In healthcare settings across New Jersey, automated tools can appear in many places: risk-scoring during triage, lab/imaging workflow software, clinical decision support prompts, and documentation systems that shape what clinicians see (and when).
A key question for Beachwood residents is this: did the care team treat the output as guidance—or as a substitute for clinical judgment?
Even if an AI or algorithm flagged a likelihood, clinicians still have duties to:
- review the patient’s full presentation,
- order or interpret confirmatory testing,
- recognize conflicting objective findings, and
- document why a diagnosis was chosen (or why follow-up was safe to delay).
When that process fails, the “source” of the error may be broader than one tool.


