In Effingham, patients may receive care at facilities that rely on advanced electronic systems for imaging, charting, and clinical support. When people say “AI” in their surgery records, they’re often referring to things like:
- Automated or machine-drafted documentation that later gets edited
- Imaging-related reports generated with decision-support tools
- Clinical decision aids that influence risk scoring or next-step recommendations
- Transcription, summarization, or workflow software that affects how information is recorded
The key point: even if no one intentionally used “AI” incorrectly, an AI-assisted workflow can still create safety gaps—for example, when outputs weren’t properly checked, when warnings weren’t acted on, or when critical details were incomplete.
We review what your records actually show—then translate it into a legal theory the other side must address.


