Three,six,fiveonnumberthree.
The x-ray reads the moment it's captured. Perio is charted by voice. The visit writes its own note, the plan prices itself, and nothing leaves the Rx pad unchecked. Every clinical wonder — one record, one login.
Call the pocket depths out loud and the chart writes itself. Every radiograph is segmented and annotated the instant it's captured — caries scored tooth by tooth, bone loss, calculus. The record keeps up with the operatory, not the other way around.
Three,six,fiveonnumberthree.
Skia — FDA 510(k) clearance pending. It flags, you diagnose.
An ambient AI listens in the operatory and turns the conversation into a structured SOAP note — in dental language, with ADA codes — ready for your review and sign-off before you leave the chair. Nothing posts on its own.
Lay out several plans at once, phased and sequenced by priority. Every line splits into what insurance is estimated to cover and what the patient owes — so the conversation is honest before you present, not after. The patient e-signs from their phone, and the pre-authorization assembles itself.
Every prescription runs the gauntlet before it can send — drug‑allergy, drug‑drug interaction, dose, PDMP, and formulary. Hard stops for real conflicts, soft notices for the rest. Controlled substances go out on EPCS with the DEA two‑factor step, and everything rides Surescripts.
Every case rides one status ladder — impression, sent, in production, shipped, seated — routed to the right lab, or several at once. The prescription builds itself from the plan, the scan and the notes, and tooth number, shade, margin and material are validated before it sends.
Twenty minutes on your own cases — the x-ray read on capture, the perio charted by voice, the note that writes itself, the plan the patient e-signs. One record, no stitching six vendors together.
Runs on the imaging hardware you already own · migrates from your current PMS · every AI action is drafted for a human to approve and fully audited.
How the AI actually behaves in the operatory — who signs, what it reads, and where the numbers come from.
No. The ambient scribe drafts a SOAP note and the plan prices itself, but both stay drafts until a clinician reviews and signs. On the Rx pad, allergy and interaction checks are hard stops — a human authorizes every script. Nothing posts on its own, and every edit between draft and signature is logged with who changed what.
The moment a sensor captures an image, Skia surfaces a second read — suspected caries, bone levels, and other findings — right beside the x-ray. It flags; the dentist confirms or dismisses every finding. It assists the read, it never diagnoses on its own or files anything unreviewed.
No. Call depths aloud the way you already do and voice charting fills the perio grid hands-free, flagging 4mm-plus pockets and bleeding as you go. Any number is correctable by voice or click, so a misheard reading is a one-tap fix, not a re-chart.
The plan prices itself from the patient's verified insurance coverage and your practice's fee schedule — not a guess. The estimate a patient reviews and e-signs is the same math you bill against, so there's no surprise between acceptance and the statement.
Ambient capture is processed into a structured note; audio handling follows your practice's retention policy, runs under a signed BAA, and is encrypted in transit and at rest. Patients are notified through your own consent flow before anything listens.