In the hospital setting, it’s common to see electronic documentation, templated summaries, and software-assisted reporting. But residents often tell us they noticed something that didn’t feel right, such as:
- Operative or post-op notes that read like a “generated” summary rather than a clear account of what occurred
- Imaging interpretation language that seems automated or inconsistent with follow-up findings
- Discharge instructions that don’t match the symptoms they experienced after surgery
- Mentions of clinical decision-support tools without clear explanation of how the care team verified results
None of those details automatically prove negligence. However, in real-world Borger healthcare timelines, small documentation gaps can become major issues—because they determine what experts can evaluate and what insurers will dispute.


