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A new AI tool at Denver Health means your doctor will see you now (and not their screen)

A big white horizontal sign reads "Denver Health" in blue capital letters. Below it in red letters reads "Est.1860." There's a blue heart with a red top on the left hump of the heart to the left of the Denver Health text. Behind the sign is the Denver Health hospital.
Kathryn Scott
/
Special to The Colorado Sun
Main entrance to Denver Health on Monday, October 21, 2024. The program Denver Health uses comes from a company called Nabla, and since it was developed specifically for use in medicine, it is trained not to trip up on complex medical jargon or tongue-twister drug names, in the way that more generic AI transcription services might.

DENVER Dr. Daniel Kortsch is a pretty popular guy these days in the hallways of Denver Health, the hospital where he works in primary care.

Colleagues come up to him for spontaneous hugs. Hes received at least one box of chocolates.

The reason for this affection has to do with Kortschs other job at the hospital as chief medical information officer, sort of a guru at the intersection of technology and patient care. After months of testing, Denver Health is now widely rolling out an artificial intelligence program that helps doctors transcribe conversations with patients and then convert them into notes that can be entered into the hospitals electronic medical records system.

Sound simple enough? Well, for doctors overburdened with tedious documentation work long after their day at the clinic is over, it is life-changing.

Its transformational, Kortsch said. I think it is the most transformational technology I have seen in my medical practice, ever.

Artificial intelligence has for years now been making its way into patient rooms and medical records in Colorado, whether that is or to spot health risks . But Denver Healths use of AI highlights another front: The potential for AI programs to make doctors workflow a little less clunky and burdensome.

The program Denver Health uses comes from a company called Nabla, which now counts 50,000 doctors and other medical practitioners across the globe but mostly in the United States as adopters. The Nabla program supports 35 languages, and it integrates directly with a hospitals medical record system.

To read the entire story, visit .

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