Oracle Health has officially launched its Clinical AI Agent, Clinical Note, across the United Kingdom following successful pilot programs at multiple NHS Trusts, including Barts Health NHS Trust, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, and Milton Keynes University Hospital. The AI-powered solution allows clinicians to use a voice-activated and screen-assisted assistant to automatically draft patient notes, significantly reducing administrative workload and freeing doctors to spend more time on direct patient care. Trusts involved in the pilot are now expanding use of the solution throughout their organizations.
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The launch aligns with the UK Government’s 10-Year Health Plan, Fit for the Future, which emphasizes leveraging AI, innovative medicines, and new technologies to improve patient care. As a leading provider of electronic health record solutions, Oracle Health aims to support this vision by integrating AI tools that streamline documentation, reduce clinician burnout, and improve workflow efficiency.
Clinical Note captures patient-clinician interactions and produces structured notes automatically, leaving clinicians to review and approve rather than type or navigate complex menus. This functionality has proven to save time, reduce stress, and allow more focus on patient engagement. Robin Kearney, consultant in acute medicine at Milton Keynes University Hospital, said that using the Clinical AI Agent has improved note accuracy and given him more time to focus entirely on patients while ensuring real-time communication among care teams.
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Sanjay Gautama, Chief Clinical Information Officer and Caldicott Guardian for Imperial College Healthcare Trust NHS and North West London Integrated Care Board, praised the technology for improving both clinician and patient experiences. He noted that accurate, comprehensive notes are captured automatically, enabling seamless follow-up care. Sarah Jensen, group chief informatics officer at Barts Health NHS Trust, explained that clinicians only need to download the app and position it near the patient. The AI then filters out irrelevant conversation and integrates essential notes directly into the trust system.
Seema Verma, executive vice president and general manager of Oracle Health and Life Sciences, highlighted that this UK launch reflects Oracle’s commitment to reducing clinician workload and combating burnout through advanced AI capabilities. Oracle has invested five billion dollars over five years to expand its cloud services in the UK, including healthcare AI tools that improve operational efficiency and patient outcomes.
Launched in the U.S. just a year ago, the Clinical AI Agent is already in use in more than 300 organizations, helping clinicians save over 200,000 hours and cut average documentation time per patient by 40 percent. Mutaz Shegewi, senior research director at IDC, emphasized that the UK rollout demonstrates the growing role of AI in supporting clinical workflows, enhancing efficiency, and enabling data-driven patient care.
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