In the Tampa Bay area, many people cycle through multiple care settings—urgent care, ER visits, imaging centers, specialist offices, and follow-up appointments. That “handoff” reality matters legally.
When an incorrect or delayed diagnosis happens, it’s often not one single moment. It’s a chain:
- symptoms described during a short visit,
- test results that arrive after you’ve left,
- a follow-up plan that depends on someone noticing abnormal findings,
- and automated systems that may influence triage, risk scoring, or how results are summarized.
If you’re trying to understand whether an AI-assisted workflow contributed—rather than treating the final diagnosis as the whole story—you need a lawyer who focuses on the timeline and decision points.


