Harrison is a busy, transportation-connected community. In practice, that often means patients move between urgent care, walk-in appointments, hospital departments, and follow-up testing—sometimes on tight schedules.
That environment can increase the odds of:
- Abnormal results not being acted on quickly (especially when patients rely on portal notifications or brief discharge instructions)
- Handoffs between providers where key symptoms or test results aren’t fully integrated
- Repeat visits because early symptoms were minimized or assigned to the wrong cause
- Triage decisions made under time pressure, where escalation protocols may not have been followed
When AI or automated decision support is part of the workflow—such as risk scoring, imaging support, or documentation assistance—the question becomes more specific: Was the tool used appropriately, and did clinicians verify and escalate when warranted?


