Emergency Medicine Ambient AI Scribe

Support clinicians in every specialty  before, during and after every touchpoint

For hospitalists managing dozens of critically ill patients with frequent handoffs and complex care requirements, Ambience's inpatient solution provides a structured approach to documentation throughout the patient journey.

$4.50

Average increase in 
revenue per E/M visit

20%

Average increase in clinician face time

78%

Average reduction in documentation time

Your clinicians deserve the best

A seamless workflow in the ED starts with a robust Epic integration: Ambience reads and surfaces ICD-10 diagnosis codes, and writes back to key documentation sections including HPI, PE, results, MDM, attestations, diagnostic results, lab results, ROS, procedures, patient instructions, and more.

Real-Time Note Generation

Pulls relevant labs, orders, vitals, and past notes (including ED and consult notes) into documentation.

Context-aware 
patient summaries:

Automatically generates patient instructions at a clear, patient-friendly reading level, ready upon disposition or discharge.

Smart dictation:

Pulls relevant labs, orders, vitals, and past notes (including ED and consult notes) into documentation.

Integrated Coding and Compliance

Provides real-time coding suggestions (ICD-10, E&M) within the clinical workflow, ensuring accurate billing and compliance.

Referral Letters

Automatically generates referral letters for seamless handoffs between physicians and specialists.

The perfect note, 

tuned for your specialty

Capture every critical detail, including admissions, coordination of care, medical decision-making, multiple speakers, consults, transfers, and disposition planning.

1

Customized provider note templates

Offers flexible configurations to match distinct documentation styles, promoting stronger adoption.

2

Clarity

Standardized opening line in assessment for improved clarity.

3

Medical decision-making (MDM)

Captures comprehensive diagnosis articulation and differential diagnoses in the appropriate format, including a traditional Impression & Plan.

4

Multi-speaker attribution

Distinguishes input from EMS, law enforcement, social workers, family, other ED staff, and specialists, capturing relevant information from each source.

5

Concise evidence

Subjective information and physical exam findings kept brief and only used to provide evidence for differential diagnoses.

6

Procedure capture

Documents fracture care, splinting, lacerations, labs, physical exam findings, and critical care documentation with accuracy.

7

Timestamping

Records the precise time of events, interventions, or consultations–ensuring compliance for time-sensitive ED procedures.

8

Patient disposition

Tracks patient education, management, and care plans, including patient transfer documentation to support EMTALA requirements when needed.

Emergency-Medicine

1. Medical decision-making (MDM):

Captures comprehensive diagnosis articulation and differential diagnoses in the appropriate format, including a traditional Impression & Plan.

2. Medical decision-making (MDM):

Captures comprehensive diagnosis articulation and differential diagnoses in the appropriate format, including a traditional Impression & Plan.

3. Medical decision-making (MDM):

Captures comprehensive diagnosis articulation and differential diagnoses in the appropriate format, including a traditional Impression & Plan.

4. Medical decision-making (MDM):

Captures comprehensive diagnosis articulation and differential diagnoses in the appropriate format, including a traditional Impression & Plan.

Emergency-Medicine

MDM:

Impression/Plan: 45 y.o male with history of diabetes and two prior MIs presenting with two weeks of concomitant chest pain, left arm pain, and swelling in the left LE. Exam did not reveal any tenderness with palpation of the chest, heart with normal rate and rhythm, no pitting edema in bilateral LEs and no significant tenderness with movement of the left arm and shoulder. Labs show elevated troponin at 843 and BNP 835 as well as mild AKI with a creatinine of 1.5. Chest x-ray showed trace right-sided pleural effusion, but no significant consolidations. Given patient’s history and elevated cardiac markers, a cardiac etiology for the chest pain is highly suspected. Initiated heparin for unstable angina and will admit patient to cardiac unit for further management under Dr. Smith; Dr. Smith consulted at 13:00 and he agrees to admit. Patient and his family has been informed of plan to admit and agree with plan.


EKG Report: EKG performed on 02/15 at 11:50 AM. Interpretation: Normal sinus rhythm, 64 beats per minute, no ST elevations, no abnormal T-wave inversions, narrow QRS, normal PR and QT interval. Independently interpreted by me.


Imaging: Chest x-ray shows trace right-sided pleural effusion, but no significant consolidations. I independently interpreted the chest x-ray.


Consideration of Admission: Patient admitted to Cardiology.


Diagnoses: Chest pain; Elevated Troponin

Ambience has been the most transformative thing we’ve done at John Muir Health. When we were looking at different vendors, we wanted to see which of them produced the best note. Documentation needs really vary depending on the setting…and even within the ambulatory specialty, it’s very different what a primary care physician needs versus what a specialist needs.

Priti Patel, MD,
Chief Medical Information Officer

Ambience has been the most transformative thing we’ve done at John Muir Health. When we were looking at different vendors, we wanted to see which of them produced the best note. Documentation needs really vary depending on the setting…and even within the ambulatory specialty, it’s very different what a primary care physician needs versus what a specialist needs.

Priti Patel, MD,
Chief Medical Information Officer

Ambience has been the most transformative thing we’ve done at John Muir Health. When we were looking at different vendors, we wanted to see which of them produced the best note. Documentation needs really vary depending on the setting…and even within the ambulatory specialty, it’s very different what a primary care physician needs versus what a specialist needs.

Priti Patel, MD,
Chief Medical Information Officer