logo
Quebec wants to launch AI pilot project to take medical notes in 2026

Quebec wants to launch AI pilot project to take medical notes in 2026

CTV News2 days ago
Emergency room physician Dr. Olivier Lavigueur works on a computer while providing care for patients in the emergency room at the Humber River Hospital during the COVID-19 pandemic in Toronto on Tuesday, January 25, 2022. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette)
More and more health care professionals are using artificial intelligence (AI) to transcribe medical notes during patient consultations, and Quebec's health ministry is planning to jump on the bandwagon.
Work is underway to evaluate available solutions for clinical and non-clinical notetaking, Santé Québec said in an email to The Canadian Press.
Currently, only solutions that have obtained official certification from Santé Québec, among other criteria to guarantee patient data protection, can be used in the health care network.
Plume IA and CoeurWay are among the Quebec companies attracting more doctors to their applications.
For now, Plume IA mainly does business with family medicine groups (GMFs).
The company is currently in the process of having its application tested by speech therapists, social workers, doctors and nurses 'to demonstrate that it works' and eventually obtain 'a licence for an entire department, for an entire hospital,' said Plume IA Co-Founder Dr. James Tu.
He launched Plume IA with Dr. Jasmin Landry one year ago, and says about 10 per cent of Quebec's doctors are already using their app – about 2,000 doctors.
'The feedback we've gotten has been really encouraging,' said Tu. 'Doctors call us, they write to us, they say we've changed their practice, they go home much less tired, they have more time with their families. We have stories of family doctors who have postponed their retirement this year because they found that the workload had decreased and that it brought back some enjoyment to their work.'
Tu is an emergency physician and estimates that in his practice, he is able to see four to six more patients in an eight-hour shift.
The amount of time saved varies depending on the practice, but in general, health care professionals can save one to two hours of charting per day.
'The app is accessible and works for all specialties,' said Tu. 'Those who get the most value from our app are those who have to do a lot of writing. I'm thinking in particular of social workers who have to write notes on patient demographics and psychosocial issues.'
Proofread, validate and insert
The Plume AI app has two modes.
The first involves recording a discussion during a consultation with a patient (after obtaining their consent).
The app then transforms the discussion into a structured medical note, a step that clinicians are used to doing themselves.
The doctor can also conduct a consultation as normal and then, at the end, record themselves talking to the app to produce the same kind of structured medical note.
According to Tu, even if a patient has a strong accent or uses certain phrases in another language, the app will be able to produce a reliable medical note.
'That's the power of artificial intelligence: it's not necessarily a word-for-word transcription. It's the artificial intelligence that interprets the conversation [...] and is able to deduce a little more about the context,' Tu points out.
He acknowledges that occasionally, some errors may still slip into the note, and that clinicians need to be vigilant.
'I think it's a habit that everyone has anyway, instinctively rereading the note and correcting any typos or adding information that is more visual or implicit. Then they can correct the note directly in the app. It takes a few seconds, and then they can immediately validate it and insert it into their file,' explained Tu.
For now, Plume IA is focusing solely on transcription, but its co-founder says he is confident that the technology will one day advance the accuracy and speed of diagnoses.
'The potential is almost endless, and I think it will happen,' he said.
However, Tu notes that important issues must still be addressed, including ethical questions, accountability, and the diversity of data sources.
The Canadian Press's health coverage is supported by a partnership with the Canadian Medical Association. The Canadian Press is solely responsible for this journalistic content.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published in French on Aug. 11, 2025.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Game-changing,' rapid blood clot removal procedure now standard at 3 Edmonton hospitals
‘Game-changing,' rapid blood clot removal procedure now standard at 3 Edmonton hospitals

CTV News

time29 minutes ago

  • CTV News

‘Game-changing,' rapid blood clot removal procedure now standard at 3 Edmonton hospitals

A new, minimally invasive procedure to remove blood clots introduced earlier this year has become the standard at three Edmonton hospitals. It uses continuous X-ray imaging to help feed a catheter through a vein and the heart to the lungs, where clots are then removed. Patients are usually under mild sedation during the procedure, which lasts one to two hours. Doctors first used the procedure in March at the Royal Alexandra Hospital and the University of Alberta Hospital in a pilot project. The procedure is now standard at the two hospitals as well as at Edmonton's Stollery Children's Hospital and at Calgary's Foothills Medical Centre. David Batke had back surgery at the end of last year. He was recovering from it at home when, a month later, he was getting out of bed and standing up when he passed out and was taken to the Royal Alex. Doctors there determined the 59-year-old had developed a pulmonary embolism, which is a blood clot that has travelled to a lung and blocks an artery. Since Batke wasn't able to take medication to deal with the clots, he was given the choice of open heart surgery or the new procedure. He chose the latter. 'They got me into this procedure in a few hours, and within a couple of hours, they were done the procedure,' Batke said, recalling the experience on Tuesday at the Royal Alex, where Alberta Health Services promoted the new procedure for media. 'I was awake for the whole thing – I heard everything and experienced it all – and within hours after I was done the procedure, I was way better within four to six hours. I was in the ICU (intensive care unit) then, and I was laughing and joking with the nurse.' Batke said he was then released from intensive care to a regular bed in the hospital and was discharged two days later with no symptoms. The business owner who employs 28 people said if he had gone the open heart surgery route, he might have been off work for months. The new procedure, he says, 'is a game-changer.' 'I was 100-per-cent back to normal within a week,' Batke said now nine months later. 'I was back to work and back to regular life.' With files from CTV News Edmonton's Evan Klippenstein

