A doctor -- pediatrician, no less -- "thinks" a patient might be having mini seizures, sight unseen, and tells the parent to bring the child in next week? Really!? I've known some crappy doctors, but that's just crazy. I think "mini seizures" might have been Terri's diagnosis.
As a mother of 7 children, 3 who have special needs and 1 who has had 20 surgeries in his 4 years of life, I can share that in my experience, it happens ALL THE TIME that a pediatrician (or other doctor) says, "I think this could be happening, so I want your child to see Dr. XYZ." Then you get the referral for that doctor & make an appointment to take your child to see him/her. If the doc is a specialist, you may have to wait months to get in (as is often the case with diagnosing autism). Even if something is urgent, you still have to wait sometimes to get in to see a doctor. It sucks, but it happens. My son had a shunt malfunction but had to wait in a local hospital for 10 days before he could be flown to his neurosurgeon in Portland because she was out of the country (in Haiti, helping after the earthquake at the end of January) and the other 2 pediatric neurosurgeons in Portland refused to touch him due to his medical complexity and their being in a different hospital and not knowing my son at all. They said that if he declined to the point his life was threatened, THEN they would treat him, but as long as the local hospital could keep him stable, they wanted us to wait for our neurosurgeon. Sometimes patients just have to wait, regardless of the problem. Not every person with cancer gets a diagnosis and has surgery that same day or even the next day, despite their obviously needing to have the tumor removed. I don't think a doctor is crappy just because they can't see every child immediately.
I think a ped could have said, "It sounds like it could be seizures; make an appointment and I'll look Kyron over." Then Terri would have had to make an appointment and unless the doctor told the scheduler it was urgent, the appointment would not be rushed, so waiting a week is not unrealistic. I think a lot of parents would recall that conversation as the doctor saying he thinks their child might be having seizures even if all he said was the symptoms could possibly be seizures, so I can't fault the recollection there, either.
Edited to add: I just want to add that after reading the other threads about the 2nd person in the truck and whatnot, I don't believe Terri is innocent. I was trying to stay balanced (even though I came down off the fence on the side of "she's up to her eyeballs in this" last week) and not totally judge her/condemn her before the facts of this case came out, but with the new stuff being leaked tonight, I think I'm about done trying to defend her. I wasn't really trying to defend HER, personally, as much as I have been trying to see the situation from an innocent person's point of view and determine that way if the behaviors/comments/emails were plausible. And honestly, for a lot of it, I could see how an innocent person could be painted in such a way to make them seem guilty when they weren't. But with the new details coming out now, it's getting awfully hard to envision Terri as anything but guilty. And that really sucks because it destroys any hope for me that Kyron could possibly be alive.