Migrate from Oracle Health to Deepscribe.
1 documentation-derived translation pattern — what carries over and what to watch for. Cited to the Feature Parity Map; the audit tells you whether the move is worth it.
DeepScribe and the Oracle Health Clinical AI Agent both listen to the visit ambiently and draft the structured note. A practice running the Oracle Health (Cerner Millennium) EHR can retire the standalone DeepScribe contract and document inside the chart instead: turn on the Oracle Health Clinical AI Agent, which uses ambient listening with a voice-and-screen interface to draft the note directly into the same encounter the clinician already uses for results review, orders, and billing. The provider talks naturally, then edits and signs the draft at the point of care - no separate DeepScribe app or paste-back. Because it lives in the system of record, it also drafts clinical orders (labs, imaging, medications, follow-ups) from the conversation, which a bolt-on scribe can only return as text. Keep Oracle Health; cut DeepScribe.
- Warning: The Clinical AI Agent is licensed as part of the Oracle Health EHR/clinical suite - confirm it is provisioned and enabled for your org/specialties before cancelling DeepScribe; there is no separate public per-seat price to assume.
- Warning: Output is a clinician-reviewed draft requiring sign-off (and order proposals need approval), the same review posture as DeepScribe - not auto-filed.
- Warning: Coverage is reported across 30+ specialties; verify your specialty mix and the languages your clinicians need are supported by the Clinical AI Agent before switching, since DeepScribe's specialty models and multilingual capture will not carry over.
- Warning: Re-validate note structure/formatting in Oracle Health - DeepScribe's personalized, specialty-shaped note style does not transfer; expect to retune templates and confirm the drafted orders land correctly in the live order workflow.