Healthcare
A six-month pilot across 28 clinics shortened average intake time while preserving nurse review on every case.

By Sofia Chen
Public Health Editor

A coalition of nonprofit clinics tested AI-assisted triage to handle high patient volumes in neighborhoods with chronic staffing shortages. Intake forms were pre-scored for urgency, then routed to nurses for confirmation before appointments were assigned.
According to program data reviewed by Becon, median intake time fell from 18 minutes to 11 minutes across participating sites. The largest gains came in clinics that already had standardized triage scripts and bilingual support staff.
Medical directors emphasized that no patient was auto-assigned without human verification. They described the model as a decision support layer rather than a replacement for clinical judgment, especially for patients with multiple chronic conditions.
Patient advocates raised concerns about transparency when intake recommendations changed. In response, clinics added plain-language explanations to discharge paperwork and gave patients a direct channel to request manual reassessment.
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