Ambience Healthcare Aims To Reduce Clinician Burnout With New AI Medical Scribe

Ambience Healthcare’s new product, AutoScribe, embeds into the electronic medical record and works in real-time. When clinicians use AutoScribe, they speak to their patient as they normally would while the software listens in the background. Immediately after the visit, the physician gets a draft of the medical notes from the meeting, and then they can edit the notes if needed.

Physicians spend more than 16 minutes on average per patient visit using electronic health records (EHRs), research shows. At a time when clinician burnout is at an all-time high, one company is trying to reduce the burden of administrative tasks.

San Francisco-based Ambience Healthcare, a healthcare software company, launched Thursday its AI medical scribe called AutoScribe. The product embeds into the electronic medical record and works in real-time. The company, which has raised $30 million, created the product out of two years of research and development.

When clinicians use AutoScribe, they speak to their patient as they normally would while the software listens in the background. Immediately after the visit, the physician gets a draft of the medical notes from the meeting, and then they can edit the notes if needed. The notes from AutoScribe provide information on the patient, the symptoms the patient mentioned and the care plan the physician recommended. If the care plan changes in the middle of the visit based on new information the patient provides, the scribe updates to only include the new care plan.

AutoScribe is able to pick up on the medically relevant parts of the visit and differentiate from small talk. It also organizes content by each unique problem, can pick up on multiple speakers and is multilingual. Additionally, the notes can be customized to the clinician’s preferences.

The product is beneficial for three main reasons, argued Nikhil Buduma, co-founder and chief scientist of Ambience Healthcare. One, it reduces the administrative burden for clinicians so they don’t have to take the notes themselves or sift through a transcription to find the relevant information from the visit. It also helps with reimbursement, as the CPT codes that physicians use to bill for insurance have to be supported by the documentation. Lastly, it helps in the case of a malpractice suit if a physician needs to go back and see why they decided on the treatment path they did.

“If you’re a provider, you’re going to come back and see this patient later,” Buduma said in an interview. “In a raw transcript format, it’s really hard for you to figure out what exactly is going on. But if you read the [AutoScribe] note, it’s actually much easier for you to understand exactly what’s going on, what the decision was and what the care plan is.”

Focus

AI medical scribe

Client

Ambience Healthcare

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