Haines City families frequently navigate healthcare across different settings—primary care, urgent care, ER visits, imaging centers, and follow-up appointments. When care is spread across providers, the “who did what and when” matters.
Diagnostic problems often show up as:
- Abnormal results not acted on quickly enough (e.g., imaging or lab findings that should have triggered prompt follow-up)
- Miscommunication during transitions of care, especially when records don’t arrive in time for the next appointment
- Repeat visits where symptoms worsen while earlier concerns are treated as less urgent
- Overreliance on automated outputs, such as risk scores, triage routing, or software-assisted interpretation
When automation is part of the workflow, the issue usually isn’t that a tool “caused everything.” The legal questions tend to focus on whether the clinical team verified the information, escalated when appropriate, and documented the reasoning behind decisions.


