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AI Medical Scribe for

Laboratory Hematologists

Your patient-facing work — iron infusion consents, anemia consults, results discussions — creates documentation on top of the reports you already write. Medical Scribe drafts the consent record and consult note from the conversation itself.

Sample note

What your notes will look like

A real example of the documentation Medical Scribe generates for laboratory hematologists — ready as soon as you finish dictating.

Iron Infusion Consent Ready to copy

Section A: Capacity and Decision-making

Patient has capacity to consent to the procedure. No substitute decision-maker required. No interpreter required.

Section C: Procedure Request

Ferric carboxymaltose 1000mg IV infusion for iron deficiency anemia. 38F with menorrhagia; Hb 9.2 g/dL, ferritin 6 µg/L, transferrin saturation 4%. Intolerant of oral iron — GI upset on ferrous sulfate 325mg despite dose adjustment.

Section D: Patient-Specific Risks

  • History of mild asthma — hypersensitivity reaction risk discussed, monitoring plan explained
  • Skin staining at infusion site in the event of extravasation
  • Hypophosphatemia, particularly with repeat ferric carboxymaltose dosing

Section E: Risks of Not Having an Iron Infusion

Progressive anemia with worsening fatigue and exertional intolerance; potential future need for blood transfusion if Hb continues to fall.

Section F: Alternative Treatment Options

Alternate-day oral iron retrial, IV iron sucrose in divided doses, and gynecology referral for management of underlying menorrhagia — discussed; patient elects single-dose ferric carboxymaltose.

Illustrative example. Every note is fully editable, and you control the format — SOAP, DAP, or your own custom template.

The lab work is written; the patient work still needs writing up

Consent is a conversation and a form

An iron infusion consent means documenting capacity, the specific procedure, patient-specific risks, risks of declining, and alternatives — every element, every patient.

The same infusion discussion, over and over

IV iron consents are high-volume and near-identical, yet each one still has to be individually documented with that patient's history, intolerances, and risk profile.

Clinical sessions squeeze reporting time

Consults, MDT meetings, and clinician callbacks sit alongside film review and report sign-out. Documentation that trails the conversation eats into the bench work.

AI-Powered Documentation

Real-time transcription that understands medical terminology and clinical context.

Specialty Vocabulary

Recognizes terms, conditions, and procedures specific to your practice area.

Save Hours Daily

Generate comprehensive clinical notes in minutes instead of hours.

HIPAA Compliant

Enterprise-grade encryption and security to protect sensitive data.

Built-in templates

Note templates built for laboratory hematologists

These aren't generic formats — they ship in the product today, structured around how you actually document.

Iron Infusion Consent

Plus 280+ templates across every specialty — or build your own in minutes.

For the clinical hours of a laboratory hematologist

Laboratory hematology is mostly written work already — but the consents, patient consults, clinician callbacks, and MDT discussions are spoken, and they still need a record. Medical Scribe records those conversations, in person or by telehealth, and drafts structured documentation you review and sign, so the clinical session doesn’t cost you the reporting session.

The built-in Iron Infusion Consent template maps the discussion into its formal structure — Capacity and Decision-making, Interpreter Requirement, Procedure Request, Patient-Specific Risks, Risks of Not Having an Iron Infusion, Alternative Treatment Options, and Clinician Information — populated only from what was actually discussed. Custom templates for other consents or consult formats take minutes.

An honest record when it counts

Consent documentation gets examined precisely when something goes wrong. Medical Scribe never invents clinical content: the risks in the document are the risks you named, the alternatives are the ones you offered. That fidelity is what makes the record defensible.

Frequently asked questions

Can it really produce a consent document, not just a visit note?

Yes. The built-in Iron Infusion Consent template structures the conversation into its formal sections — capacity, interpreter requirement, procedure request, patient-specific risks, risks of declining, alternatives, and clinician details — ready for review and signature.

Most of my output is reports, not visit notes. Where does this fit?

Medical Scribe documents the spoken side of your role: consent discussions, anemia and hemostasis consults, MDT case discussions, and dictated case summaries. It drafts structured documents from what you say; it does not read slides or analyzers.

Will it add clinical details I didn't state?

No. It only documents what was said or dictated — lab values, history, risks discussed. If you didn't mention it, it is not in the draft, and you review and sign everything before it stands as the record.

How is the audio protected?

Medical Scribe is HIPAA compliant, encrypted in transit and at rest, and works across iOS, Android, Web, Apple Watch, and Mac in 57 languages.

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