Many Huntley residents receive care at hospitals and outpatient centers across the region, where electronic documentation and software-assisted workflows are common. That’s not automatically bad—technology can improve accuracy and efficiency.
But problems can arise when:
- A generated summary or templated note doesn’t match what actually happened in the operating room
- Imaging interpretation appears automated, while the clinical follow-up looks delayed or incomplete
- Decision-support outputs weren’t verified before they influenced treatment decisions
- Key safety steps were documented in a way that doesn’t align with the clinical timeline
If your records raise questions about how a clinician used (or relied on) AI-related tools, you deserve a legal review that treats those details as evidence—not as background noise.


