In Titusville, many families experience fragmented care—an urgent care visit one day, imaging at a different facility, follow-up with a specialist later, and sometimes repeat visits because symptoms don’t improve.
That pattern can create opportunities for:
- Abnormal results not reaching the right clinician fast enough
- Follow-up instructions not being completed or documented clearly
- Triage systems routing patients based on risk scores that may not fit the full clinical picture
- Care handoffs where key history or test changes don’t get communicated
When AI or automated clinical decision support is part of the workflow (for example, imaging assistance, lab interpretation support, or triage and documentation prompts), the legal question is not “Was AI involved?”—it’s whether the system’s role was verified appropriately and whether clinicians met Florida’s standard of care.


