Ambient artificial intelligence technology to assist Stanford Medicine clinicians with taking notes – Stanford Medical Center Report
Learn how we are healing patients through science & compassion
Stanford team stimulates neurons to induce particular perceptions in mice’s minds
Learn how we are fueling innovation
Students from far and near begin medical studies at Stanford
Learn how we empower tomorrow’s leaders
Support teaching, research, and patient care.
Support Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford and child and maternal health
Stanford School of Medicine
Stanford Health Care
Stanford Children’s Health
Administration
Aging
Big Data
Biochemistry
Bioengineering
Cancer
Cardiovascular Health
Chemical Biology
Chronic Disease
COVID-19
Developmental Biology
Education
Genetics
Global Health
Health Policy
Hearing
Imaging
Immunology
Infectious Disease
Mental Health
Neuroscience
Nutrition
Obituaries
Pain
Patient Care
Pediatrics
Precision Health
Preventive Medicine
Sleep
Stem Cells
Surgery
Technology
Transplantation
Urology
Women’s Health
Stanford Medicine integrates AI-powered listening technology that takes notes for health care providers, allowing them to spend more time with patients and less time on administrative tasks.
March 11, 2024 – By Hanae Armitage
Technology that listens to conversations and takes notes allows allows health care providers to focus on the patient rather than on documentation.
tippapatt
Clinicians at Stanford Health Care will soon have access to an AI-powered app that can securely listen to interactions with patients and automatically generate draft clinical notes. The app, which was recently tested in a pilot program at Stanford Health Care, harnesses ambient voice recognition technology to create a written summary that captures essential clinical details.
Doctors and other care providers take notes during appointments as a standard practice, often wrapping up patient histories or logging details of care plans after the appointment. The ambient listening technology, DAX Copilot, developed by Nuance Communications, a Microsoft company, is expected to help shoulder much of that workload.
“This can be a meaningful way to allow our clinicians to spend more time with their patients and reduce the burden of administrative, nonclinical work that is a huge source of burnout,” said Niraj Sehgal, MD, chief medical officer at Stanford Health Care.
Through this new effort and others, such as the RAISE Health initiative, Stanford Medicine actively seeks to integrate new AI-driven technologies effectively and responsibly — in this case, to help facilitate the provider-patient connection. “It’s about helping clinicians do more of what they love — talking to patients and focusing on that engagement and therapeutic relationship,” said Michael Pfeffer, MD, Stanford Health Care’s chief information officer.
To use the app, the clinician first obtains consent from the patient to securely record the conversation through an app on their smartphone, then continues with the appointment. Once the recording stops, an algorithm processes the data and, seconds later, generates a draft clinical note.
The technology is able to discern friendly chit-chat from discussions of pertinent health information, effectively becoming an invisible assistant that selectively prioritizes the relevant pieces of the patient’s history and details of their appointment.
The clinician can then review the notes, adding to them or editing them, and approve the final version for the patient’s electronic health record. Throughout the process, all conversations and data remain secure and HIPAA-compliant, said Patricia Garcia, MD, associate chief medical information officer, who, along with Stephen Ma, MD, clinical informatics fellow, helped run the pilot program. Clinicians can add to notes in the patient chart using voice prompts during an appointment; these notes are incorporated into the documentation.
Chief medical information officer Christopher Sharp, MD, who helped lead the pilot program and participated in it, is excited to see how automated and generative AI apps can help boost doctor-patient relationships. “One of the things that was most remarkable to me was my ability to turn away from my keyboard, face the patient and really listen, knowing that everything shared in our conversation was being documented without me having to spend a lot of mental or physical energy capturing it in the moment.”
Starting in the fall of 2023, 48 physicians in a variety of specialties — including primary care, cardiology, orthopedic surgery, rheumatology and neurology — tested the technology.
Through a preliminary survey, about 96% of physicians reported that the technology was easy to use, and 78% reported that it expedited clinical note taking. About two-thirds reported that it saved time.
“That’s the win here,” said Gary Fritz, chief of applications at Stanford Health Care. “An hour saved, for instance, can help rebalance a provider’s too-often overburdened day and cognitive load.”
Stanford Medicine clinical and technology leaders plan to roll out the app to all care providers at Stanford Health Care, including, physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, resident physicians and medical students.
Advances to the technology — such as the ability to customize note style, suggest orders or edit drafts using natural language — are also on the horizon.
“This could have a transformative impact on the way we provide clinical care. AI tools will never replace the clinician, but it might replace parts of their workflow,” Sehgal said. “As people get more comfortable using AI-powered technology, it creates a fertile ground to continue adapting other tools for the workplace that support providers, freeing them to better care for patients.”
About Stanford Medicine
Stanford Medicine is an integrated academic health system comprising the Stanford School of Medicine and adult and pediatric health care delivery systems. Together, they harness the full potential of biomedicine through collaborative research, education and clinical care for patients. For more information, please visit med.stanford.edu.
Leaders from health care, industry and government convened virtually to find ways to ensure artificial intelligence improves care for caregivers as well as patients.
Exploring ways AI is applied to health care
Contact Us
For Media
For Faculty & Staff
News Center
Scope
Stanford Medicine Magazine
Stanford Medicine Children’s Health Blog
About
Contact
Maps & Directions
Careers
Basic Science Departments
Clinical Science Departments
Academic Programs
Vision
This article was autogenerated from a news feed from CDO TIMES selected high quality news and research sources. There was no editorial review conducted beyond that by CDO TIMES staff. Need help with any of the topics in our articles? Schedule your free CDO TIMES Tech Navigator call today to stay ahead of the curve and gain insider advantages to propel your business!

