Specialty · General medicine

Every problem,
on one round.

The multi-problem admission, kept straight as you talk.

A general-medicine patient rarely has one problem. aurii follows you down a problem-by-problem review, drafts the daily progress note across each active issue, reconciles the medications, and writes the GP letter and a discharge the GP can act on — and you review and sign before the next bed.

On the ward round.

A typical review on a general-medicine ward, and what aurii captures as you say it.

Open the patient and start talking

An older patient admitted with a community-acquired pneumonia, on a background of heart failure and type 2 diabetes. You note overnight events, observations, the oxygen requirement and how the patient is overall. aurii is listening and structuring as you speak.

Work problem by problem

The pneumonia and antibiotic day, the fluid balance and the heart failure, the glycaemic control, renal function and electrolytes. aurii keeps each active problem as its own thread, so the multi-problem picture stays legible rather than collapsing into one paragraph.

State the plan per problem

Continue and review the antibiotics, gently offload, hold or adjust the relevant medications, repeat the bloods, and the discharge criteria you're working toward. aurii pairs each plan with its problem, ready for the letter and discharge.

Review and sign before you leave the bed

The progress note is drafted in front of you, problem by problem. You correct anything, then sign. Nothing is filed until you do — and the GP letter, the discharge and the billing all draw from the same signed update.

What aurii drafts.

One spoken review, the full set of medical documents — each a draft until you sign it.

The daily progress note

A structured note built around the problem list — observations and overnight events up top, then each active problem with its own assessment and plan, so a complex admission reads clearly day to day.

Medication reconciliation

aurii captures the changes you call during the round — what's started, stopped, held or adjusted, and why — and carries them into a clean reconciled list for the discharge, with the reasons attached. You confirm it.

The GP & referrer letters

A letter back to the referring GP and, where relevant, any specialist referrers — the admission, the issues addressed problem by problem, the medication changes, and exactly what you'd like the GP to monitor and follow up.

The discharge summary

The problem list and what was done for each, the in-hospital course, the reconciled medications with changes flagged, outstanding results to chase, red flags, and the follow-up — written so the GP can pick the patient up without guesswork.

The private health fund billing

aurii captures the billing items typical to the medical admission — the attendances and reviews across the stay, and complexity where it applies — as a draft for you to check against what was actually done, then confirm. It surfaces the items; you decide what's billed.

Nothing without your signature

Every one of these stays a draft until a named specialist reviews and signs it. aurii proposes the documents; you remain responsible for the clinical content and what goes out in your name.

What it actually drafts

A problem-by-problem progress note.

An illustrative example of the daily note aurii drafts from one spoken general-medicine review — yours to correct and sign.

Illustrative example · synthetic patient · every aurii draft is reviewed and signed by a specialist before anything is filed.

aurii is a documentation tool, not a diagnostic device. It drafts notes and billing items for your review; it does not diagnose, decide medication changes or decide what is claimable. You confirm every change and every item before anything is filed or billed.

Built around a busy list.

A general-medicine round is long and the patients are complex. aurii is built so review-and-sign fits between beds, not at the end of the day.

Sign at the bedside, not at 8pm

The note is ready to read the moment you finish speaking. You sign it there, problem by problem, while the plan for each issue is exactly as you intended — the documentation doesn't follow you home.

The problem list stays straight

Because aurii keeps each active problem as its own thread across the admission, a long, multi-problem stay never blurs into one block of text — every issue carries its own assessment and plan, day to day.

A discharge that's mostly done

Each day's signed note and the running medication reconciliation feed the discharge, so the summary is already most of the way written when the patient is ready to go. You finish the follow-up and sign.

It reaches the GP, not a fax tray

Letters and the discharge can be delivered over HL7 v2 with Medical Objects connectivity, so they land in the right Australian practice inbox rather than a fax machine.

Run a round with aurii.
Sign before you leave the ward.

Bring a typical multi-problem admission. We'll show you the problem-by-problem note, the medication reconciliation, the letters, the discharge and the billing — and where you review and sign.

hello@aurii.com.au · SYD primary // MEL backup // always doctor-signed