Garfield Heights is a busy suburban community with regular access to regional hospitals, urgent care, imaging centers, and specialist referrals. That matters because diagnostic errors often happen at the handoffs—when someone is moved from one setting to another, when results are routed through electronic systems, or when follow-up is delayed.
In local cases, delays can occur when:
- abnormal results aren’t acted on quickly after an ER visit or outpatient imaging
- someone is discharged with instructions that don’t match the test findings
- follow-up appointments in the same week slip because of scheduling gaps or communication breakdowns
- records are incomplete when care shifts between facilities
When AI- or automation-assisted tools are involved, the risk isn’t simply that “a computer was wrong.” The legal issue is whether the care team handled the information appropriately—verified it, escalated when needed, and documented what they relied on.


