In modern healthcare, “AI” isn’t always a visible dashboard you can point to. Instead, it may appear behind the scenes as:
- imaging triage or automated measurement tools
- risk scoring or decision-support prompts in electronic health records
- lab or documentation assistance that affects what gets flagged
- routing/triage workflows used during busy clinic or urgent-care hours
When these tools are used, the legal question usually becomes less about whether software exists and more about how clinicians and facilities used it—and whether they still performed the independent assessment required by the standard of care.
A local reality: visits can be fragmented
Many Kirksville residents move between providers and settings—especially when symptoms worsen. That can create gaps such as:
- results filed in one system but not acted on in time
- follow-up instructions that weren’t clearly communicated
- abnormal findings that weren’t escalated to the right clinician
If you’re trying to understand what happened, your attorney can help map the care timeline so the “why it mattered” story is clear.


