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.
Consent captured section by section
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.