In the real world, diagnostic mistakes don’t usually happen in a calm, controlled setting. In the Merrillville area, people frequently end up seeking care during busy hours—after work, after school, or when symptoms worsen overnight. That environment can affect how information is gathered and how follow-up is handled.
When AI or automated systems are part of the picture—such as clinical decision support prompts, imaging or lab assistance, triage algorithms, or documentation tools—the risk isn’t that technology is “bad.” The risk is that outputs may be treated as more decisive than they should be, or that the human review step doesn’t catch conflicts between the tool’s suggestion and the patient’s actual presentation.
If your family’s timeline includes symptoms that kept escalating, repeat visits, or abnormal results that weren’t acted on quickly, it may be worth exploring whether diagnostic negligence occurred.


