Positively transforming hospital team conversations & performance of clinical and coding teams
SCRAWL is an essential smart toolbox & service program, co-designed by clinicians and coding teams.
Collaborating easily with any EMR platform, SCRAWL delivers real-time improved patient outcomes, alignment in language, coding performance & hospital metrics.
Created by an expert team committed to delivery quality care
to patients every single day
Scrawl helps doctors and nurses handle high patient loads,
helps medical leaders make decisions with complete information,
and gets patients home sooner.
Put your top clinician’s thinking in the hands of junior doctors.
Guided paths for assessment and management
Scrawl prompts for the right questions and captures the right data.
It takes doctors on a guided journey that’s customised to each medical unit, providing recommendations and prompts.
Scrawl comes with a template stroke workflow ready to adapt and use.
Complete knowledge transfer
Doctors and nursing staff can see every step, action, and piece of information they need for the patient — without waiting for the next meeting or looking for a clipboard.
Automatic documentation in seconds
Patient notes are drafted instantly and automatically fed into the EMR. Doctors currently using the system report that assessment and documentation are taking less time and are more comprehensive than before.
Mobilise an operations centre for your acute service
Fast. Really fast.
Deploy in under 72 hours
With ready-to-go stroke pathways and implementation support from the Scrawl team, you’ll be up and running in hours – not months.
Training-free deployment
While every implementation comes with training support, most doctors use the intuitively designed system without consulting any training materials.
Compatible with all major EMR systems
In the Gosford Hospital Neurological Unit, Scrawl delivered:
14.2%
Reduction in average patient stay
97%
Stroke unit care (baseline for service and nationally 60-75%).
$1,210,000
Savings in productivity over the year by reducing patient bed-days
*Alanati, K., Presented at Stroke Society Australasia (2019)