MedFlow

Seamless clinical note-takingfor your healthcare practice

AI that turns conversations into medical notes
services to help you get it back.

Contact us for free Demo!
Time Saved: Documentation
90%

Reduce clinical note taking time by 90%, giving doctors more time for patient care.

Voice-Powered AI

Real-time voice recognition converts patient conversations into structured clinical notes

Note Enhancement
85%

Increases the accuracy of your handwritten notes by 85%, ensuring comprehensive and precise clinical documentation

Example Generated Notes

See how our AI transforms brief notes into comprehensive clinical documentation

Abdullah Alsalem

DOB: March 8, 1952 | Age: 72 | MRN: 987654321

Background

72-year-old man with history of high blood pressure, diabetes, and chronic kidney disease (stage 3). Takes lisinopril, metformin, and aspirin daily.

Chief Complaint

"I've been feeling very tired and short of breath for about a week."

History of Present Illness

Patient reports one week of worsening shortness of breath, now needing extra pillows at night to breathe comfortably. He also notices swelling in his feet and legs, and feels unusually tired with small amounts of activity. No chest pain, fever, cough, or recent illness. Eating and drinking normally, no weight loss.

Denies: chest pain, fainting, fever, cough, vomiting.

Not assessed: prior heart ultrasound results, smoking history, family history of heart disease.

Exam Findings

• Blood pressure 160/92, heart rate 102, oxygen 90% on room air

• Patient looks tired but alert, speaking in full sentences

• Lungs: crackling sounds at both bases

• Heart: regular rhythm, no murmurs heard

• Legs: swelling up to mid-shin, skin tight but not red

• Neck veins look raised (sign of fluid buildup)

Assessment

• Most likely diagnosis: fluid buildup from worsening heart failure

• Other possible causes: lung infection, blood clot in lungs, worsening kidney function

Plan

• Admit to hospital for treatment and close monitoring

• Give water pill through IV to help remove extra fluid

• Order chest x-ray, blood tests (kidney, heart enzyme, infection markers), and EKG

• Continue blood pressure medicine but hold diabetes pill until kidney function is checked

• Oxygen as needed to keep levels above 94%

• Daily weight checks and limit fluid intake

• Heart specialist to evaluate tomorrow

• Safety: tell patient to report chest pain, worsening breathing, or confusion immediately

• Follow-up: recheck symptoms and lab results in the morning