×
Suki’s health plans expand beyond AI scribing with Epic integration and Rush partnership
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

Suki’s rapid ascent in the health technology landscape is transforming how clinicians interact with electronic health records and manage patient care. By securing partnerships with major healthcare organizations like Rush and integrating with essential systems like Epic, Suki is positioning itself as an indispensable AI assistant rather than merely a scribing tool. This strategic positioning comes at a pivotal moment when healthcare providers are actively seeking AI solutions that can improve clinical workflows and reduce documentation burden.

The big picture: Health technology company Suki is cementing its position as a leading AI assistant in healthcare through major partnerships with prestigious medical institutions and technology providers.

  • Rush, a Chicago-based academic medical center, announced it will deploy Suki’s technology across 28 specialties, incorporating AI dictation features directly within the Epic electronic health record system.
  • Suki also partnered with Wolters Kluwer Health to integrate the UpToDate clinical evidence database into Suki Assistant, enhancing point-of-care decision support for clinicians.

Key partnerships: Suki has strategically embedded itself within the healthcare technology ecosystem by integrating with major platforms that dominate the market.

  • The company maintains longstanding partnerships with Google and has integrated with major electronic health record systems including Epic, Athenahealth, and Meditech.
  • Zoom, which provides telehealth services to over 140,000 healthcare institutions worldwide and handles 36 percent of virtual visits, has adopted Suki’s AI solutions.

Beyond AI scribing: Suki CEO Punit Soni emphasizes that the company offers more comprehensive functionality than simple AI transcription services.

  • Soni founded Suki in 2017 with the vision of creating an “AI assistant” that could help clinicians with various tasks beyond just documentation.
  • Today’s Suki platform includes problem-based charting, coding, patient summarization, and Q&A features, representing an evolution from its original combination of ambient scribing, voice commands, and dictation.
Suki AI is everywhere—and aims to be invisible

Recent News

AI evidence trumps expert consensus on AGI timeline

New framework suggests analyzing technological developments, economic impacts, and regulatory patterns could yield more reliable AGI forecasts than current expert predictions targeting 2040.

Vive AI résistance? AI skeptics refuse adoption despite growing tech trend

Concerns about lost human connection, environmental impact, and diminished critical thinking drive professionals to reject AI tools despite career pressures.

OpenAI to acquire Windsurf for $3 billion, reports say

The acquisition would significantly bolster OpenAI's AI coding capabilities at a time when specialized coding tools represent a growing competitive challenge to ChatGPT.