Logansport-area patients may encounter diagnostic delays across emergency, urgent care, outpatient imaging, and follow-up scheduling. When an automated system is part of the workflow, the failure mode can look different than a simple “wrong diagnosis.”
Common patterns include:
- Risk scoring or triage routed you to the wrong level of care (you were told to monitor, but symptoms required escalation)
- Imaging or lab results were flagged inconsistently, with abnormal findings not acted on quickly enough
- Clinical decision support suggested one direction, and clinicians didn’t adequately verify it against objective findings
- Follow-up instructions didn’t match the abnormal results, especially when appointments were delayed by scheduling constraints
These issues matter legally because the question isn’t only “what was diagnosed later?” It’s whether the earlier care team responded appropriately to what was known at the time.


