Scribuprofen listens to the visit, writes the note in your style, and remembers every patient — last visit's findings and plan carry into today's draft. Finish charting before you leave the office.
No credit card required · HIPAA compliant · Set up in 2 minutes
How It Works
Start a session and talk to your patient naturally. Scribuprofen listens in the background — ambient or dictation, your choice.
Get a complete clinical note in seconds. Every sentence traces back to your recording. Built from your style, not a generic template.
Copy your note to any EMR with one click. No integrations to configure, no IT department needed.
How It Feels
No buttons to press, no templates to pick. Just talk and your note writes itself.
Agentic Documentation
Scribuprofen doesn't just transcribe — it understands. One sentence is all it takes. It pulls your preferred template, applies the changes you mentioned, and generates a complete operative note. Try that with any other scribe.
"My usual right total knee but we went subvastus, used Stryker Triathlon, and had to do a lateral release."
OPERATIVE NOTE
Procedure: Right Total Knee Arthroplasty
Approach: Subvastus (quadriceps-sparing) — modified from your usual medial parapatellar
Implants: Stryker Triathlon CR system
Additional: Lateral retinacular release performed due to patellar maltracking
+ 12 more sections from your template...
Features
The note is the starting point. The rest of the visit's paperwork comes with it.
Every note you approve teaches it your phrasing, your format, your shorthand. First drafts start sounding like you, not a template.
A dashboard lists every phrase, style rule, and template it has picked up from your notes. Edit or delete any of it.
Prior findings and assessments carry into today's note, with interval changes tracked — no re-dictating the backstory.
"Add risks and benefits." "Include the implant specs." Say it, and the note updates — no typing.
Ask about this patient's history, or tell it to rework a section. It answers without you leaving the note.
SOAP notes, consults, procedures, rounding, operative notes — one tool covers every encounter you document.
ICD-10 and CPT suggestions for every note, grounded in what you documented. You review, you decide.
Referral letters, work notes, clearance requests, patient instructions — drafted from the visit, ready to sign.
Send a pre-visit link: patients answer a guided interview in any of 11 languages. You get a clean English summary before you walk in.
Continuous Learning
Imagine a scribe who has worked alongside you for years — someone who knows your templates, your phrasing, how you close every note. Scribuprofen builds that understanding from your first session, and refines it with every note you approve.
Patient Intake
Send patients a secure link before their visit. An AI-guided interview collects chief complaint, medical history, medications, allergies, and review of systems — all flowing directly into their encounter note.
Inpatient Rounding
Walk the floor, see your patients, and dictate a quick update at each bedside. Scribuprofen remembers yesterday's plan and what you've done so far — then writes a complete progress note that captures exactly what changed. No more catching up at 9 PM.
"Post-op day one right hip. She's doing well, pain controlled on PCA, PT got her up to chair this morning. Wound is clean and dry, no drainage. Pull the Foley today, advance diet, continue DVT prophylaxis."
S: Patient reports pain well controlled. Tolerated PT, mobilized to chair.
O: POD #1 status post R total hip arthroplasty. Afebrile, VSS. Surgical site clean, dry, intact, no erythema or drainage. NV intact distally.
A: Progressing well post R THA. Pain controlled. Mobilizing appropriately.
P: D/C Foley, advance diet to regular, continue enoxaparin DVT prophylaxis, PT BID, reassess PCA tomorrow.
Generated in 8 seconds · 30-second dictation
Why Scribuprofen
See It In Action
"Alright this is Mrs. Patterson, 52, seeing her for right shoulder pain. Been going on about three months, worse with overhead stuff. She's a teacher so she's reaching up at the board all day. Tried ibuprofen, didn't help much. On exam she's got positive Neer's and Hawkins, painful arc midrange, good strength though. Got an MRI showing a partial thickness tear of the supraspinatus. I'm gonna start her on PT, give her a subacromial injection today, and see her back in six weeks."
52-year-old female presenting with 3-month history of right shoulder pain. Pain is exacerbated by overhead activities. Patient is a teacher and reports difficulty reaching overhead at work. She has trialed ibuprofen with minimal relief. No prior injections. No history of trauma.
