One-screen synthesis: panel snapshot, last visit, open tasks.
The arc of a patient, across every visit.
Charting one visit is documentation. Understanding the trajectory across visits is psychiatry. Nextvisit treats the longitudinal record as a first-class surface, with analysis that runs every time you open a patient.
A multi-step longitudinal analysis, run on every patient load.
Treatment Pulse runs a seven-step pipeline across the patient's full encounter history. Symptom trajectory, medication response, scale movement, plan adherence, and risk flags. The output is a clinical synthesis that's ready to read before you say hello.
- Symptom trajectory QueuedPHQ-9 22 → 11 over 12 weeks. GAD-7 stable in mild range.
- Medication response QueuedSertraline 50 mg titration: partial response by W6, sustained by W10.
- Cross-reference scales QueuedPHQ-9, GAD-7, C-SSRS pulled across 8 visits. No SI escalation.
- Plan adherence QueuedSleep hygiene plan started W4. Pt reports consistent application.
- Risk flags QueuedNo SI/HI. Polypharmacy: single agent, low interaction load.
- Recommendations QueuedMaintain dose, recheck W16. Consider step-down if stable through W20.
- Synthesis QueuedMDD recurrent, moderate, in partial remission. Trajectory favorable.
MDD recurrent, moderate, in partial remission on sertraline 50 mg. PHQ-9 down 50% over 12 weeks, GAD-7 stable in mild range. C-SSRS negative across all visits. Plan: maintain dose, RTC W16, consider step-down if stable through W20.
Each step is observable. You can see what the model looked at, which encounters it pulled from, and which scales it cross-referenced. Nothing is generated without a source.
Every signed encounter, in chronological order, written for continuity.
Treatment Pulse is the analysis. The AI Timeline is the record. One AI-authored entry per signed encounter, tied to the source date, with the medication changes, mood deltas, and direct patient quotes that matter for the next visit.
The Timeline is what most prescribers open first when a patient sits down. It's the six-week or eight-week refresher you used to cobble together by re-reading three notes. See the detailed view on the features page.
See the Patient Timeline visualThirteen sections deep, because behavioral health doesn't fit on one screen.
A psychiatric chart is not a paragraph. It's a longitudinal record with scales over time, polypharmacy review, prior trials, allergies that interact with first-line agents, and the documents that came in by fax three years ago. Every section here is its own surface.
AI-authored entry per signed encounter, in chronological order.
Seven-step longitudinal analysis, regenerated on every load.
Name, DOB, pronouns, contact, emergency contact, language.
Assigned providers, supervising clinicians, referring physicians.
Patient-level coverage, eligibility status, prior authorizations.
Patient-level claims, copays, balances, payment history.
Every encounter, signed and unsigned, with note status and codes.
Active and historical regimen, doses, dates, prescriber.
Active and resolved diagnoses, ICD-10 mapped, with onset dates.
Drug, food, environmental allergies with reaction severity.
PHQ-9, GAD-7, C-SSRS, AUDIT, custom screeners with trends.
Faxes, prior records, OCR-indexed and AriaMD-readable.
Standardized instruments are first-class data, not free text.
PHQ-9, GAD-7, and C-SSRS are scored, trended, and cross-referenced by Treatment Pulse. AUDIT, custom screeners, and clinic-specific instruments live in the same surface, with the same trajectory view.
- C-SSRS
- AUDIT
- Custom intake
Need a scale on a visit you already signed? Open the encounter, click edit, and run the magic-wand action: relevant scales are scored and trended into the same surface as if they had been captured during the session.
Twenty minutes. We open one of your patients (or a sample) and walk the longitudinal view.
Treatment Pulse, AI Timeline, the full 13-section profile. You leave knowing whether longitudinal AI changes how you run a panel.