Also state what sign you are?
You can change lawyers. However, most retainer agreements (the thing you signed when you hired this lawyer) requires you to pay for the time the attorney and staff have spent on the case, as well as costs. (Medical records can be very expensive.) So you need to look carefully at the agreement and figure out what the cost will be. And the attorney doesn't have to wait for the case to settle to get that money. It's very hard to find a lawyer to take malpractice cases unless it's a slam dunk. So make sure you have a new one in place first. I have to wonder how you know the documents are literally on her desk. Realize that it is tough to find medical professionals who will review the case and they are very expensive. So she may be having trouble first, figuring out what specialties should be asked, and second, finding anyone in those specialties who are willing to review the documents and testify in court. Any malpractice lawyer can have that problem. And they don't know there is a case until that is done.
A compact disc CD or DVD is made from 1.2 mm thick, almost-pure polycarbonate plastic and weighs approximately 16 grams. A thin layer of aluminum or, more rarely, gold is applied to the surface to make it reflective, and is protected by a film of lacquer that is normally spin coated directly on top of the reflective layer, upon which the label print is applied. CD data are stored as a series of tiny indentations known as “pits”, encoded in a tightly packed spiral track molded into the top of the polycarbonate layer.