In Seal Beach, people often seek care quickly—especially when symptoms flare up unexpectedly. That can mean urgent care visits, repeat appointments, ED evaluations, and follow-ups arranged across multiple facilities.
That pattern matters legally because diagnostic error claims frequently turn on communication gaps and handoff failures, such as:
- A test being ordered in one setting but not properly escalated for follow-up
- Imaging or lab results being “received” but not acted on within an appropriate window
- A clinician relying too heavily on risk-scoring, triage prompts, or other automated recommendations
- Symptoms being attributed to a more common cause rather than fully considering alternatives
When AI or software tools are involved, the risk isn’t that technology is “always wrong.” The risk is that systems can influence workflow—how quickly someone is triaged, what gets flagged, and what is documented—sometimes in ways that a responsible care team still must verify.


