Presence for histories that are hard to tell
Urogynecology begins with disclosures patients have postponed for years. Medical Scribe records the consultation — in the office or by telehealth — and drafts the note afterward, so the incontinence story, its impact on exercise and intimacy, and the patient’s own goals are heard and captured rather than half-typed.
The Urogynecologist’s note, from history to plan
The built-in Urogynecologist’s note — one of 280+ specialty templates — structures the encounter as you chart it: Subjective spanning chief complaint, obstetric and gynecologic history, and medications; Objective with pelvic examination findings, labs, and imaging; Assessment with diagnosis and clinical impression; and Plan covering treatment, prescriptions, patient counseling, and follow-up.
Counseling that leaves a paper trail
No subspecialty has learned the cost of undocumented consent conversations more painfully than urogynecology. Because the note is drafted from the recorded visit, the alternatives you offered and the risks you explained appear because they were said — never inserted by a template — and you review and sign before the note becomes the record.