Welcome to Corti Assistant. Whether you are just beginning to use our AI scribe or looking for ways to enhance your documentation practices, this guide will help you unlock more value from the tool. Our goal is to support clinicians in producing clear, accurate, and complete medical notes with minimal additional effort.
Why Thoughtful Documentation Matters
In patient interactions, clinicians naturally balance clarity for the patient with precision for the medical record. For example, you might tell the patient:
“Your symptoms and this ECG suggest you may be having a heart attack.”
However, in the medical note, greater specificity is required: “The 12-lead ECG suggests an anterior wall STEMI.”
Corti Assistant helps bridge this gap by capturing both the patient-friendly communication and the clinical facts needed for high-quality documentation.
Key Techniques to Enhance Your Documentation
Start/Stop Dictation
Start/stop dictation allows you to intentionally control when Corti Assistant is recording during the patient consultation.
You can start recording when you want the Assistant to capture specific parts of the conversation and stop it when you want to pause documentation.
When to use:
Use start/stop dictation during the live interaction. For example:
Start recording as the patient begins describing their symptoms.
Stop recording during sensitive discussions or when input from family members is not relevant to the medical note.
Restart recording when resuming clinical discussion or summarizing the plan.
Purpose:
This technique gives you precise control over what is documented from the live conversation, helping to focus the scribe on relevant clinical dialogue.
Full Ambient
Ambient dictation enables Corti Assistant to passively capture the entire consultation without you needing to start or stop the recording. The Assistant listens continuously during the interaction and generates a structured note from the natural flow of the conversation.
When to use:
Use ambient dictation during routine patient encounters where you want the Assistant to document the complete consultation seamlessly.
Purpose:
This technique minimizes the need for manual control of the scribe and is ideal for situations where you want to focus entirely on the patient, allowing Corti to handle documentation in the background.
Pseudo Dictation
Pseudo dictation refers to recording a summary of clinical findings, decisions, or observations after the patient interaction has ended (or during a natural pause when appropriate). In this method, you narrate key details that were not verbalized during the consultation but are important for the medical record.
When to use:
Use pseudo dictation after the patient encounter to:
Capture findings that you observed but did not say aloud to the patient.
Document the clinical interpretation of data (such as ECG findings, imaging results, or exam observations).
Summarize actions taken or decisions made that were not part of the patient dialogue.
Example:
After the patient leaves, you record:
“The 12-lead ECG shows anterior wall STEMI. Cath lab activated. Aspirin administered at 14:23. Vitals stable.”
Purpose:
This technique helps ensure that key clinical details, interpretations, and actions are documented clearly, supplementing what was captured during the patient dialogue.
Summary of Techniques
Technique | When to use | What it captures |
Start/Stop Dictation | During the live consultation | Specific parts of the conversation that you choose to record |
Full Ambient | Throughout the entire consultation | The full natural dialogue, captured passively |
Pseudo Dictation | After the consultation or during a pause | Your spoken summary of findings, interpretations, and actions not part of the dialogue |