AI Scribe

The #1 AI Veterinary Scribe for Modern Practices

VetGeni is the only AI veterinary scribe powered by Wiley-licensed veterinary references. Record the visit and save 10 minutes per SOAP note and 10 minutes per discharge — with improved accuracy backed by a peer-reviewed publisher. Starting at $50/mo.

No account required to try. No credit card required to start the 14-day trial.

See What VetGeni Generates

Client communication summary from a canine seizure case

Example Output

Generated in real time

Client Communication Summary

CLIENT COMMUNICATION SUMMARY
Date/Time: Jan 29, 2026, 10:16 AM
Reason for Visit:
- Remo presented for cluster seizures (approximately 20 seizures in the past hour, per client).
History:
- Previous seizure in August (single episode, followed by intermittent "yips" and brief focal events for a couple of weeks).
- Another episode of "yip fits" in December.
- No known toxin exposure; both dogs are not prone to getting into food or substances.
- Remo was found as a stray in Guam at about 1 year old; has been in client's care since.
- Recent travel: clients returned from Egypt yesterday; Remo was with a familiar dog sitter.
- Seizures began shortly after reunion with clients (possible excitement trigger).
- Longest seizure lasted about 1.5 minutes.
- Client administered CBD oil at 10:00 p.m. last night, which seemed to reduce severity.
- Remo currently unable to turn left; exhibiting right-sided circling post-ictally.
- No report of abnormal temperature; currently normothermic.
Findings Discussed:
- Temperature is normal (no hyperthermia).
- Post-ictal right-sided circling and inability to turn left.
- Plan for neuro assessment once Remo is more awake.
Diagnosis:
- Most likely idiopathic epilepsy (based on age and history).
- Differentials discussed: toxin exposure (less likely), brain tumor (very unlikely at this age), possible rare brain parasite.
- Hypothyroidism discussed as unlikely based on clinical signs and age.
Treatment Plan:
- Diazepam administered to control seizures.
- Initiation of phenobarbital therapy: IV phenobarbital to achieve therapeutic levels over 14–16 hours (dosed every 4 hours).
- IV fluids to support during hospitalization.
- Blood work to rule out metabolic causes (including liver function, blood glucose, and T4/thyroid testing if indicated).
- Monitoring for 4–5 hours post-loading to ensure seizure control.
- Plan to discharge with oral phenobarbital for long-term management.
- Dispense rectal diazepam as a rescue medication for at-home seizure control.
Client Instructions:
- Will be called with blood work results.
- Oral phenobarbital to be continued at home (dosing to be provided at discharge).
- Instructions on use of rectal diazepam for seizure emergencies at home.
Follow-Up:
- 24-hour hospitalization for monitoring and treatment initiation.
- Recheck and further follow-up to be scheduled as needed based on response and blood work.
Cost Discussion:
- Estimate for hospitalization and treatment provided to client.
- Client informed of 10% discount eligibility.

See It In Action

Watch real veterinarians using VetGeni

See how real veterinarians use VetGeni's AI veterinary scribe to generate SOAP notes, toxicology reports, and discharge summaries in seconds.

How It Works

Three steps to better documentation

1

Record the Visit

Use your phone or laptop to capture the conversation and exam notes.

2

AI Structures the Output

VetGeni transcribes and organizes content into SOAP and summaries.

3

Edit and Finalize

Make quick edits, then export or save to the patient record.

Why Vets Choose Our AI Veterinary Scribe

Realtime Transcription

Capture the visit as it happens.

Auto-Structured Notes

SOAP sections generated automatically.

Wiley Reference Support

AI-assisted clinical answers when needed.

Voice or Text

Use dictation or typed notes.

Full Editing Control

Review and adjust every section.

Export Ready

Copy to EMR or print for records.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the scribe work during the exam?

Yes. VetGeni transcribes in real time and organizes content while you speak.

Can I edit the output?

Yes. Every section is editable before saving or exporting.

Is it trained for veterinary terminology?

Yes. The models are tuned for veterinary language and drug names.

Is there a free demo?

Yes. Try the realtime voice demo without an account.

Is the AI scribe safe for new graduate veterinarians?

Yes. The AI scribe acts as a clinical safety net — new grads get evidence-based decision support from Wiley references, ranked differentials, and dosing guidance at the moment of care, reducing documentation burden and burnout.

Try the Best AI Veterinary Scribe Today

Join thousands of vets using our veterinary AI scribe to save hours on documentation. Try the demo now and see instant structured output.