Medical harm often doesn’t arrive with a dramatic warning. It shows up as a pattern—symptoms that should have triggered further testing, paperwork that wasn’t followed up, or test results that weren’t acted on quickly enough.
In the Collinsville area, common “timeline” situations include:
- Repeat visits with escalating symptoms: you’re told it’s “monitor and follow up,” but symptoms worsen before the correct diagnosis is reached.
- Abnormal results not triggering escalation: imaging or lab findings that should have prompted urgent review are handled like routine information.
- Provider reliance on automated triage/documentation: risk scores or software-generated impressions are treated as confirmation rather than a prompt to verify.
- Communication breakdowns during transitions: referrals, discharge instructions, and handoffs between departments or facilities don’t connect the dots quickly.
If you suspect that an automated system influenced decisions—or that your care team didn’t properly verify AI-assisted outputs—legal review can focus on what was knowable at the time and whether the response met Illinois standards.


