AI itself isn’t “the defendant.” In real life, the legal question is whether the care team and the facility met the required professional standards when using modern tools.
In Roselle and across Union County, patients commonly move through a mix of settings—primary care, urgent care, imaging centers, hospital systems, and follow-up specialists. That creates more handoffs, more places for abnormal results to be delayed, and more documentation that must be accurate.
Problems we see in diagnostic-error investigations often include:
- Automated triage or risk scoring that leads to the wrong urgency level or underestimates severity
- Clinical decision support that is treated like a final answer rather than one input among many
- Imaging or lab interpretation workflows where outputs aren’t verified against the full record
- Documentation gaps after an abnormal result, discharge, or referral
The key is connecting the dots between what was known at the time, what the tool suggested, what clinicians did (or didn’t do) next, and how the delay or error affected outcomes.


