People in Ashland don’t always hear the word “AI” during care. Sometimes it shows up later—through chart language, templated documentation, automated imaging reports, or generated summaries in the medical record.
A surgical injury case may involve AI or automated tools when:
- A radiology or imaging workflow produced an interpretation that didn’t trigger appropriate follow-up.
- Clinical documentation includes machine-assisted or templated text that doesn’t reflect what clinicians actually observed.
- Decision-support outputs influenced planning or risk assessments without adequate verification.
- Electronic records include system-generated entries that conflict with operative or anesthesia notes.
Important: AI tools don’t automatically mean negligence. The legal question is whether the care met the standard expected of a reasonably careful medical team—and whether any AI-related workflow issue contributed to harm.


