By AIM · AIM Media House
The Neurology Center of New England, a Massachusetts neurological care provider that manages more than 2,700 patients each month, reported saving between two and four hours per day on clinical documentation after deploying the Sunoh.ai medical scribe within its eClinicalWorks electronic health record (EHR) system.
The announcement came from eClinicalWorks on June 4 and highlights how specialty practices are increasingly using ambient AI tools to reduce documentation workloads and complete notes during patient encounters. “I spend more time with patients and less time typing,” Dr.
Maria Bartkus, Neuromuscular Specialist at the Neurology Center of New England, said in a statement. “Now there is more eye contact with patients, and I feel less stressed.
I complete my notes almost entirely during the encounter.” According to the company, the AI tool captures patient-provider conversations and generates clinical documentation within the EHR.
Bartkus said the system records information discussed during appointments, including MRI findings, laboratory results, and medications. AI Documentation Expands Into Specialty Care The deployment adds to growing adoption of ambient AI documentation systems across healthcare organizations.
Recent implementations have focused on reducing administrative work that often extends beyond clinic hours. Similar efforts can be seen as ambient AI documentation systems gain wider adoption across health systems. Neurology practices present a particularly demanding documentation environment.
Providers often manage chronic neurological conditions that require detailed patient histories, imaging reviews, medication adjustments, and long-term disease monitoring. Bartkus said the technology has reduced after-hours charting responsibilities.
“Everything discussed during the encounter is captured, including MRI findings, labs, and medications.
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