AI isn’t usually “the doctor,” but it can still affect decisions in ways that matter legally. In medical settings across New Jersey, automated systems may be involved in:
- Imaging triage and read suggestions (e.g., software flagging something “likely”)
- Risk scoring used during urgent visits or triage
- EHR-based prompts that influence what clinicians notice or order next
- Lab interpretation workflows where results are routed or summarized
- Automated documentation tools that affect what gets recorded and communicated
A key point for Cliffside Park residents: the legal focus is rarely on whether technology exists—it’s on how clinicians and facilities used the outputs. If a tool’s suggestion conflicted with objective findings, if escalation protocols weren’t followed, or if abnormal results weren’t acted on promptly, that breakdown can become part of a negligence analysis.


