In many Longview cases, the harm doesn’t come from one dramatic mistake. It comes from a chain of events—symptoms get interpreted one way, abnormal findings don’t get escalated, test results don’t reach the right clinician in time, or a recommendation from an automated system is treated as more certain than it is.
AI or automation may be involved in:
- imaging review and prioritization
- risk scoring used for triage
- clinical decision support prompts
- lab interpretation workflows
- documentation or intake processes that shape what gets reviewed
The key legal issue is not whether technology exists—it’s whether the care team met the standard of care for verifying and acting on information available at the time.


