Many people assume “AI” means a single robot made the decision. In healthcare, the more common scenario is that automated tools influence parts of the workflow—such as:
- Clinical decision support prompts or alerts
- Imaging triage that routes studies for review
- Lab or pathology workflow software that flags “likely” results
- Risk scoring used to decide what to test next
- Documentation assistance that shapes what gets recorded in the chart
In a Bridgeview context, a frequent pattern is the same across suburban communities: patients may be seen quickly, referred, and re-assessed across multiple handoffs (urgent care → emergency department → specialist). If automated outputs weren’t verified, or if staff relied on a tool rather than the full clinical picture, that reliance can become legally relevant.


