My wife Jen is a therapist. And she asked me to build a tool that could speed up her progress notes.
This was over two years ago.
She loved that first version, and she had some colleagues try it out.
They loved it too. And they told colleagues. Who then told their colleagues.
And now here we are, thousands of therapists strong... Spending less time on their documentation each week and maintaining the privacy of their therapy sessions by not recording sessions.
Sometimes I get asked what made us decide to never record sessions.
It was never even a decision. Truly. It was never even a question or topic that Jen or I ever brought up.
It was that unthinkable for the problem we were trying to solve.
I think you just have to believe me on that, but seriously, we never once talked about the possibility of recording and transcribing the session.
A therapist provides a summary of their session. That's the input to Quill. And that's plenty for Quill to then generate a nicely-written note.
Why would you need anything more than that?
This is why we become so passionate about this topic, this consistent urging by companies that recording sessions and introducing AI into the therapy room is not only 100% reasonable, but it's 100% necessary.
We know it's not necessary.
Quill is proof of that. The thousands of therapists that use Quill each week are proof of that.
Anyway, if you haven't tried it out already, I hope you do. Or don't. We're not salespeople, so do what makes you comfortable! (But also know that our free trial is truly no commitment, not even a credit card is needed.)
Jon