Sterling Heights patients often move through multiple care touchpoints—primary care, urgent care, ER, imaging centers, and follow-up specialists. When those handoffs happen quickly, a “helpful” automated recommendation can get treated as if it were a final clinical conclusion.
In these situations, the legal focus is typically on process:
- whether the care team treated algorithm output as advisory or definitive
- whether abnormal results were flagged and acted on promptly
- how information was transferred between facilities
- whether documentation accurately reflects the decision-making that occurred
For people in Sterling Heights, this often shows up in records as gaps: missing result notifications, unclear follow-up instructions, or inconsistent timelines between visits.


