OpenEvidence 2.0 Now AvailableOpenEvidence Adds Administrative and Clinical Workflows, Calculators, and Enhanced Primary Evidence Modules
We are excited to announce OpenEvidence 2.0. In addition to medical search, OpenEvidence now fully supports administrative and clinical workflow use cases, including:
  • Administrative tasks like writing prior authorization letters (based on the evidence, including citations and references)
  • Drafting patient handouts
  • Upgraded diagnostic reasoning support
  • Support for 50+ widely used clinical calculators
  • Detailed drug monograph modules and delineated guideline-based modules
  • Support for tables on demand
  • A wider accepted scope of questions to support the expansion of use cases.
  • OpenEvidence remains free for verified U.S. doctors, and the above features are already automatically enabled. All you need to do is use OpenEvidence as you normally would, but expand the types of questions you ask. Try asking questions like this to explore the new capabilities in OpenEvidence 2.0:
  • "Write a prior auth letter requesting coverage for __________"
  • "Calculate the CHA2DS2-VASc score for __________"
  • "Write home care instructions for a patient who __________"
  • We are dedicated to providing high-quality, evidence-based information at your fingertips. In this update, OpenEvidence maintains its emphasis on grounding information in verifiable, trustworthy sources and builds on that foundation to support a wide range of physician needs.
    If you have feedback or suggestions, please contact us and share your thoughts.
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    OpenEvidence is an experimental technology demonstrator. OpenEvidence does not provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. User questions and other inputs on OpenEvidence are not covered by HIPAA. It is the responsibility of the user to ensure questions do not contain protected health information (PHI) or any information that violates the privacy of any person.