The post-op round,
written as you go.
Drains, diet, wound, plan — said once, drafted in full.
A general-surgical list moves fast and the notes pile up: the daily post-op review, the operation note, the letter back to the GP, the discharge. aurii drafts all of it from the way you already talk through a patient — and you review and sign before you move to the next bed.
On the ward round.
A typical post-operative review on a general-surgical ward, and what aurii captures as you say it.
Open the patient and start talking
Day-two post laparoscopic appendicectomy. You note observations, that the abdomen is soft and non-tender, the wounds are clean and dry, and the patient is tolerating diet. aurii is listening and structuring as you speak.
Cover the surgical specifics
Drain output and whether it's coming out, analgesia and the move to oral, return of bowel function, mobilising, and the wound check. The detail a surgical note lives or dies on — captured in the order you say it, not forced into a fixed template.
State the plan
Remove the drain, continue simple analgesia, mobilise, and plan for discharge tomorrow with wound-care advice and a GP follow-up. aurii separates today's assessment from the plan, ready for the documents that follow.
Review and sign before you leave the bed
The progress note is drafted in front of you. You correct anything, then sign. Nothing is filed until you do — and the GP letter, discharge and billing draw from the same signed update.
What aurii drafts.
One spoken review, the full set of surgical documents — each a draft until you sign it.
The progress note
A structured post-op note — observations, the focused abdominal and wound exam, drains and output, analgesia, diet and bowels, mobilisation, and a clear assessment and plan for the day.
The operation note
The record of the procedure — findings, the procedure performed, any specimens, closure and immediate post-operative instructions — drafted from your account so the contemporaneous note is written while it's fresh.
The GP & referrer letters
A letter back to the referring GP and, where relevant, the original referrer — what was done, the findings, the post-operative course and exactly what you'd like the GP to watch for and follow up.
The discharge summary
Diagnosis and procedure, the in-hospital course, medications on discharge, wound-care and activity advice, red flags to return on, and the follow-up arrangements — written so the GP can act on it.
The private health fund billing
aurii captures the billing items typical to the surgical admission — the operative episode, post-operative care and any aftercare — 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.
A post-operative progress note.
An illustrative example of the daily post-op note aurii drafts from one spoken surgical 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 billing items for your review against the procedure and your fund agreements; it does not decide what is claimable or set fees. You confirm every item before anything is billed.
Built around a busy list.
A surgical round doesn't pause for paperwork. aurii is built so review-and-sign fits between beds, not after theatre.
Sign at the bedside, not at 8pm
The note is ready to read the moment you finish speaking. You sign it there, while the patient is in front of you and the detail is right — the documentation doesn't follow you home.
The whole bed in one place
The operation note, the daily progress notes, the GP letter, the discharge and the billing for an admission sit together against the one patient, in order — so the record of the episode tells the whole story.
Discharge that's mostly done
Because each day's signed note feeds the discharge, the summary is already most of the way written when the patient is ready to go home. You finish the plan and 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 list with aurii.
Sign before you leave the ward.
Bring a typical post-op round. We'll show you the note, the operation record, the letters, the discharge and the billing — and where you review and sign.
hello@aurii.com.au · SYD primary // MEL backup // always doctor-signed