# AI SOAP Note Organiser (Educational Tool)
> Paste rough encounter notes; get a structured SOAP framework for teaching and review. Not a scribe — Rounds does not generate billable clinical documentation. Information is only reorganised, never invented.

## Overview

The SOAP Note Organiser takes rough encounter notes and reorganises them into a teaching-first SOAP structure: subjective, objective, assessment (in educational framing), problem-based plan framework, missing sections that may need collection, teaching points, and references to institutional documentation policy. It is explicitly not a clinical scribe; Rounds does not generate billable clinical documentation, and the tool will never invent information not supplied by the user.

## Who this is for

- Medical students learning to write SOAP notes
- Program directors using structured-feedback exercises
- Educators reviewing trainee documentation

## Cited source

**Institutional documentation policy + specialty templates** (2024) — Local institution

_Primary publication:_ Institution-specific note templates

## FAQs

### Is this a clinical scribe?

No. It reorganises information you provide into SOAP structure for educational review only. It does not generate billable documentation.

### Will it invent information?

No. Missing fields are explicitly flagged as '(not provided)' or 'missing_sections_to_consider_collecting' rather than fabricated.

### Can I use the output as my note?

No. Use it for self-review and teaching feedback. Final documentation must be authored by the clinician and reflect the actual encounter.

### Does it work for surgical notes?

It is optimised for medical SOAP notes. Surgical operative notes follow distinct formats; verify against your institutional template.

### Will it suggest billing codes?

No. Coding decisions involve documentation specifics, payer rules, and compliance review beyond the scope of this tool.

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_Rounds AI is a citation-first clinical AI assistant. It supports clinical reasoning by surfacing cited information and is not a substitute for independent clinical judgement._
