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Oracle announced that its Oracle Health Clinical AI Agent is expanding its note-generation capabilities to emergency departments and inpatient settings across the United States. The AI-powered tool is designed to reduce the documentation burden on clinicians by automatically generating draft clinical notes from patient encounters, allowing physicians to spend more time focused on patient care rather than paperwork.
The technology captures information from real-time conversations and existing data within the health system’s electronic health record. It organizes symptoms, medical history, treatments, and test results into a structured clinical note that clinicians can review, edit, and finalize. This automation is especially valuable in high-pressure environments such as emergency departments, where documentation requirements can compete with the urgent needs of patient care.
Healthcare organizations using the platform have already reported measurable improvements. In some deployments, the system has reduced documentation time significantly and streamlined clinical workflows, helping physicians stay present with patients while maintaining accurate records. Overall, Oracle reports that its Clinical AI Agent has saved doctors more than 200,000 hours of documentation time since its launch. Source: HIT Consultant.
A key voice behind the announcement was Seema Verma, Executive Vice President and General Manager of Oracle Health and Life Sciences. Verma emphasized how AI-driven automation can alleviate administrative burdens that often pull clinicians away from patient care.
She noted that the emergency department is one of the most demanding medical environments and explained that Oracle’s Clinical AI Agent is built to support clinicians by automating note generation and reducing administrative workload. According to Verma, the goal is to enable healthcare teams to remain focused on patients while maintaining accurate documentation and clear next-step actions.
Under Verma’s leadership, Oracle Health has been accelerating the integration of artificial intelligence into clinical workflows, positioning AI agents as a core tool for improving efficiency, clinician experience, and patient outcomes across healthcare systems.
As the executive leading Oracle’s healthcare and life sciences strategy, Seema Verma brings rare insight into the intersection of healthcare policy, digital transformation, and artificial intelligence. Her experience shaping national healthcare programs and now driving innovation in health technology makes her a compelling keynote speaker for organizations exploring the future of healthcare, AI, and policy.
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