logo
ScribeEMR Showcases Medical Coding and AI Scribing Solutions At 2025 FACHC Annual Conference: Bridging Care & Community

ScribeEMR Showcases Medical Coding and AI Scribing Solutions At 2025 FACHC Annual Conference: Bridging Care & Community

CHAMPIONSGATE, FL, UNITED STATES, July 21, 2025 / EINPresswire.com / -- ScribeEMR, a leading provider of AI-powered healthcare documentation solutions, virtual scribing, coding, auditing, and medical office services will exhibit at the Florida Association of Community Health Centers (FACHC) 2025 Annual Conference: Bridging Care & Community, July 21-22, at the Omni Orlando Resort at Championsgate, in Championsgate, Florida, Booth #8.
Representatives from ScribeEMR, and its medical coding subsidiary CodeEMR, will discuss their solutions for streamlining medical charting, maximizing revenue and ensuring coding compliance with hundreds of community health leaders from Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) that provide care to patients in underserved areas throughout Florida.
AI Scribing for Optimizing Revenue
This year, ScribeEMR will focus on the revenue generating advantages of its ScribeRyte AI system, which leverages ambient clinical intelligence to produce real-time, voice-driven documentation, and deliver accurate, structured SOAP notes that integrate seamlessly with most EMRs and specialty platforms including orthopaedics, urgent care, emergency medicine, dermatology primary care.
'ScribeRyte AI is redefining the future of clinical documentation for FQHCs and other community health centers, delivering virtually 100% accurate clinical notes instantly during a patient visit,' says Terry Ciesla. 'With the click of a button, providers can be assured their clinical encounters are being captured, including subtle details like medical intent, terminology and tone, with little to no need for revisions. The time they used to spend charting can now be used to provide greater access to patients and increase revenue.'
ScribeEMR's technology team built the ScribeRyte AI system based on actual live, virtual scribing encounters. With minimal training, it intuitively monitors a physician's charting habits and the details of a patient's medical history, and predicts what should be included in each note.
ScribeRyte AI offers customized solutions for providers who want to use AI in tandem with existing ScribeEMR virtual scribes or as a standalone system. It also generates codes that serve as a reference guide to correctly capture billable patient encounter information.
Coding Specificity to Capture Payment
CodeEMR provides medical coding and auditing services with the specificity needed to address the challenges and requirements of FQHCs, who are now in danger of losing crucial federal funding.
'Medicaid is a critical revenue source many FQHCs rely on for as much as 30-50% of their operating budgets. Impending cuts will likely lead to fewer patient visits and billable services, and create unprecedented uncompensated care burdens,' says Vice President of Coding Business Development Paul Ferrazza.
'It will be more important than ever to code to the highest level of specificity to optimize CMS reimbursements and ensure proper payment for all commercial services,' he adds. 'CodeEMR has the deep expertise in FQHC medical coding and auditing necessary to achieve favorable 2026 cost reporting and HRSA ratings that will allow FQHCs to continue serving their communities.'
About the 2025 FACHC Annual Conference
The Florida Association of Community Health Centers, Inc. (FACHC) is the leading state advocate for community-based healthcare programs, focusing on Florida's Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs). The Association plays a vital role in educating federal, state, and local policymakers about healthcare issues and the role health centers play in Florida's healthcare system. Its annual conference has grown to include more than 500 attendees, 76 exhibitors, a large-scale networking event, and five educational tracks.
About ScribeEMR
ScribeEMR is a leading provider of AI-powered healthcare documentation solutions and live, real-time virtual medical coding, scribing, and medical office services for medical practices, hospitals, and community health systems. For two consecutive years, ScribeEMR has been ranked 'Best in KLAS for virtual scribing services' in the 2025 and 2024 Best in KLAS: Software & Services Reports. ScribeEMR is also the highest rated company in KLAS Research's Virtual Scribing Services 2024 report. Highly trained U.S. and overseas teams partner with healthcare providers and health systems to improve practice efficiency, maximize revenue, and reduce provider burnout. ScribeRyte AI delivers physician-guided, AI-driven medical charting with unprecedented speed, close to 100% accuracy, and many personalized capabilities.
For more information visit www.scribeemr.com. Follow us on: LinkedIn
Andrew Lavin/Sue Klein
A. Lavin Communications
[email protected]
Legal Disclaimer:
EIN Presswire provides this news content 'as is' without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Google's AI push pays off with solid second quarter, but doubts about company's future persist
Google's AI push pays off with solid second quarter, but doubts about company's future persist

