Access to specialist endometriosis expertise remains limited, meaning complex cases may not be identified early.
In the Republic of Ireland, investment in specialist centres is growing, but access still varies significantly depending on location. Many women report years of symptoms before being taken seriously or referred for diagnostic laparoscopy.
These problems are systemic and, on their own, generally do not amount to negligence. But not all delays are the same.
When Delay or Mismanagement May Amount to Negligence

To bring a successful medical negligence case, you must show that:
- A clinician failed to provide care that met the acceptable standard; and
- That failure caused your condition to worsen in a way that could have been avoided.
Here are situations where negligence may be arguable:
1. Repeated dismissal of severe or escalating symptoms
If you repeatedly reported debilitating pelvic pain, bowel or bladder symptoms, fainting, bleeding irregularities or pain that stopped you functioning — yet no examination, referral or investigation was arranged despite clear warning signs.
2. Failure to refer to gynaecology or a specialist centre
Especially where symptoms suggested deep infiltrating endometriosis or where hormonal treatments clearly failed.
3. Misinterpretation of scans or surgical findings
If an ultrasound, MRI or previous operative report showed concerning features but a clinician failed to act on them, did not communicate the findings, or arranged no follow-up.
4. Harm caused by the delay
Negligence requires actual damage. Examples might include:
- avoidable progression to bowel or bladder involvement,
- ovarian rupture or loss of fertility that competent treatment would likely have prevented,
- worsening organ damage due to failure to intervene earlier.
When Delay Is Unlikely to Be Negligence
System-wide waiting lists, staff shortages and slow diagnostic pathways — however unacceptable — usually fall outside negligence law. Likewise, where earlier diagnosis would not have changed the eventual outcome, a legal claim is unlikely to succeed.
If You Believe Your Care Fell Below Standard
We understand how distressing and isolating endometriosis can be. If you feel your symptoms were ignored, your diagnosis was avoidably delayed, or your condition worsened due to substandard care, our specialist team can help you understand your options.



