AI made the note easy, and that exposed the real problem. The work around every visit ... chart prep, coding, orders, the inbox ... still lands on your providers, who chart at midnight while throughput slips. The Clinical Intelligence Platform completes the whole patient journey: AI carries the volume, a US-based clinical specialist owns the judgment. Your providers go from buried to fully present with patients again.
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Put an AI scribe on the visit and the note gets faster. Then you notice the note was never the hard part. The work around every visit ... the chart prep before, and the coding, the orders, the referrals, the inbox, and the follow-ups after ... still lands on your providers. So they chart at 10pm, your best people burn out, earned revenue leaks through missed codes, and dropped follow-ups start putting patients at risk.
It was never about automating the provider. It's about completing the work around them. That's the difference between a faster note and a practice that actually runs.
Leaving the work around the visit half-handled doesn't hold steady. The cost compounds, quarter after quarter, across the provider, the practice, and the patient.
Burnout takes the most conscientious providers first. Every one who walks is months of recruiting and a heavier load on everyone who stays.
Every under-coded or missed visit is reimbursement you earned and didn't collect. It never shows up as a crisis. It just comes off the bottom line.
A lab with no callback, a referral that never went out, a follow-up that slipped. These become repeat visits, worse outcomes, and real risk to safety.
The AI pilot that didn't stick was paid for. Leave it at "good enough" and you keep paying for a tool most providers don't use.
Notes that AI alone got thin or wrong are a compliance exposure, in a climate where that accountability is landing harder on the provider who used the AI.
Budgets tighten every year and liability keeps shifting. Doing nothing isn't holding position. It's falling behind a problem that's getting harder.
The question was never whether to change. It's whether to change while it's still cheap to fix, or after the cost has compounded.
A human at the center, across the whole patient journey. Not just another AI scribe stuck at the note.
Every other tool forces the same question: AI, or no AI? The platform answers a better one. How much human intelligence and judgment do you want in the work? That's the whole mechanism. One platform, one toggle bar, and you decide which responsibilities to take on and which to hand off, for each provider.
What changes from left to right isn't the platform. It's how much risk and manual effort the clinic hands off instead of keeping. This isn't about pushing every clinic to the right. It's being honest about the trade at each setting, so you choose with eyes open.
The toggle bar doesn't sit on the note alone. It runs the entire journey, organized as intelligence layers. The capability stacks as you move right, and we mark what's live and what's expanding, honestly.
The provider walks in prepared. Chart prep, prior visit history, problem-list and medication review, open orders and labs surfaced before the visit starts.
More of the visit with the patient, less time managing the record. The note, the after-visit summary, and the orders discussed in the room, captured around the way the provider actually works.
The practice collects what it earned. Coding completeness, documentation specificity, HCC visibility, level-of-service support, and charge-capture visibility, so reimbursement stops leaking.
The gaps that affect patient care, caught before they're missed. Care-gap visibility, preventive reminders, problem and medication accuracy, and UDS/HEDIS measure visibility.
The setting is chosen per provider. A practice can run its highest-volume providers one way and the rest another, all under one agreement. Start on the left and move right without switching tools, a level of fit no single fixed tool offers.
Most competing tools are a single fixed setting: AI only, the note and not much past it. A tool designed around the algorithm can't bolt a human onto it later and call it the same thing. The human structure is the product, and it has to be built in from the start. That's the moat. It's not a feature they're missing. It's a different model.
You don't assemble features one by one. You choose a configuration. What changes across the three is how much human intelligence stands in the work, and the accountability behind it.
AI captures the visit and drafts the note, self-directed. For the cost-conscious or tech-comfortable provider who's fine owning more of the manual steps, and for any clinic that wants to see the floor for itself before deciding how far past it to go.
AI drafts, and a trained, US-based clinical specialist carries the highest-stakes work, the coding and the orders that drive revenue, where quality and context matter. For the provider who's been burned by an AI-only rollout and wants it actually handled.
AI plus human intelligence across every stage, a clinical specialist at the center of the whole journey, including real-time support during the visit. For the high producer you don't dare slow down, and the senior clinician who never wants to touch the computer.
Set per provider, under one agreement. Run a few high producers on Enterprise and the rest on Professional, all on one contract. Pricing is configuration-based ... talk to us about your practice.
Across Scribe-X accounts, the model shows up as more patients seen, better-captured revenue, and providers who are measurably happier.
Draft note: figures are Scribe-X internal averages, pending verification (sample, time window, comparison group) before publication.
The demand is real, and the independent evidence says AI alone helps modestly, and only when people keep using it. A multisite JAMA study of 1,800+ AI-scribe users found about a 10% cut in documentation time and 0.5 more visits a week. And only about 1 in 3 clinicians used the scribe in more than half their visits. The tool only pays off when a person keeps using it. Most don't.
You're not choosing between Scribe-X and nothing. You're weighing a short list of real options. Name them honestly, and the gap shows itself.
We're built for enterprise community health: FQHCs and their lookalikes, the larger, multi-site organizations carrying the heaviest documentation load with the least room to lose a provider. One platform serves a committee of three, each through their own door.
Owns clinical quality, provider experience, and retention. Feels the human cost first, and when this person is in the room, the deal moves.
Owns the seam between clinical workflow and the EHR, and whether anyone actually adopts the thing. Pragmatic, and a little burned by tools that dazzled in the demo and died in the exam room.
Owns data security, PHI, integration, and AI governance. Risk-first, with one job: keep the organization from getting breached or sued, and stop the pile of overlapping tools from growing.
Three steps, and we carry the load on every one. The clinic carries none of the integration weight. We do.
We map the journey, find where the work is breaking, and set the toggle for each provider. You see your gaps and what they cost before spending a dollar, made concrete by the Practice Health Scorecard.
We turn it on for a few providers in the real workflow, not a demo. Scope, KPIs, and success measures defined up front, in your own terms. We run the rollout; your providers just see their day get better.
Once it's proven, roll it to more providers and move the toggle right as needs grow. Different providers can sit at different tiers under one agreement. Same platform, turned up, no re-implementation.
The failure you fear, another tool switched on that quietly dies, can't play out the same way here. A clinical specialist carries adoption, so there's nothing for a busy provider to get right. The decision is reversible at every step, which is exactly why it's safe to start.
No. AI carries the volume; the product is the human intelligence and judgment on top of it, across the whole journey. The note is the smallest part. If a note is all a clinic needs, the market already sells that, and so do we, as the Essentials floor.
It does, and it's convenient. It's also the AI-only note, and the ROI math behind it assumes your providers see more patients to pay for it, so it takes time rather than gives it back. We finish the work it leaves undone: chart prep, coding, orders, referrals, the inbox, the follow-ups.
Because what didn't stick was AI alone, turned on and handed to the provider to figure out. Here a trained clinical specialist carries the work and owns the accuracy, so there's no rollout for a busy provider to get right. The thing that failed is the thing we replace.
Adoption is our job, not theirs. Because a clinical specialist carries the work, there's nothing for a busy provider to use wrong or quietly abandon. That's the difference between a tool a clinic has to adopt and a service that simply runs.
Our clinical specialists are US-based and the record stays onshore. That's deliberate. In a climate where offshore handling is getting restricted and the legal liability is landing on the provider who used the AI, it reduces the risk a clinic carries instead of adding to it.
Before you spend a dollar, the Practice Health Scorecard shows you where the work around the visit is breaking, and what it's quietly costing your practice. It's the Discover step, productized.
AI carries the volume. A US-based clinical specialist owns the judgment. You decide how much human each provider needs, across the whole patient journey. Let's map yours.