In Clifton and across Bergen County, it’s common for patients to move between settings quickly—urgent care, ER triage, imaging centers, outpatient follow-ups, and primary care. That “handoff” chain is where diagnostic errors often surface:
- symptoms are described differently across visits
- test results land in one system but aren’t acted on in time
- abnormal findings aren’t escalated or communicated clearly
- follow-up gets delayed because of scheduling, transportation, or work constraints
When AI-enabled tools are part of a care workflow (such as risk scoring, imaging assistance, or documentation support), the legal question becomes: Was the information verified and communicated appropriately, and did clinicians meet New Jersey’s standard of care despite any automated output?


