Westminster’s daily rhythm—school schedules, shift work, and frequent trips between providers—can unintentionally create diagnostic delay. Common patterns we see in cases involving missed or delayed diagnoses include:
- Follow-ups that get delayed after abnormal results, especially when patients are balancing work and transportation.
- Care occurring in multiple settings (urgent care, hospital ER, outpatient imaging), where records don’t always flow smoothly.
- High patient volume that can pressure clinicians to move quickly—sometimes leading to incomplete risk assessment or delayed escalation.
When automated tools are involved—such as clinical decision support, imaging triage, or automated documentation prompts—the risk isn’t that “AI is always wrong.” The risk is that the clinical team may treat an output as more definitive than it is, or fail to verify it against the full medical picture.


