Many people hear “AI” and assume it’s either magic or irrelevant. In real life, the most common scenario isn’t that an algorithm “decides” your condition—it’s that automated tools affect the workflow.
For example, in settings common to the Hewitt/Waco region (urgent care, hospital outpatient departments, imaging centers, lab systems, and tele-triage), automated components may:
- Flag a risk score or suggested condition that becomes the starting point for treatment
- Route patients to the wrong level of care or next step
- Summarize symptoms in a way that clinicians must rely on under time pressure
- Influence how imaging or lab information is highlighted in the chart
- Affect what gets documented and what doesn’t
A lawyer looks closely at whether the care team treated automation outputs as advisory instead of definitive, and whether the patient’s presentation required additional verification.


