Table of contents
Before you start
The recorder runs in any modern browser at nextvisit.app/recorder. The first time you start a session, the browser asks for microphone access. Approve it once and the prompt does not come back. Telehealth visits add screen capture with audio on top of the microphone, so each session prompts you to share the call’s browser tab when you click Start Recording. The toggle is per session, not a saved preference, and re-prompts on every pause-and-resume cycle. There is nothing to install.
Step 1: Open the recorder and pick a template
Open the recorder and the template gallery loads. Your most recent pick is pinned at the top under Recently Used for one-click reuse. Below that, Your Templates shows any custom templates your workspace has authored. The full library lives in the All Templates grid, with a search input that filters live as you type.
Click a card to advance to session setup. If you grabbed the wrong template, the chosen one appears as a chip at the top of the next screen, and clicking it sends you back to swap.
Step 2: Pick a patient and review the auto-populated context
Search for the patient by name in the picker at the top of session setup. Selecting a record auto-populates the pre-session context editor below it: today’s date, the logged-in provider, the patient’s name and DOB, and an active medications table pulled from the chart. The editor is a full rich-text surface, so you can edit the populated fields, add a sentence about why the patient is in today, or paste in anything else AriaMD should ground the note on.
| Medication | Sig | Started | Prescriber |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acamprosate | 666mg BID | 11/01/23 | Katie |
If you want the AI to reference specific patient documents, expand Link Documents and pick up to 5. They feed into the AI’s context silently during recording and appear as a Documents tab on the encounter detail when the session ends.
The Telehealth Mode toggle in the upper right of this screen flips capture mode for this session only. Leave it off for in-person visits, flip it on for telehealth. The toggle is locked while recording is active, so to change modes mid-flow you stop recording first.
Step 3: Start recording
Click Start Recording. The view switches to live transcription, the status dot turns red, the timer starts, and your first words begin to appear. As you speak, the in-progress phrase builds in cyan below the latest finalized line, with a blinking cursor. Finalized lines stamp themselves with the wall-clock time and stack above.
Add context, scales, files, and codes mid-session
The right-hand action panel stays available throughout the session. Six tools, each one click away, without leaving the recorder.
This note will appear in the transcript at the current time.
Add Note drops a non-spoken context note into the transcript at the current timestamp. Use it for things the AI should know but should not transcribe verbatim, like “patient nodded but did not verbalize agreement” or “appears alert and oriented x3, no acute distress.” Submitted notes pin to the top of the transcript as a labeled CONTEXT NOTE block, separate from the live conversation.
Scales opens the measure picker. Pick an instrument (PHQ-9, GAD-7, AIMS, MMSE, COWS, and the rest), add a sentence of context in the Notes field, and click Generate with Context. The AI scores the instrument from the in-progress transcript plus your notes and returns a filled preview with the total, the per-item responses, and the severity interpretation. Confirm to insert the completed scale into the transcript. After the encounter is signed, the measure also appears in a dedicated Scales & Exams panel on the encounter detail.
Coding lets you pre-stage ICD-10 diagnostic codes and billing codes during the visit, before AriaMD’s auto-suggestions land on the encounter detail. Type a code or a description, multi-select from the dropdown, and save. Selected codes appear as removable pills above the search.
The remaining three tools live in the same panel:
- Context opens the same rich-text editor you used at session setup, so you can edit the AI’s grounding mid-session. Saves are live.
- Files uploads ad-hoc attachments (PDF, DOC, DOCX, TXT, images) for AriaMD to reference. This is separate from the Link Documents picker on session setup, which sources files already in the patient’s chart.
- Audio opens audio settings to change microphone or toggle echo cancellation, noise suppression, and auto gain control mid-session.
Pause and resume
Press Space or click the Pause button to pause. The status dot flips to yellow, the listening pill changes to Paused, and the transcript stays put. Press Space again or click Resume to pick back up. Audio settings changes only take effect after a pause-and-resume cycle, which is the supported way to switch microphones mid-visit.
