An AI medical scribe and clinical co-pilot for doctors in India and the UK. Every AI suggestion is born amber — and only the doctor’s hand turns it green.
Scroll to walk through a hospital that runs on Nadix ↓
The OPD queue is ready before the doctors are — cardiology to paediatrics. A new patient is registered in seconds, on the front-desk tablet.
No keyboard between them. Nadix listens — with the patient’s consent, and only after it.
They speak the way Chennai speaks — Tamil and English, mid-sentence.
The transcript appears live, in both languages, word by word.
When the visit ends, a clinical note is born — amber. Unreviewed. Not yet a record.
It turns green only under her hand. She edits, she signs — or she rejects it.
Then the prescription writes itself. After she signs that too.
No patient in the room. She seeds the case, probes the edge cases across turns, then asks Nadix to crystallise the thinking into a plan. Which she signs.
Members, roles and invitations in one place. Only NMC-verified clinicians can practise — a flagged verification waits for human review, never auto-approval. Admins manage; they cannot touch clinical records.
Every access, every approval, every consent — appended to a tamper-evident, hash-chained audit trail. Consent is per-purpose and revocable, DPDP-first. Built as a regulated medical device, because it is one.
Nadix is in pilot with hospitals and clinics in Chennai. Bring it to yours.