MedArtistryOS is the operational backbone for physicians offering FMLA certification and short-term disability documentation through telehealth. AI-powered intake. Compliant forms. Same-day turnaround.
Employees need job-protected leave. Employers need compliant documentation. Physicians get stuck in the middle with forms that eat clinical time. The current process is slow, manual, and no one wins.
WH-380-E, WH-380-F, attending physician statements, STD claim forms, ADA accommodation letters. Each employer has different requirements.
Employers give employees 15 days to submit certification. By the time they find a doctor, the clock is already running.
100 million Americans don't have a primary care physician. They need a board-certified doctor who knows the FMLA process.
Telehealth practices could serve these patients at $149-200/visit, but the intake and documentation workflow doesn't exist.
AI-powered screening identifies the leave type (intermittent FMLA, continuous FMLA, STD, ADA), pre-fills condition-specific fields, and flags missing information before the visit.
Board-certified physician conducts a focused video consultation. Clinical notes are auto-generated in FMLA-compliant language, saving 30+ minutes per patient.
Certification documents are populated, reviewed by the physician, signed, and securely delivered to the patient. Same-day for intermittent FMLA.
Automated reminders at 30, 60, and 180 days. Follow-up scheduling is handled. One-time patients become ongoing relationships.
Board-certified internist with 20+ years. Not a coordinator, not a referral network. Actual medical evaluation and ongoing patient relationship.
Intelligent intake, auto-form population, compliance-ready clinical notes. The physician focuses on medicine while AI handles documentation.
FMLA recertifications every 6 months. Treatment plan follow-ups. One patient generates 2-4 visits per year, not one.
Patient intake, scheduling, form management, recertification reminders, compliance documentation. MedArtistryOS handles the operational burden so physicians can focus on what matters: the patient on the other side of the screen.