Module · Clinical intelligence

Agents that analyse.
A veterinarian who decides.

From the extension, the animal's clinical record loads onto the platform and is analysed there. You then have specialised agents — drawing exclusively on your clinic's knowledge sources, and never making a diagnosis.

01 · Extension
The record is recognised

The patient record is recognised in your practice software.

02 · Record loaded
It arrives on the platform

The clinical record loads onto the platform, ready to be questioned.

03 · Analysis
Read and structured

History, bloods, treatments — read and structured for the agents.

04 · Your agents
Ready to be questioned

Assistant, compliance, prevention — and the ones you build yourself.

No diagnosis. Ever.

The platform never establishes a diagnosis. It is an assistant for analysing medical data — nothing more. Agents spot, cross-reference and flag; clinical judgement and the decision remain yours.

A non-negotiable rule, built into every agent
Your agents

One record. As many agents as your practice needs.

Each agent works inside a strict perimeter: the loaded case, medical questions, and your clinic's knowledge sources. Three come built in — and you can create your own.

The assistant that already read the record.

Ask anything about the case: parameter trends, interactions, history. The assistant answers citing the record and your sources — and politely refuses anything outside the medical perimeter.

  • Sourced answers: record + your clinic's knowledge base
  • Anti-hallucination guardrails: strictly medical, strictly this case
  • No recommendation without a source — when unsure, it says so
Clinical assistant — Biscuit · Labrador · 9y Guardrails active
Has Biscuit's creatinine changed since February?
Yes. Creatinine: 14 mg/L (12 Feb) → 19 mg/L (12 May), +36% in 3 months. Still below the IRIS 2 threshold, but the trend warrants a recheck. Note: long-term meloxicam in the current treatment.
Sources: bloods 12 Feb & 12 May · Biscuit's record · your nephrology handbook
What's the best financial investment right now?
I can't answer that: my perimeter is limited to this case and veterinary medical questions.
Out of perimeter — question refused
Your agents write for you

Written for the patient you're treating — not generalities.

Agents draft documents strictly adapted to the case: nutritional recommendations, operative reports, instructions — always from your sources.

Tailor-made nutritional recommendations

Strictly adapted to the animal's pathologies — refeeding after pancreatitis, for instance, with instructions written exactly for its case.

Refeeding — Biscuit · post-pancreatitis Catalogue: your supplier
D1 6 mini-meals — low-fat digestive diet (ref. from YOUR catalogue), 1/3 of energy requirement
D2–D3 Gradual increase to 2/3 of requirement — same reference, watch for nausea and pain
D4+ Full ration — 5-day transition to the usual maintenance diet
Written for this patient · from your catalogues

Knowledge base: the pet-food catalogues used at the clinic — the right food is prescribed according to your habits and your suppliers.

Operative reports & instructions

Dictated in theatre, structured to standards — with post-op instructions written for the team and for the owner.

Operative report
Dictated in theatre, structured to standards
Team instructions
D0–D3 care, monitoring, alert thresholds
Owner instructions
Clear, in the client's language
Shift change

Better continuity of care. Zero lost handover.

Clinical exams are dictated every hour during hospitalisation, without ever touching the computer. At shift change, no handover needed: the incoming veterinarian simply asks the agent.

  • Clinical exams every hour, dictated at the kennel side — the computer is never touched
  • The incoming vet asks — the agent answers precisely, sources attached
  • Fewer errors at shift changes — decisive in emergency care
Shift handover — 8:00 pm 11 entries dictated today
Where are we with this dog? What's been done? Have the owners been called?
Biscuit, kennel 4 — pancreatitis, refeeding under way. Hourly exams dictated at the kennel side — last at 7:00 pm: temp 38.6, pain 2/10, 6 pm meal tolerated. IV reduced to 2 ml/kg/h at 5:30 pm (Dr Roux). Control creatinine sampled at 2:00 pm, result expected tonight. Owners called at 4:40 pm by nurse Léa — informed, callback planned tomorrow 9:00 am.
Sources: today's 11 entries · Biscuit's record
The big difference

Your agents don't search “the Internet”. They read your library.

Each clinic configures its own knowledge sources: best-practice handbooks, reference books, internal protocols. Answers are drawn exclusively from this base — never from the random Web.

Generic AI
Where answers come from: unknown
Open Web, forums, unverified content
No way to know where a claim comes from
Hallucination risk — dreadful in medicine
The Digital Clinic agents
Where answers come from: your knowledge base
Your best-practice handbooks
The books you already work with
Every answer is traceable to its source

Customisable per clinic — you define what counts as a reference.

Anti-hallucination

Three locks, on every agent.

Strict perimeter

The loaded case and medical questions. Everything else is refused — politely, but refused.

Controlled sources

Answers are drawn from your clinic's knowledge base. No Web, no forums.

Never a diagnosis

Agents analyse, cross-reference and flag. Diagnosis and decision stay with the veterinarian.

Try it

An AI that knows its place: a highly intelligent, always-available assistant — not another veterinarian telling you what to do.

Load a record, question an agent, check a prescription — and stay in charge.

One account = the whole clinic · No subscription · Pay only for what you use