Abstract
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: There is growing evidence to support ambient artificial intelligence (AI) scribes in healthcare to improve medical documentation by generating timely and comprehensive notes. Using the Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) methodology, this study evaluated the utility and potential time savings of an ambient AI scribe, Scribeberry, (V2), in a palliative medicine outpatient setting, comparing it to the standard practice of dictation. METHODS: This prospective quality improvement study was conducted at an academic medical center by two palliative medicine resident physicians. Residents documented patient visits using a freely available ambient AI scribe software program, Scribeberry, as well as using standard dictation software. Primary outcome measures included the editing time for the AI scribe and the dictating and editing times for a dictated manuscript, as well as subjective assessments of the accuracy, organization, and overall usefulness of the AI-generated clinical letters. RESULTS: A heterogenous response was seen with the implementation of an AI scribe. One resident saw a statistically significant reduction (p < 0.025) in the time spent on clinical documentation, while a second resident saw essentially no improvement. The resident who experienced time savings with the ambient AI scribe also demonstrated a significant improvement in the graded organization and usefulness of the AI outputs over time, while the other resident did not demonstrate significant improvements in any of the metrics assessed over the course of this project. CONCLUSIONS: This pilot study describes the use of an ambient AI scribe software program, Scribeberry, in the community palliative medicine context. Our results showed a mixed response with respect to time savings and improvements in the organization, accuracy, and overall clinical usefulness of the AI-generated notes over time. Given the small sample size and short study duration, this study is insufficiently powered to draw conclusions with respect to AI scribe benefits in real-world contexts.