Yahoo

time10 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Google's AI push pays off with solid second quarter, but doubts about company's future persist

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Google's accelerating shift into artificial intelligence helped propel its corporate parent to another quarter of solid growth while a crackdown on its internet empire looms in the background. The results released Wednesday for the April-June period provided the latest sign that Google is deftly navigating the technological landscape's tilt toward AI while still capitalizing on well-worn techniques that have made it the internet's main gateway for the past quarter century. That balancing act helped Google parent Alphabet Inc. earn $28.2 billion, or $2.31 per share, during the second quarter, a 19% increase from the same time last year. Revenue climbed 14% from a year ago to $96.4 billion. Both figures easily eclipsed analysts' projections. 'We had a standout quarter, with robust growth across the company," Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai said. 'We are leading at the frontier of AI and shipping at an incredible pace. AI is positively impacting every part of the business, driving strong momentum.' The numbers were initially overshadowed by a disclosure that Alphabet is increasing this year's budget for capital expenditures by $10 billion to $85 billion as part of its effort to fend off intensifying competition from AI startups such as OpenAI's ChatGPT and Perplexity. Besides those threats, a federal judge who declared Google's search engine to be an illegal monopoly is now weighing a range of countermeasures that include requiring the sale of its popular Chrome browser. Alphabet's shares dipped 1% in extended trading after the quarterly report came out. After initially dipping following the disclosure about the rising costs of AI, Alphabet's stock price rebounded and rose by more than 1% in extended trading. The performance covered a stretch that saw Google bring even more AI technology into its search engine in an effort to maintain its dominance, including the May release of its own version of a conversational answer engine called AI Mode. That addition supplemented its more than year-old use of extensive summaries called AI Overviews that Google now frequently highlights at the top of its results page while decreasing the number of its traditional links to other websites. The shake-up has resulted in even more interaction with Google's search engine and steady earnings growth to support Alphabet's $2.3 trillion market value, said Jim Yu, chief executive of BrightEdge, a firm that analyzes search trends. Google's search-driven ad revenue totaled $54.2 billion in the past quarter, a 12% increase from the same time last year. 'All this AI stuff is not slowing Google down, they are doing a very good job of evolving with the times,' Yu said. The AI boom has also been fueling demand in Google's Cloud division that sells computing power and other services. Google Cloud continued to thrive in the past quarter with revenue rising 32% from a year ago to $13.6 billion. The division is under pressure to deliver robust growth from investors to help justify Google's huge investments in AI technology.

Crown Castle raises annual site rental revenue forecast on healthy leasing activity
Crown Castle raises annual site rental revenue forecast on healthy leasing activity

Yahoo

time10 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Crown Castle raises annual site rental revenue forecast on healthy leasing activity

(Reuters) -Wireless tower operator Crown Castle raised its annual site rental revenue forecast on Wednesday, hinting at healthy leasing activity by wireless carriers as service providers continue to augment capacity. The results follow intensifying competition among service providers, highlighting how companies are actively pursuing new avenues for growth by expanding capacity amid the 5G boom. The real estate investment trust now expects full-year site rental revenue of around $4.00 billion and $4.04 billion, compared with its prior expectations of around $3.99 billion to $4.03 billion. Crown Castle owns about 40,000 towers and derives the majority of its revenue from leasing out tower infrastructure to wireless carriers such as AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon in the United States on a long-term basis. For the year, the company now expects adjusted funds from operations between $4.14 and $4.25 per share, compared with the analysts' average estimate of $4.18 apiece, according to data compiled by LSEG. The company posted second-quarter site rental revenue of $1.01 billion, compared with estimates of $1.04 billion. For the second quarter, Crown Castle reported earnings of 67 cents per share. Errore nel recupero dei dati Effettua l'accesso per consultare il tuo portafoglio Errore nel recupero dei dati Errore nel recupero dei dati Errore nel recupero dei dati Errore nel recupero dei dati

The Artificial Intelligence Underwriting Company launches with $15M to help enterprises deploy AI with confidence
The Artificial Intelligence Underwriting Company launches with $15M to help enterprises deploy AI with confidence

