# DScribe > DScribe is paperless clinical documentation for Indian hospitals. Doctors and nurses keep writing by hand — with a stylus on a tablet instead of paper. The moment a note is finished it is instantly digital, shared across nursing, pharmacy, medical records and administration, and filed automatically. No typing, no templates, no scanning, and no workflow change for clinicians. DScribe is the clinical documentation layer — not an EMR, not an HMS, not a billing system. It runs alongside a hospital's existing systems and replaces the paper file, not the software they have already invested in. It is built ground-up for Indian hospitals — for our patient volumes, consultant-led high-volume wards, and the way our clinicians actually work — by Unriddle Technologies Private Limited (Shivamogga, Karnataka, India). DScribe runs today in 40+ hospitals across Karnataka: 100% implemented, 100% paperless medical records, with 2,500+ doctors, nurses and staff using it daily. Not a pilot anywhere, not a partial rollout anywhere. ## Pages - [Homepage](https://dscribe.in/): What DScribe is and why hospitals adopt it — the paperless wedge, why traditional EMRs die in Indian wards, what changes by role, and answers to common buyer questions. - [How DScribe works](https://dscribe.in/product): A normal day with DScribe — what consultants, nursing, pharmacy and MRD actually experience on rounds and after, plus what DScribe deliberately does not do. - [For hospitals — outcomes by role](https://dscribe.in/for-hospitals): The business case decision-maker by decision-maker: CEO/COO, CMO, Nursing, MRD/Quality/NABH and CFO/insurance — the specific pain each one solves. - [About DScribe](https://dscribe.in/about): Why DScribe exists, how it was built inside Indian hospital wards over two years, and the team behind it. - [Book a call](https://dscribe.in/book-a-call): Request a call-back from the DScribe team to see the product live in a hospital like yours. (A call-back request — you submit, the team calls you.) - [Blog](https://dscribe.in/blog): Practical guides on hospital documentation, NABH, ABDM and making Indian hospitals paperless. ## Key facts - Category: clinical documentation layer for hospitals — not an EMR, HMS or billing system; it runs alongside them and replaces only the paper file. - How it works: clinicians write by hand on a tablet and stylus exactly as they did on paper; the note is instantly digitised, shared across departments, and filed automatically. Nothing changes for the people writing. - Scale: 40+ hospitals across Karnataka; 100% implemented; 100% paperless MRD; 2,500+ doctors, nurses and staff using it daily. - Deployment: hospital-wide go-live in days, not a months-long IT project — because clinicians need no behavioural training. The DScribe team stays on the ground through go-live. - Outcome hospitals observe: up to a 50% decrease in discharge turnaround time within the first month of going live. - Security & compliance: NABH-aligned audit logging, role-based access, and secure clinical data handling. The hospital owns its data. - Pricing: per tablet, per year (quote provided on a call) — no public price list. - Works across OPD, IPD, ICU and Emergency — wherever clinicians write notes. - Best fit: 50–500 bed multi-specialty hospitals in Tier 2 / Tier 3 India, pre-EMR or running a basic HMS without IPD documentation. - Built by: Unriddle Technologies Private Limited, Shivamogga, Karnataka, India. ## Blog posts - [How to Reduce Discharge Time in Hospitals: A Guide for Indian IPDs](https://dscribe.in/blog/how-to-reduce-discharge-time-in-hospitals-a-guide-for-indian-ipds): Patients who are clinically fit still wait hours to be discharged while new admissions need the bed. This guide explains what actually causes discharge delays in Indian hospitals — and the practical steps that fix them, without burning out doctors or nurses. - [Digital IPD vs Digital OPD: Why Inpatient Digitization Is Fundamentally Different](https://dscribe.in/blog/digital-ipd-vs-digital-opd): Digital IPD is not an extension of digital OPD—it is a fundamentally different problem. OPD digitized easily because workflows are linear and desk-based, while IPD documentation is continuous, happens in motion, and is shared across many departments. - [Digital IPD Documentation: What Actually Changes Inside the Ward](https://dscribe.in/blog/digital-ipd-documentation-dscribe): Digital IPD documentation changes how information flows inside the ward, not how clinicians work. Doctor rounds and nursing notes go digital at the source, the patient file stops blocking departments, and discharge prep starts early—without forcing typing. - [IPD Digitization vs EMR: What Indian Hospitals Get