Product
What actually happens in a DScribe hospital
Here's a normal day with DScribe — not a feature list, but what your people experience.
On rounds, nothing looks different
Your consultant carries a tablet instead of a file. They write the progress note by hand, with a stylus, exactly as they would on paper. Same speed. Same shorthand. Clinicians who've rejected every traditional EMR have nothing to reject here — there's no form, no dropdown, no typing.
The moment the pen lifts, the hospital has the note
The nurse at the station sees the new orders without walking to find the file. Pharmacy sees the prescription. MRD has the record filed automatically. The billing desk isn't waiting for the file to “come down.” One note, written once, available everywhere it's authorised to be.
Behind the scenes, the record gets organised
Every admission builds a complete, chronological, retrievable record — every note, every department, in one place. When a patient returns, the history is seconds away. When an auditor or insurer asks, the record is complete. Your clinicians did nothing extra to make that happen.
The difference
Why traditional EMRs couldn't do this
Traditional EMRs were designed for Western healthcare — fewer patients per doctor, more time per consultation, structured data entry as the default. In an Indian ward, that model collapses under real patient volumes. DScribe inverts it: instead of changing the clinician to fit the software, the software is built around how Indian clinicians already work. That's the difference between a system that gets deployed and a system that gets used.
Scope
What DScribe deliberately doesn't do
DScribe is not an order-entry system you must learn, not a billing platform, and not a patient app. It does one thing — clinical documentation at the bedside — and does it in a way your clinical team genuinely accepts. Your existing systems stay.
Watch it live in a hospital like yours
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