In many local cases, families don’t start by searching for “AI.” They start by asking why the story changed.
Common signals you may see in your chart or discharge paperwork include:
- Auto-generated summaries that omit key details or describe steps you don’t recognize
- Imaging interpretation references that don’t reflect what was communicated to you
- Decision-support prompts or “risk score” language that appears without showing how clinicians verified it
- Inconsistent operative or nursing documentation across visits, facilities, or time windows
- Notes that are unusually vague, overly polished, or difficult to match to the clinical timeline
These clues don’t automatically prove wrongdoing. But in a medical negligence case, they can be important—because the legal question is whether the care team met the standard of care and whether any AI-related errors (or overreliance) factored into the outcome.