Wrong](https://dscribe.in/blog/ipd-digitization-vs-emr): Having an EMR is not the same as digitizing IPD. EMRs are built for desk-based OPD typing, so wards revert to paper and double documentation. True IPD digitization preserves handwriting, removes single-file dependency, and gives all departments real-time access. - [Why Hospital Digitization Fails in India (And How to Get It Right)](https://dscribe.in/blog/why-hospital-digitization-fails-india): Hospital digitization in India fails because of workflow disruption, not because clinicians resist technology. Forcing typing, rigid templates, and single-file dependency drive staff back to paper. Hospitals succeed by preserving clinical habits and starting with IPD. - [Hospital Digitization in India: Complete Guide for 2026](https://dscribe.in/blog/hospital-digitization-india): Hospital digitization in India means converting paper workflows into unified digital systems—not just buying software. Over 90% of hospitals still run IPD on paper. Success comes from starting with IPD, preserving handwriting, and enabling real-time cross-department access. - [Paperless Hospitals in India: The Practical Guide to Going Digital Without Disrupting Doctors](https://dscribe.in/blog/paperless-hospitals-a-practical-guide): A true paperless hospital isn't an EMR or scanned PDFs—it's documentation created once, digitally, with zero dependency on physical files. Over 90% of Indian IPD records are still paper. The fix is digitizing at the source without forcing doctors to type. - [Paperless Hospitals: A Practical Guide for Indian Healthcare](https://dscribe.in/blog/paperless-hospitals-a-practical-guide-for-indian-healthcare): A paperless hospital makes paper no longer the source of truth—clinical records are created, stored, and accessed digitally. The practical path is to capture handwritten notes at the source, digitize them in real time, and share them across departments incrementally. - [Digital Documentation in Hospitals Is Not an IT Project - It's an Operations Decision](https://dscribe.in/blog/digital-documentation-hospital-operations): Digital documentation in hospitals is an operations decision, not an IT project. Because documentation touches nurse workload, rounds, discharge, billing, and MRD, success comes from clinical-and-operations ownership—measured by time saved and faster discharge. - [Why Doctors and Nurses Resist Digital Documentation — And How Smart Hospitals Solve It](https://dscribe.in/blog/hospital-doctor-digital-documentation): Doctors and nurses don't resist digital documentation—they resist bad workflow design that forces typing and adds steps. High-adoption hospitals preserve natural writing, keep screens simple, and introduce systems quietly, so little training is needed. - [Digital IPD Documentation: How Hospitals Can Improve Efficiency Without Disrupting Care](https://dscribe.in/blog/digital-ipd-documentation-hospitals): Digital IPD documentation lets doctors and nurses keep writing naturally while every note becomes a shared digital record. Instead of one paper file moving between departments, everyone works in parallel—cutting discharge times 40–60% with minimal training. - [Cut Hospital Discharge Time in Half: A Simple, Practical Guide for Hospitals](https://dscribe.in/blog/cut-hospital-discharge-time-in-half): Hospital discharge is slow because too many teams wait on one paper file, forcing a serial process. Making records available to everyone at once through paperless IPD workflows lets departments work in parallel and cuts discharge time by 40–60%. - [Paperless Hospitals: The Simple Shift Transforming Efficiency, Care, and Sustainability](https://dscribe.in/blog/paperless-hospitals-digital-ipd-transformation): Hospitals stick with paper because it feels easy, not because it works—roughly 95% of Indian IPD documentation is still paper. Going paperless with natural, writing-based digital workflows speeds discharges, frees nurse time, cuts costs, and lowers carbon footprint. - [Why Are Hospitals Still Drowning in Paper? And Why It Doesn't Have To Be This Way](https://dscribe.in/blog/why-hospitals-still-use-paper-and-how-to-go-paperless): Hospitals don't resist digitization—they resist disruption, which is why ~95% of Indian IPD records stay on paper. A tablet-and-stylus system that preserves natural writing wins adoption, cutting discharge delays and freeing about a third of nurses' time. ## Contact - Email: contact@dscribe.in - Phone: +91 80955 80975 - Location: Shivamogga, Karnataka, India - LinkedIn: https://in.linkedin.com/company/dscribe-unriddle ## Optional - [Full site content as Markdown](https://dscribe.in/llms-full.txt): every marketing page's complete copy in one file, for deeper questions.