Guttenberg’s pace means people commonly seek care quickly—sometimes more than once—when symptoms don’t improve. It’s not unusual for residents to:
- Visit urgent care or an emergency department, then return because symptoms worsen.
- Rely on discharge instructions while trying to coordinate follow-up.
- Undergo imaging or lab testing that gets interpreted later.
- Share the same history with multiple providers across different shifts.
In that environment, diagnostic breakdowns can be amplified by handoff failures, follow-up gaps, and delays in acting on abnormal results—all of which are central issues in medical negligence cases in New Jersey.
If an automated tool or clinical decision support system was used as part of triage, documentation, imaging review, or risk scoring, the question becomes more specific: Was it treated as a suggestion—or as a reliable conclusion without appropriate verification?


