In and around Streamwood, diagnostic mistakes often surface during the same kinds of real-life settings many residents use:
- Urgent care and walk-in clinics when symptoms are “not obvious yet”
- ER visits during high-traffic seasons and high patient volume
- Follow-ups that get delayed because of scheduling, referral backlogs, or unclear instructions
- Lab or imaging workflows where results must be reviewed and acted on quickly
When technology is part of the workflow—such as risk scoring, decision support prompts, automated routing, or document drafting—errors can become harder to spot. A tool may flag a “most likely” condition while clinicians still have to verify it against the patient’s actual presentation. If that verification didn’t happen, or if abnormal results weren’t escalated appropriately, the issue may be legally relevant.


