Check, flag, dose, then you sign
Clinical decision support that checks before you sign
Prescriber.io flags drug interactions for review, surfaces contraindications, and suggests renal or hepatic dosing before you sign the prescription. Here is exactly how the assistant supports each decision at the point of care, from the first check to your signature.
Prescriber.io is a decision-support tool for licensed clinicians. It does not diagnose or prescribe and is not a substitute for professional clinical judgment. Verify against official sources. Final prescribing decisions always rest with the responsible clinician.
The check, end to end
How clinical decision support fits the decision: enter, flag, dose, sign
No new tab to babysit and no prescription written for you. The assistant does the checking, the surfacing, and the suggesting; the licensed clinician makes every call and signs off.
01 / ENTER
Enter the drug or scenario
Type a drug and a second drug, or pick a scenario. The assistant pulls the interaction, contraindication, and dosing checks together, flagged for your review. It surfaces what may warrant a closer look. It does not diagnose or prescribe.
02 / CHECK
Interactions and contraindications flagged
Drug-drug interactions, allergies, and contraindications are surfaced in plain language with the mechanism, not just a code, so a buried blocker shows up before the script does, not after.
03 / DOSE
Renal and hepatic dosing surfaced
Dose adjustments for reduced renal or hepatic function arrive alongside, with guideline-based alternatives and cited sources, so you start from an integrated check instead of four separate lookups.
04 / REVIEW & SIGN
Review and sign
You verify against official sources, choose, and sign. Nothing is prescribed until the clinician signs it. The assistant supports the decision; the responsible clinician owns it.
See it for yourself
Watch the assistant check a sample prescription
This is an illustrative sample, not real clinical advice. Run it and watch the interaction get flagged, the contraindication check surface, and a structured decision-support card build line by line, ready for the clinician to verify and sign off.
- The interaction is flagged in plain language with the mechanism
- Contraindications and allergies are surfaced before you sign
- Renal and hepatic dosing arrives alongside, with cited sources
- Every check ends the same way: the clinician verifies and signs off
Press Run check to see the interaction, contraindication, and dosing decision-support card for this scenario.
Interaction
Contraindication / allergy check
Dosing guidance (renal / hepatic)
Guideline-based alternatives
Illustrative sample · not real clinical advice · you verify and decide
Clinician-in-the-loopDecision support for licensed clinicians. Prescriber.io does not diagnose or prescribe and is not a substitute for professional clinical judgment.
Across the prescriptions you write
One assistant across interactions, contraindications and dosing
The same check, flag and suggest flow runs across the prescribing decisions a primary care, urgent care, or hospital list mixes through in a shift, so you are not stitching together separate lookups by question type.
Drug interactions
Every prescription gets a structured second read for drug-drug interactions. The assistant surfaces the mechanism and plain-language risk, so a missed CYP interaction is flagged while you can still act on it.
Contraindications and allergies
Allergies and contraindications buried in the picture are surfaced from the scenario, so the blocker shows up before the prescription does, not after.
Renal and hepatic dosing
Dose adjustments for reduced renal or hepatic function arrive alongside the interaction check, with guideline-based alternatives and cited sources, as decision-support you confirm and apply.
What it is, and is not
The questions every clinician asks first
Is the assistant prescribing for me?
No. Prescriber.io is decision-support only. It checks for interactions, contraindications, and dosing and suggests options to save you time. You review, verify against official sources, and sign every prescription. It is not a substitute for professional clinical judgment.
Does the clinician still sign every prescription?
Always. Nothing is prescribed until the responsible clinician signs it. The card is a prompt, the sign-off is yours, and the prescribing decision rests with you.
What does it check?
Drug-drug interactions, contraindications and allergies, and renal or hepatic dose adjustments, with guideline-based alternatives. The same check, flag and suggest flow runs across them, with coverage scoped per plan.
Are the flags graded for accuracy?
We speak to workflow, not to a performance figure. The flags are a second set of eyes and the suggestions are a starting point. The clinician decides what is clinically appropriate and verifies against official sources before prescribing.
Does it fit our prescribing workflow?
It is designed to sit alongside how you already check and decide. We scope which checks, references and how it fits your stack with your group during onboarding.
Catch the interaction before you sign the prescription
Bring the check, flag and suggest flow to your point of care, across interactions, contraindications and dosing. You verify and sign every prescription.
Decision-support, not autonomous prescribing · Verify against official sources · The clinician always signs