Right shoulder: Active ROM painful in midrange arc. Positive Neer impingement sign. Positive Hawkins-Kennedy test. Supraspinatus strength 5/5. Infraspinatus and subscapularis strength intact. Neurovascularly intact distally.
MRI right shoulder: Partial-thickness articular-sided tear of the supraspinatus tendon. No full-thickness component. Acromion morphology type II.
Right shoulder impingement syndrome with partial-thickness rotator cuff tear (supraspinatus).
1. Subacromial corticosteroid injection performed today 2. Physical therapy referral — rotator cuff strengthening protocol 3. Activity modification — avoid repetitive overhead reaching 4. Follow up in 6 weeks to reassess 5. Discussed surgical options if conservative management fails
"This is Mr. Chen, day one post-op after cataract surgery on the left eye. He says his vision is already better. No pain, no flashes or floaters. On exam the wound is sealed, chamber is deep and quiet, lens is centered. Pressure is 14. I told him to keep using the drops as directed and I'll see him in a week."
Patient presents for post-operative day 1 evaluation following phacoemulsification with posterior chamber intraocular lens implantation, left eye. Reports subjective improvement in vision. Denies pain, photopsia, or floaters.
Left eye: Intraocular pressure: 14 mmHg Slit lamp: Clear corneal incision well-sealed, Seidel negative. Anterior chamber deep and quiet, no cells or flare. PCL well-centered in the capsular bag.
Status post phacoemulsification with PCIOL implantation, left eye — post-operative day 1. Progressing well.
1. Continue current post-operative drop regimen (antibiotic, steroid, NSAID) as prescribed 2. Wear protective shield at night 3. Follow up in 1 week 4. Precautions reviewed: no heavy lifting, no rubbing eye, no swimming
"Do my usual laparoscopic cholecystectomy but we had some dense adhesions at the gallbladder fundus, had to do a subtotal. Critical view was obtained. Used Endo GIA on the cystic duct because the clip wouldn't fit."
Laparoscopic Subtotal Cholecystectomy
The patient was placed supine on the operating table. General anesthesia was induced. A time-out was performed. The abdomen was prepped and draped in standard sterile fashion. Pneumoperitoneum was established via Veress needle technique. A 12mm trocar was placed at the umbilicus. Under direct visualization, three additional ports were placed in standard positions. The camera was advanced. Dense adhesions were encountered at the gallbladder fundus and dissected sharply and bluntly. Due to severe inflammation, a subtotal cholecystectomy was performed. The hepatocystic triangle was dissected and the critical view of safety was obtained, with clear identification of the cystic duct and cystic artery. The cystic artery was clipped and divided. The cystic duct was too large for clip application; it was divided using an Endo GIA stapler. The gallbladder was dissected from the liver bed using electrocautery. Hemostasis was achieved. The specimen was placed in an endocatch bag and removed through the umbilical port. All ports were removed under direct visualization. Fascia was closed at the umbilical site. Skin was closed with subcuticular sutures and dermabond. The patient was extubated and transferred to recovery in stable condition.
Dense adhesions at gallbladder fundus consistent with chronic cholecystitis. Cystic duct dilated, unable to accommodate standard clip application. No bile duct injury identified. No stones spilled.
To PACU in stable condition. EBL minimal. All counts correct.
Works Everywhere
Between patients, between rooms, between surgeries — pull out your phone and start recording. Scribuprofen works in any browser on any device. No app to download, no IT to involve.
Built for healthcare from the ground up. Every layer — from how we handle recordings to how notes are stored — was designed with patient privacy first.
Pricing
Two plans. No hidden fees. No per-note charges.
or $79/mo billed annually
per provider
No credit card required
or $169/mo billed annually
per provider
Everything in Core, plus:
"One properly coded procedure covers the month"
Try 10 FreeNo credit card required
Group pricing available for practices with 5+ providers
FAQ
Join physicians who are getting their evenings back.
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