You don’t need to be a tech expert to know something is off. In many Jasper cases, the first red flags appear in the paperwork:
- Operative or follow-up notes that reference automated summaries or decision-support outputs
- Imaging or interpretation language that sounds “generated” rather than clinically explained
- Charting that doesn’t seem to match what you were told to expect
- Documentation timing that raises questions about what was actually verified
AI doesn’t automatically mean negligence. But when automated tools, software-assisted documentation, or AI-influenced clinical workflow are involved, it can introduce new failure points—especially if the information wasn’t reviewed, confirmed, or corrected when it mattered.