Yahoo

time10 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

The Artificial Intelligence Underwriting Company launches with $15M to help enterprises deploy AI with confidence

Insurance built the modern world. It will unlock AI's future progress. SAN FRANCISCO, July 23, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Superintelligence is within reach. In just five years, AI has advanced from preschool-level capabilities to systems that can reason and act with the skill of an undergraduate. Proof of concepts are emerging across industries—from finance and legal to healthcare, drug discovery, and frontier technologies—but enterprises hesitate to deploy AI agents that feel like black boxes. They don't know which tools they can trust or who will be accountable if something goes wrong. There's a fear that hallucinated responses or unsafe outputs could lead to customer harm, revenue loss, regulatory risk, or reputational fallout. Today, the Artificial Intelligence Underwriting Company (AIUC) launches to unlock the next wave of AI progress by building the confidence infrastructure for AI agents. The company also announces a $15 million seed round led by Nat Friedman at NFDG, with participation from Emergence, Terrain and others including Ben Mann, co-founder of Anthropic; and former chief information security officers at Google Cloud and MongoDB. Enterprises are walking a tightrope. On the one hand, they face an "adopt or die" moment as their industries are transforming overnight. On the other hand, when AI fails spectacularly, the consequences are steep and customer trust is breached. AIUC gives enterprises a way to adopt AI with confidence, before their competitors do it faster. This playbook is time-tested throughout American history. In the 18th century, Benjamin Franklin responded to the fires ravaging Philadelphia not with bans, but with the country's first mutual fire insurance company. In the 19th century, when electricity posed new threats, insurance companies built UL Labs to test and certify the new technology. In the 20th century, as cars shaped modern life, insurers created safety standards and crash tests. Each time, insurance has made bold progress possible, before regulators could catch up. To help enterprises deploy AI agents with confidence, AIUC is structured around three pillars: Standards. AIUC-1 is a security and risk framework built specifically for AI agents. Think of it as "SOC-2 for AI agents." The standard is designed to speed up enterprise adoption by addressing the technical, legal and operational safeguards that matter most to enterprise buyers. AIUC-1 builds on existing trusted frameworks, including the NIST's AI Risk Management Framework, the EU AI Act, and MITRE's ATLAS–and goes further by defining clear, auditable requirements. That means AI companies can be certified against it, giving enterprises a concrete signal of safety and trust. Audits. For AI agents, independent audits give enterprises the confidence to adopt these systems. AIUC conducts rigorous testing of AI agents against the AIUC-1 standard. These audits identify vulnerabilities, quantify risk, and give enterprises a clear view of the AI systems they are evaluating, before actually deploying. This process is structured to be objective, repeatable, and aligned with enterprise-grade expectations for safety and trust. Insurance. AIUC offers liability coverage for AI vendors and their customers in case an agent fails. The cost and availability of insurance are tied directly to audit results: safer systems are offered better terms. This aligns incentives for builders, buyers and insurers, making it easier for enterprises to adopt new technology with confidence. "This is the path forward for faster, more secure AI adoption", said Rune Kvist, co-founder and CEO. "Every major technological leap in history, from electricity and automobiles to flight and the internet, was unlocked by private market insurance. That is what we're building for this major leap. Confidence infrastructure that rewards responsibility, unlocks speed, and enables enterprises to make informed decisions." The founding team brings deep experience across AI safety and institutional risk. Rune Kvist (co-founder, CEO) was the first product and go-to-market hire at Anthropic. He also sits on the board of the Center for AI Safety. Brandon Wang (co-founder, CTO) is a Thiel Fellow who previously founded a consumer underwriting business. Rajiv Dattani (co-founder) is a former McKinsey partner who led work in the global insurance sector, and was COO of METR, a research non-profit that evaluated OpenAI and Anthropic's models before deployment. For more information, visit About Artificial Intelligence Underwriting CompanyThe Artificial Intelligence Underwriting Company (AIUC) helps enterprises answer one critical question: Can we trust this AI agent? Founded by a team of leaders from Anthropic, McKinsey, Center for AI Safety, and METR, AIUC combines audits, standards, and insurance to enable confident AI adoption to unlock progress. View original content: SOURCE Artificial Intelligence Underwriting Company Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store