In communities across the Los Angeles region, patients often cycle through urgent care, imaging centers, specialty referrals, and follow-up appointments—sometimes with limited time for review. In San Gabriel, that can look like:
- Abnormal imaging findings that aren’t clearly communicated or are inconsistently documented
- Symptoms initially attributed to more common causes, while an underlying condition evolves
- Lab or radiology results that are “in the system” but not acted on promptly
- Care transitions (urgent care → primary care → specialist) where the critical detail gets lost
When automated systems are part of the workflow—risk scoring, documentation templates, imaging or reporting assistance—the concern is not that technology is always wrong. The risk is that a tool’s output may be over-trusted, not verified, or not escalated when objective findings suggest something else.


