In Lovejoy, GA, many people juggle work commutes, school schedules, and weekend plans. That pace can make it easier for important symptoms to get labeled as “minor” or “probably something else”—especially when a clinic uses automated triage tools or decision support to move patients through the system.
When an initial diagnosis is wrong or delayed, the consequences can be severe: worsening conditions, additional procedures, and treatment that arrives only after the window for better outcomes has narrowed. If your care involved risk-scoring software, imaging “assist” tools, lab interpretation workflows, or intake systems that route patients based on predicted probabilities, you may have questions about whether the process was followed and whether the results were verified.
You don’t need to guess. You need a legal review that connects the timeline of care to what should have happened under Georgia’s medical negligence standards.


