Migrate from Abridge to Eclinicalworks.
2 documentation-derived translation patterns — what carries over and what to watch for. Cited to the Feature Parity Map; the audit tells you whether the move is worth it.
Abridge and Sunoh.ai both ambiently capture the visit and draft a structured note (with orders and follow-ups) for the clinician to review and sign. A practice already on eClinicalWorks can cut the standalone Abridge contract and move the same ambient workflow into the EHR they already run: enable Sunoh.ai, the ambient AI scribe in the eClinicalWorks/healow family that is natively wired into the eCW Progress Note. Sunoh transcribes the conversation, sorts it into SOAP sections, pre-fills coded/uncoded diagnoses, treatment plans, labs, imaging, and medication orders, and the provider imports it directly into the Progress Note inside eClinicalWorks — no separate Abridge login or paste-back. It runs on desktop eCW, eClinicalTouch (iPad), and eClinicalMobile. Keep eClinicalWorks as the system of record; cut Abridge.
- Warning: Sunoh.ai is a paid add-on to the deployed eCW license (publicly listed around $149/user/month, with possible additional monthly charges) — price the Sunoh seats against the Abridge contract before cancelling so the switch is actually a saving.
- Warning: Abridge's Linked Evidence (map any note word back to the source transcript/audio) is a distinct traceability layer; Sunoh's review is transcript-based but not marketed identically — confirm clinicians' audit needs are met before switching.
- Warning: Sunoh now generates CPT/ICD codes from the conversation, but re-validate its coding output against the practice's existing eCW coding (Clinical Rules Engine) so revenue capture does not regress at cutover.
- Warning: Sunoh is marketed as EHR-agnostic but the deepest, no-extra-click import is the eCW Progress Note path — verify the org is using the native eCW integration, not a looser connector.
Abridge's revenue-cycle product captures billing codes (ICD-10, HCC, visit diagnoses) from the documented conversation; eClinicalWorks provides native coding support on the same encounter. A practice already on eCW can drop the standalone Abridge revenue-cycle add-on and let the EHR's own coding do the work: the eClinicalWorks Clinical Rules Engine (CRE) auto-drops/suggests the appropriate CPT and ICD-10 codes from the clinical documentation as the encounter is completed and feeds them into the integrated charge/claim workflow, and the embedded eva assistant can be invoked in-context during documentation. Because coding runs on the note the clinician already wrote inside eCW, the codes attach directly to the note, orders, and billing record rather than coming from a separate tool. Keep eClinicalWorks as the system of record for coding; cut the Abridge coding add-on.
- Warning: eCW's native coding is largely rules-based (CRE) plus eva, not the deep autonomous GenAI chart-coding some third-party tools offer — if the practice relied on Abridge's conversation-level GenAI HCC capture, expect a depth difference and validate before cutover.
- Warning: Abridge anchors codes to the conversation via Linked Evidence for MEAT-style auditability; the CRE attaches codes from documentation triggers without that audio trail — confirm the coding/compliance team's audit needs are met by eCW first.
- Warning: Sunoh.ai (eCW's ambient scribe) now also generates CPT/ICD from the conversation; decide whether coding capture should move to Sunoh, the CRE, or both, and avoid double-suggesting codes into the charge workflow.
- Warning: eClinicalWorks markets a 98%+ first-pass acceptance rate for its RCM Services offering, not for the in-EHR coding engine in isolation — do not assume that headline applies automatically to the native CRE coding you are switching to.