The Nigerian doctor’s missing hour.
6,800 consultations documented in beta
Speak the consultation. Read the note.
consultation_0642 · generated in 48s
SUBJECTIVE Fever ×4 days, intermittent, worse at night.
Headache, generalised body pain. Vomited ×2.
Incomplete OTC course of artemether-lumefantrine.
OBJECTIVE T 38.6°C · BP 118/76 · P 96
Chest clear. Mild splenic tip palpable.
ASSESSMENT Uncomplicated P. falciparum malaria (B50.9)
DDx: typhoid fever (A01.0), viral syndrome (B34.9)
[REVIEW: prior partial ACT course]
PLAN AL 80/480 mg PO BD ×3/7 with food (full 6-dose course)
Paracetamol 1 g PO 8-hourly PRN, max 4 g/day
MP test + FBC · Review in 3/7 or sooner if not
tolerating fluidsA differential that knows where your patient lives.
01
Uncomplicated P. falciparum malaria
B50.9
02
Typhoid (enteric) fever
A01.0
03
Viral syndrome
B34.9
Checked against the medicines Nigerians actually take.
check artemether-lumefantrine × ciprofloxacin
artemether-lumefantrine×ciprofloxacin
6,800
4
14
74%
Built by clinicians and engineers who got tired of the same problem.
Dr. Amara Nwosu
“Every extra hour a doctor spends on paperwork is an hour taken from a patient. That trade-off is visible and measurable. We built Cassia to take that trade-off off the table.”
Ifeanyi Eze
“The hard part is not the AI. It is making the AI work on a 2G connection, on a two-year-old Android, in a room with background noise from a hospital ward. That is the actual product.”
I stopped taking notes home. That sentence would not have been true any evening of the last nine years.
Senior Registrar, Federal Medical Centre Abuja (beta participant)