Neravise uses secure transcription support to assist clinicians with clinical documentation during neurodevelopmental assessments. During an assessment, spoken conversation can be converted into written text to help organise information and support report drafting. The responsible clinician remains accountable for reviewing transcript accuracy, editing content where needed, and ensuring that all reports reflect professional clinical judgement.
No. Neravise does not independently diagnose conditions or replace clinician expertise. The platform is designed to support clinicians with documentation, organisation of assessment information, evidence triangulation, and report workflows. Final interpretation, formulation, and diagnostic decision-making always remain the responsibility of the clinician.
For face-to-face appointments, clinicians can activate the Transcription Service Link within the Session Capture workspace. The system can capture audio through an approved microphone setup and generate live transcript support during the session. Clinicians review transcript content and retain full responsibility for checking accuracy and deciding what information is clinically relevant.
For remote appointments, transcription support can be used within a secure assessment environment or integrated communication workflow. With informed consent and appropriate permissions, audio from the assessment session can be processed to generate a transcript to support documentation and report drafting. Clinician oversight remains central throughout the process.
Yes. Neravise uses a clinically informed consent process before transcription support can be activated. Consent is viewed as an ongoing process rather than a one-off signature. Patients are provided with information regarding the purpose of transcription, confidentiality, how information may be used, and their right to ask questions, pause, or withdraw consent at any stage.
Neravise was developed by a HCPC Registered and BPS Chartered Practitioner Psychologist and is designed to support clinicians working in accordance with professional standards relating to informed consent, confidentiality, transparency, autonomy, and professional accountability. The platform supports governance-led workflows, clinician oversight, quality assurance pathways, and clear audit processes.
Neravise is designed with information governance and confidentiality principles in mind. Clinical information is handled within secure workflows intended to support UK GDPR principles, lawful processing, auditability, and professional responsibilities regarding sensitive healthcare information. Access to records should be restricted to authorised individuals involved in care, governance, or quality assurance processes.
Access to transcript information should be limited to authorised professionals involved in the assessment pathway, clinical care, supervision, quality assurance, or governance responsibilities. Clinicians retain responsibility for reviewing and determining what information forms part of the final clinical record.
Yes. Participation and use of transcription support are voluntary. Patients can ask questions, request clarification, pause participation, or withdraw consent at any point during the process. Clinicians remain responsible for discussing options and documenting consent decisions appropriately.
Transcription technology may occasionally mishear words or produce inaccuracies. For this reason, clinicians remain responsible for reviewing transcripts, editing content where necessary, and ensuring that documentation accurately reflects the assessment discussion and clinical understanding.
No. Neravise was designed from a clinician perspective with the understanding that effective assessment is built upon meaningful therapeutic relationships and person-centred practice. The aim is to reduce administrative burden so clinicians can focus more time and attention on patient care and engagement.
Neravise Ltd was created in response to increasing demand for timely, high-quality neurodevelopmental assessments and the growing administrative pressures experienced by clinicians. Built by a HCPC Registered and BPS Chartered Practitioner Psychologist, the platform aims to support clinically governed workflows while preserving professional integrity and the human aspects of assessment practice.