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Ear Assessment Documentation

Learn the essential elements of a thorough ear exam and see how our AI medical scribe turns your recorded encounter into a structured clinical draft.

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HIPAA

Compliant

Is this the right workflow for you?

For Primary and Urgent Care

Best for clinicians performing routine otoscopic exams or diagnosing acute ear infections.

Clinical Requirements

You will find a breakdown of necessary exam findings, from canal patency to TM landmarks.

From Exam to Draft

Aduvera converts your recorded assessment into a structured note for your final review.

See how Aduvera turns a recorded visit into a transcript-backed draft you can review before charting around ear assessment documentation.

High-Fidelity Documentation for Ear Exams

Move beyond generic templates with a scribe that captures the specifics of your physical exam.

Otoscopic Detail Capture

Captures specific mentions of the tympanic membrane color, light reflex, and presence of effusion or perforation.

Transcript-Backed Citations

Verify every finding by clicking the note segment to see the exact part of the encounter recording it came from.

EHR-Ready Output

Generate a clean, structured assessment that you can copy and paste directly into your EHR system.

From Ear Exam to Final Note

Turn your clinical findings into a professional record without manual typing.

1

Record the Encounter

Use the web app to record the patient visit, including your verbal findings during the ear assessment.

2

Review the AI Draft

Aduvera organizes the recording into a structured note, highlighting the ear exam findings for your review.

3

Verify and Finalize

Check the source context for accuracy, make any necessary edits, and paste the final note into the EHR.

Standards for Ear Assessment Documentation

Strong ear assessment documentation must detail the external ear, the external auditory canal, and the tympanic membrane (TM). A complete note should specify if the canal is patent or obstructed by cerumen, and describe the TM in terms of color (e.g., pearly gray or erythematous), position (e.g., bulging or retracted), and the presence of the cone of light. Documentation of the patient's hearing acuity or response to tuning fork tests should also be included to provide a full clinical picture.

Using Aduvera to draft these notes eliminates the need to recall specific descriptors from memory at the end of the day. By recording the encounter, the AI captures the exact terminology you used during the exam, such as 'opacification of the TM' or 'narrowed canal.' This allows the clinician to focus on the physical exam and then simply verify the transcript-backed citations before finalizing the note, ensuring the record reflects the actual encounter.

More clinical documentation topics

Common Questions

Transcript-backed documentation, clinician review, and EHR-ready note output are built into every workflow.

Can I use a specific format for my ear assessments in Aduvera?

Yes, Aduvera supports common structured styles like SOAP and H&P to organize your ear exam findings.

How does the AI handle specific otoscopic findings?

The AI captures the descriptors you speak during the exam, such as 'perforation' or 'effusion,' and places them in the physical exam section.

Can I verify that the AI didn't hallucinate a finding?

Yes, you can review per-segment citations that link the drafted note directly back to the encounter recording.

Is the app secure for patient ear exams?

Yes, the app supports security-first clinical documentation workflows to ensure patient data is handled securely.

Reclaim your evenings from chart notes

Let Aduvera turn visit conversations into a cleaner first draft so you can review faster and finish documentation with less after-hours work.