In Clarksville, diagnostic problems frequently surface through everyday patterns:
- Repeat visits after symptoms worsen. People may return to urgent care or the ER as conditions progress, only to receive the correct diagnosis later.
- Imaging and lab handoffs. A patient may be told they’re fine after an initial interpretation, then the record later shows abnormalities weren’t acted on quickly.
- Busy systems and high patient flow. High-volume facilities can develop bottlenecks—follow-up instructions may get lost, results may be delayed, or abnormal findings may not be escalated.
When automation is involved, residents sometimes assume the system was “just a tool.” But in real cases, the legal issue is often whether clinicians and facilities treated automated outputs as reliable guidance when they should have verified, escalated, or documented concerns.


