In practice, AI rarely “stands alone.” Instead, it shows up as part of a larger process—such as:
- Triage and routing tools used to decide urgency
- Automated flags for abnormal imaging or lab results
- Clinical decision support that suggests likely conditions
- Documentation assistants that shape what gets recorded and communicated
- Workflow handoffs where information must be interpreted quickly
A legal claim typically focuses on whether the care team appropriately verified the information the system produced—especially when symptoms, vitals, or test results pointed in a different direction.
If you were told later that the correct diagnosis was “obvious,” that can be important. But what matters legally is what was knowable at the time, and whether the response matched the standard of care.


