Prescriber.io

For teams & settings · Medication reconciliation

Medication reconciliation software for transitions of care

Transitions of care are where medication lists go wrong: an admission, a discharge, a transfer, each one a chance for a drug to be dropped, duplicated, or carried forward when it should have stopped. Reconciling it all by hand is tedious and easy to rush.

Prescriber.io supports medication reconciliation by comparing the lists for you. It surfaces discrepancies between sources, flags duplications and potential omissions, highlights new interactions, and notes doses that may warrant a second look, all with cited rationale. The licensed clinician reviews each item, verifies against official sources, and reconciles. It surfaces the discrepancies; the reconciliation decisions stay with the prescriber.

The Monograph Desk

Press Run check to see the interaction, contraindication, and dosing decision-support card for this scenario.

Illustrative sample · decision-support only · verify against official sources

Interaction

Contraindication / allergy check

Dosing guidance (renal / hepatic)

Guideline-based alternatives

Sources

Illustrative sample · not real clinical advice · you verify and decide

Checked in · you review & sign

Decision support for licensed clinicians. Prescriber.io does not diagnose or prescribe and is not a substitute for professional clinical judgment.

Run a check

Check · flag · suggest · you review and sign off

INTERACTIONS CONTRAINDICATIONS DOSING SOURCES CITED

Decision-support not autonomous prescribing

You review & sign off

Why it works

What your group gets with medication reconciliation

Lists compared for you

The assistant compares the medication lists across sources and surfaces discrepancies, so the tedious line-by-line matching is structured rather than manual.

Discrepancies flagged

Duplications, potential omissions and new interactions are flagged with cited rationale, so the items needing attention stand out.

Clinician reconciles

Each flag is a prompt to review and verify. The licensed clinician decides the reconciled list and signs; the software supports the work.

What it handles

Checked, flagged and suggested for your review

The decision-support card checks the prescription for interactions, flags contraindications and allergy blockers, surfaces renal and hepatic dose adjustments, and suggests guideline-based alternatives. You confirm, verify against official sources, and sign off.

  • Compares medication lists across sources
  • Surfaces discrepancies and potential omissions
  • Flags duplications and new interactions
  • Notes doses that may warrant review
  • Clinician verifies and reconciles the list
MEDICATION RECONCILIATION REVIEW

Interaction flagged for review

A potential drug interaction is surfaced on the sample prescription for the clinician to review. The card flags it for your judgment and does not prescribe.

Dosing guidance

Renal dose adjustment suggested for review. Confirm against official sources before prescribing. Decision-support for review and sign-off.

Illustrative sample · not real clinical advice You review & sign off

Why Prescriber.io

One integrated check at the point of care

Not separate lookups stitched together. Check interactions, flag contraindications and suggest alternatives in one calm card, with the clinician signing off on every prescription.

Checks interactions and contraindications

A second set of eyes flags drug interactions, contraindications and allergy blockers for review on every prescription, so a missed interaction is less likely to slip past at the end of a long clinic.

Surfaces dosing guidance

Renal and hepatic dose adjustments surface alongside the checks, so a dose that should be adjusted for organ function is raised for you to confirm before you prescribe.

Suggests guideline-based alternatives

When a flag warrants it, the card suggests guideline-based alternatives with a one-line rationale and cited sources. The suggestion saves the lookup, never the judgment.

Good questions

Questions about medication reconciliation

No. It surfaces discrepancies, duplications and interactions across lists, but the licensed clinician reviews each item, verifies against official sources and decides the reconciled list. It is decision support, not autonomous reconciliation.
At transitions of care, such as admission, discharge or transfer, where lists are most likely to diverge. It compares the sources and flags what needs attention so the prescriber can reconcile efficiently and sign.

Explore more

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From the blog: best drug interaction checker in 2026, what is clinical decision support, and how to reduce prescribing errors.

Prescribe with the decision-support card alongside you

Check for drug interactions, flag contraindications, surface renal and hepatic dosing, and suggest guideline-based alternatives. You review, verify against official sources, and sign off on every prescription.

See pricing

Prescriber.io is a clinical reference and decision-support tool for licensed clinicians. It does not diagnose or prescribe autonomously and is not a substitute for professional clinical judgment. Always verify against official sources.