Doctor's notes contain codes, abbreviations, and clinical language that obscure what's actually being said about your care. Learning to decode these notes—what they reveal about your diagnosis, what concerns triggered which tests, what wasn't mentioned—gives you clarity and helps you spot gaps in your care.
You have the legal right to your medical records, including your doctor's notes about you. But reading them is another matter—they're full of abbreviations, medical terminology, and documentation standards that make them nearly incomprehensible to regular people. This is where AI becomes genuinely useful as a translator.
Doctor's notes use shorthand and medical vocabulary not because doctors are trying to exclude you, but because they're writing for other medical professionals. "NKDA" means "No Known Drug Allergies." "Afebrile" means "no fever." "CC: SOB" means "Chief Complaint: Shortness of Breath." Individually these make sense once explained; together they create documents that sound like a foreign language.
Get a copy of your notes (your doctor's office can provide them). Paste a section into an AI and ask: "Please explain this doctor's note in simple language. What is the doctor saying about my health?" The AI will translate abbreviations, explain medical terms, and summarize what's actually being documented.
This is powerful because doctor's notes contain important information. They note what the doctor observed, what concerns them, what they diagnosed, what they're treating, what they're monitoring, and what they think might happen next. Understanding these notes helps you understand your health better. It also helps you catch potential errors—if the note says something that's not accurate, you can correct it.
First: the assessment section. This is what the doctor thinks is going on. Second: the plan section. This is what they're doing about it. These two sections contain the key information. Don't get lost in the detailed observations; focus on what the doctor concluded and what they're planning.
Look for language that indicates confidence versus uncertainty. "Likely pneumonia" versus "Possible pneumonia" versus "Rule out pneumonia" mean very different things. The doctor's language reveals how sure they are. This matters because it changes what needs to happen next.
Check whether the notes match what the doctor told you verbally. Usually they do, but sometimes there are discrepancies. Maybe the doctor said "you might have a thyroid issue" but the note says "thyroid function likely normal." That's worth clarifying. Notes are the official record, so they take priority, but you should understand why there's a difference if one exists.
Try this: Ask your doctor's office for your last clinical note. Paste it into an AI and ask for a simple explanation. Then re-read the note with that explanation. You'll start to recognize patterns in how doctors write. The next time you get a note, you'll understand it faster.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.