Keyboard shortcuts
| Key | Action |
|---|---|
Space | Pause / Resume |
N | Add a context note |
F | Open Files (Upload Attachments) |
⌘F | Search transcript |
⌘. | End the recording |
When you’re done
Click End or press ⌘. to finish. The recorder hands the session off to the encounter detail page and runs the AI analysis pipeline in front of you: Creating Timeline Events, Generating Note, Suggesting Codes, and so on, up to seven steps when documents are linked. The card turns green at the end with Encounter Processed.
The encounter detail page renders with Note, Transcript, Peer Review, and Context tabs, plus a Documents tab when files were linked at setup. A coding sidebar shows AriaMD’s ICD-10 and billing suggestions alongside anything you pre-staged. Scales and exams from the session appear in their own sidebar panel. For more on what AriaMD does to your session after you click End, see the features overview.
Telehealth mode
On a virtual visit, the patient is on the other side of a Zoom, Doxy, Teams, or Google Meet call. Their voice plays through your speakers and a normal mic-only recording catches it as muffled bleed, which degrades transcription. Telehealth Mode solves this by capturing the patient’s audio directly from the call’s browser tab at line level and mixing it with your microphone before streaming to live transcription.
| Medication | Sig | Started | Prescriber |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acamprosate | 666mg BID | 11/01/23 | Katie |
Turning it on
Toggle Telehealth Mode on at session setup before you click Start Recording. The button on the right shows a monitor icon. Active state fills sky-blue with a checkmark badge, and a notice banner appears below the Session Information header with the heading Telehealth Mode Active and the body: “When you start recording, you’ll be prompted to share your screen with audio to capture both sides of your telehealth session.”
When you click Start Recording, the browser’s native screen-share picker appears. Pick the tab running the video call and check Share tab audio (Chrome’s wording; some browsers say Share system audio). Confirm. Recording begins, and the transcript captures both sides of the call.
If you forget to check the audio box, the recorder catches the empty audio stream and silently falls back to microphone-only recording. The session continues, but the line-level patient capture is gone for the rest of the visit.
Pause and resume re-prompts the share dialog
Each pause-and-resume cycle tears down the screen capture and re-runs the picker. On long telehealth visits with several pauses, the share dialog comes back every time you resume. Pick the same tab and check the audio box again to keep capturing both sides.
If you click “Stop sharing” mid-session
The browser shows a persistent “Stop sharing” indicator while you’re sharing the tab. Clicking it does not stop the recording, but the patient’s audio drops out from that point and the recorder continues with microphone-only audio for the rest of the session. To restore patient capture, end the recording and start a new one.
Browser support
Telehealth Mode requires desktop Chromium browsers: Chrome, Edge, Brave, Arc, Opera. Firefox shows the toggle but the share picker does not offer an audio checkbox, so the recorder falls back to microphone-only. Safari support is partial and inconsistent. The toggle is not rendered on mobile (iOS Safari and Android Chrome do not support tab-audio capture).
Privacy
In real-time recording mode, no audio file is saved on either Nextvisit’s servers or the video platform’s. Only the text transcript is persisted. The video call platform itself (Zoom, Doxy, Teams) is unaffected: Telehealth Mode is browser-level audio capture from the tab you point it at, not an integration with the video service.
Troubleshooting
Mic not detected
Check the browser’s site permissions for nextvisit.app and confirm microphone access is granted. If it is, open Audio Settings from the gear icon, switch to a different microphone in the dropdown, and click Test Mic to confirm levels move. If the recorder is already running and you change microphones, pause and resume to apply the change.
Transcript stops mid-session
Check the listening pill in the upper right. If it flipped to Paused, press Space to resume. If it shows a connectivity error, the recorder queues audio locally and resumes transcription automatically when the connection returns. Nothing is lost during the gap.
Recording ended unexpectedly
All sessions auto-save up to the moment of disconnect. Open the recorder again, pick the same patient, and the in-progress encounter appears under Resume. Pick up where you left off, and AriaMD stitches the segments together when you click End.