In the Antioch area, diagnostic problems often surface in patterns tied to everyday healthcare access and urgency, such as:
- Multiple urgent care or ER visits before the correct diagnosis is recognized.
- Busy clinic workflows where abnormal lab results or imaging findings aren’t escalated promptly.
- Transitions of care (ER to discharge, discharge to outpatient follow-up) where instructions are missed or delayed.
- Backlogged diagnostic capacity that can slow testing, reading, and follow-up—especially when symptoms keep returning.
And when technology is involved—risk-scoring, triage routing, imaging interpretation assistance, documentation tools, or automated clinical decision support—the legal question becomes more specific: Was the tool treated as a shortcut instead of a support?


