In many surgical cases, the first place you may see AI references is in South Jersey medical documentation—sometimes as software-generated wording, automated summaries, or decision-support language included in the record. That can be alarming, especially when you’re trying to understand why a complication occurred or why certain concerns weren’t acted on.
AI-related concerns can involve:
- AI-assisted planning that may not have been confirmed against real-world patient facts
- Automated documentation that conflicts with what actually occurred in the operating room
- Imaging or analysis tools used for interpretation, triage, or follow-up recommendations
- Clinical decision support outputs that were treated as definitive when they should have been verified
Our job is to sort out the difference between “technology being present” and technology being used in a way that falls short of the standard of care.


