@Medcram

It seems as though many have commented without watching the video. AI in this video is being used to reformat information that you put in to it and to generate a note that meets the criteria for billing. Of course, we also recommend that you review the notes for accuracy. This is not using AI to manage the patient. The same input would be necessary for scribes, which have been an existence for over a decade. Again, I would encourage you to watch the video before commenting. Please join us at Medcram.com for Morekone. Continuing medical education videos 

@richard01983

As a patient, this gives me confidence that the care giver will have more time for my care and future providers will have better and more useful information.  All meaning better care for me.

@DillyDahlia

I’m a retired medical transcriptionist, which was a dying field when I left a few years ago, but it’s dead as a doornail now. I get why AI can be a good thing for efficiency and cost saving, but the doctors I worked for appreciated the value of a skilled transcriptionist in catching their errors (some of which can be quite subtle depending on the specialty and takes a knowledgeable MT to discern). One of the docs even said “If you made as many mistakes as this software does, you’d be fired!” So true.

@sapelesteve

Now that is totally off the medical charts incredible! I sent this video to my cousin (M.D.) who is now in private practice but use to be an E.R. Doc. I am certain that he will find this very interesting. Thanks for posting and hope that all is well!  👍👍

@BeInnovativeToday

I work in the AI space, and I know the CEO of several AI med Note taker softwares, this will be the future for everyone in medicine, in any language!

@incensejunkie7516

I'm in Canada, and my dr has just started using this. I had a good chat with them before I gave consent. Drs can edit information they feel is incorrect. I like that my dr is now focusing  on me, and just not typing what I'm saying onto their laptop. As someone with a chronic illness, this is far better to have my drs full attention. The drs also find it so much better as well.

@weston.weston

I am a clinical trials manager.  We work within departments and clinics and reference the EMR for tons our work too.  We often have to document patient research participation within the EMR. 

This is a helpful topic!

@googacct

I use LLM's quite often for my job as a programmer, but it is great to see how this is being used in the medical profession. 
Hopefully this will allow you spend more time being a doctor and not being a paper pusher.

@WavzonRox39

I reviewed the post visit notes from my video appt, and it was amazingly complete and accurate - many portions verbatim.   It even added that i laughed about being tempted by snacking.

@msemmahale4608

I can actually sit and make eye contact and have a natural conversation with my patients rather than having my nose in a screen and typing frantically.

@JoeGlines-Automator

Great video!  I've been a subscriber for years (learning about the medical field) but it was great watching you cover AI (which is my field).    We create custom tools for Doctors (mostly Radiologists) that leverage AI and help with reporting, image evaluation, etc.    Thank you for sharing your prompts!  I'm sure those took a long time to nail down!

@HappyCat3096

As a patient, now I know why so many of my doctors are head down typing furiously on their laptops during my exams. They spend more time typing than talking to me. Although I have one doc who is old school and talks into a microphone. I guess later a medical transcriptionist will translate it all to digital format. And going back decades, I remember when medical transcriptionists used to type up doctors' notes using a Dictaphone machine. The only time I've seen a scribe is in a Dr Glaucomflecken video. 

This tech is great if it means more time spent with patients and less with machines.

@lamedvav

It’s all about the billing!  
Money and profits.

@qigong1001

I work in health profession, and one of the offices is  using the AI software to takes notes. Its nice, but when its wrong its really really wrong. Like dangerously wrong with names of meds, health history highlights. It also includes too much useless info (even though it claims it filters it out). But we are stuck with it, because it's pushed on the HCP. There is a learning feature, which they keep hyping. So, the promise is "it will get better". But I see no evidence of this. It's just more work editing and fixing, which means less time for patients and doctors. The doctors aren't even checking their notes and they just think it's the best. lol!

@mariesimpson7613

Very impressive.

@sethjchandler

Fantastic video. As a law professor who has been involved in health law, insurance law and who also teaches a class called Large Language Models for Lawyers, I found this fascinating.  Also. This is where we are in 2025. Think about what 2027 looks like. Medicine and law are both going to be transformed.

@DIABETESHEALTHS

Could be a disaster in the waiting. I have seen so many mistakes, especially getting information from and reliable on trustworthy sources.

@ChrisCapoccia

Interesting. It even fixed some dictation glitches like "and PO" was corrected to NPO

@rebeccamatteson9643

I’ll be more impressed when the AI is integrated into the chart such that it pulls from my entered orders, current lab results, radiologic reports automatically to make the A/P, so that all I need to input is the HPI. It looks like it could be a win-win for admin and providers since it could more consistently capture billing and provide prompts to cover “holes” in documentation, so fewer charts bounce back. As demonstrated, this doesn’t really save much time because my EMR’s automatically pull in PMH, current meds, allergies, labs, vital signs. But it would still be interesting to try for my HPI and A/P.

@sheila7814

I have been using AI to answer detailed scientific questions about  the medications I am on for cancer, as well as possible natural ways to help my body fight it. It is great at giving details, cautions, etc.