Migrate from Epic Ehr to Abridge.
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 Epic both capture the visit ambiently and draft a structured note for clinician review. A practice already on Epic can retire the standalone Abridge contract and move the same ambient workflow into Epic itself: turn on Epic's in-app ambient documentation — either Epic's native AI Charting ('Art', generally available since February 2026) or the embedded partner ambient (Microsoft/Nuance DAX Copilot in Epic) — which records during the encounter and writes the draft straight into the Epic note, available immediately to orders, coding, and billing on the same chart. Clinicians record in Epic Haiku/Canto on mobile and review in Hyperdrive, exactly where Abridge Inside ran, so the muscle memory carries over without a separate Abridge login or paste-back. Keep Epic as the system of record; cut Abridge.
- Warning: Epic's ambient is a licensed capability: native AI Charting/Art and especially DAX Copilot-in-Epic can carry their own per-clinician fee or add-on license — confirm it is provisioned and live for the org before cancelling Abridge.
- Warning: Abridge's Linked Evidence (tap any note phrase to hear the source audio) has no exact equivalent in Epic's native draft — if clinicians rely on that audit-back-to-audio step, validate Epic's review workflow covers their compliance need first.
- Warning: Re-validate any coding/HCC context Abridge surfaced during drafting against Epic's own coding (Coding Assistance / Penny) so revenue-cycle capture does not regress at cutover.
Abridge's revenue-cycle product captures billing-relevant codes (ICD-10, HCC, visit diagnoses) straight from the documented conversation; Epic does the equivalent natively. A practice already on Epic can drop the standalone Abridge revenue-cycle workflow and let Epic's own coding do the job on the same chart: Epic's Coding Assistance (branded under Penny for the revenue cycle) tees up diagnosis and procedure codes from the visit's clinical content, recommends Level of Service from data entered during the visit including free-text notes, and surfaces CDI query opportunities — then writes the codes onto that chart's claim in Resolute. Because Epic reads the same encounter it will bill against, there is no export-and-post-back loop. Keep Epic as the system of record for coding; cut the Abridge coding add-on.
- Warning: Epic Coding Assistance / Penny is part of the Epic revenue-cycle license — confirm the coding and Level-of-Service modules are deployed and configured for the org's service lines before dropping Abridge's coding capture.
- Warning: Abridge anchors each captured code to the conversation via Linked Evidence (MEAT-style auditability); Epic's coding is grounded in the chart but the audit trail differs — verify the coding/CDI team's documentation-support and audit needs are met by Epic before cutover.
- Warning: Autonomous ('no-touch') Penny coding is rolling out starting with Emergency Department and Radiology — most other encounter types remain coder-assisted, so do not assume full automation parity with whatever Abridge was producing.
- Warning: HCC/risk-adjustment capture is revenue-critical: run a side-by-side on a sample of encounters to confirm Epic's suggestions match or beat Abridge's HCC capture before cancelling.