Many Cayce residents receive care through a mix of urgent settings, hospital visits, imaging centers, and follow-up appointments. Diagnostic mistakes often show up as:
- Abnormal results not acted on promptly (or not communicated clearly)
- A patient “ruled out” too early after a brief exam or triage screen
- Test results delayed while symptoms continue to worsen
- Follow-up instructions that don’t match the severity of what the clinician observed
When AI- or software-assisted tools are part of the workflow, the risk can increase when outputs are treated as more certain than they really are—especially when a patient’s symptoms don’t fit neatly into a prediction model.
In South Carolina, the practical effect is the same: you need a clear timeline showing what was known, when it was known, and what should have happened next.


