Clinical community

CARE should feel like clinical infrastructure, not only IT.

OHC needs clinicians and frontline workers to shape workflows, forms, terminology, safety practices, and assistive AI tools so CARE reflects how care is actually delivered.

Where clinicians shape the platform

Clinical governance belongs close to product decisions.

Clinical notes and rounds

Make documentation fit real bedside, outpatient, emergency, home care, and critical care workflows.

Forms and terminology

Review questionnaires, SNOMED CT, LOINC, UCUM, ICD-10 mappings, and local terminology needs.

Care coordination

Shape tasks, referrals, care plans, home visits, follow-up, and continuity of care patterns.

AI documentation review

Guide voice-native forms, AI draft flags, summarization, and human-in-the-loop safety expectations.

Safety and adoption

Better records only matter if frontline teams can actually use them.

CARE's clinical design should reduce documentation burden, preserve accountability, and support continuity of care across facilities, home visits, referrals, and program workflows.

Clinical safety before automation

Human-in-the-loop review for AI-assisted documentation

Structured data without burdening frontline staff

Auditability for clinical and administrative actions

Local language and local workflow sensitivity

Open feedback loops with maintainers and implementers

Assistive AI

Voice and AI should draft, not decide.

Care Scribe and related AI workflows should help clinicians capture structured notes, forms, summaries, and care plans with clear draft states, review paths, and traceability.

The foundation's role is to make AI safer by grounding it in open standards, structured clinical data, human review, and deployment choices that health systems can govern locally.

Get involved

Help turn clinical reality into reusable open workflows.

Share workflow needs

Review forms and modules

Test AI documentation flows

Mentor implementation teams