Disciplinary hearing for Cape Breton gynecologist wraps up
Disciplinary hearing for Cape Breton gynecologist wraps up

CBC

time30 minutes ago

  • CBC

Disciplinary hearing for Cape Breton gynecologist wraps up

The lawyer for a Cape Breton gynecologist has denied all allegations that three women have made against her client. And Muneeza Sheikh went further, saying some of the allegations against Dr. Manivasan Moodley could have been motivated by racism. Moodley is of South Asian descent and moved to Canada from South Africa. Sheikh made her comments as part of closing arguments at a disciplinary hearing before a panel created by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Nova Scotia. The panel wrapped up public hearings on Tuesday in Bedford and is now considering whether Moodley's actions in the three cases constitute professional misconduct. If the panel finds that lawyers for the college have proven their allegations, the next step would be to decide what sanctions he should face. There are three separate complaints by women whose identities are protected by a publication ban. Episiotomy case The first case involved a woman who said Moodley defied her express instructions not to perform an episiotomy during the delivery of her first child. Moodley performed the procedure, which involves making an incision to provide more space for the baby's head during delivery, and the woman gave birth to a healthy child. But she said she was traumatized by the experience and the woman's husband described Moodley's actions as an "assault." Sheikh said using language like that against a racialized person like Moodley was troubling. The woman testified she only wanted an episiotomy if her baby's health was in danger. Sheikh said Moodley's understanding was that he had the woman's consent to perform the procedure and it was not uncommon for women in these situations to not have a complete memory of what was said. Sheikh questioned the woman's claim that she was traumatized, noting she went on to have two more children in fairly close succession. The woman also claimed the experience left her depressed, but Sheikh pointed out she was already being treated for depression before her pregnancy. Tubal ligation The second woman was referred to Moodley by her family physician for a consultation on a tubal ligation, a permanent form of birth control. The woman, 21 at the time, testified Moodley refused to do the procedure because of her age and said her boyfriend or husband should have input on whether she should undergo sterilization. Sheikh disputed the woman's version of the consultation, pointing out Moodley had performed tubal ligations on several women under the age of 25. She also said the woman, seven years after her consultation, still had not undergone the procedure, and her complaint to the college followed media reports of other complaints against Moodley. Sheikh argued that just because the woman was upset did not constitute professional misconduct. Early labour The issue in the case of the third woman was whether Moodley failed to detect that she had gone into early labour. She complained of intermittent lower back pain over a six-hour period and eventually gave birth to a son with serious medical complications. "This was an incredibly unfortunate outcome," Sheikh said in her closing arguments. But she said Moodley did the best he could and met the standard of care. Sheikh denied the college's suggestion that Moodley ignored the possibility the woman was in early labour. The lawyer said even though he didn't write it down, the diagnosis would have been "top of mind" as he monitored her condition that day. Referring to the testimony of the woman's husband, Sheikh described him as an "incredibly angry person who probably felt someone should pay" for his child's difficulties. The panel is not expected to deliver a verdict for several weeks.

Lung cancer survival rate has doubled, but it still causes the most cancer deaths: StatCan
Lung cancer survival rate has doubled, but it still causes the most cancer deaths: StatCan

CTV News

time2 hours ago

  • CTV News

Lung cancer survival rate has doubled, but it still causes the most cancer deaths: StatCan

In this Sept. 5, 2013 file photo, an infusion drug to treat cancer is administered to a patient via intravenous drip at Duke Cancer Center in Durham, N.C. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome, File) TORONTO — Statistics Canada says five-year survival rates for people with lung cancer have doubled since the 1990s. The report released today says the number of people living five years after they were diagnosed jumped from 13 per cent to 27 per cent between 1992 and 2021. It says new treatments, including immunotherapy that prompts the patient's immune system to attack cancerous cells, have contributed to better lung cancer survival rates. But lung cancer is still responsible for almost a quarter of all cancer deaths in Canada — more than any other type. StatCan says the cancers with a five-year survival rate of 90 per cent or higher include thyroid, testicular, prostate and breast cancers, as well as melanoma skin cancer. It says cancers with the lowest survival rates of under 10 per cent include mesothelioma — cancer in the membrane that surrounds most internal organs — as well as cancer in the bile ducts of the liver. The report says those cancers, along with pancreatic cancer, are often diagnosed at advanced stages when the cancer has already spread. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 13, 2025. Canadian Press health coverage receives support through a partnership with the Canadian Medical Association. CP is solely responsible for this content. Nicole Ireland, The Canadian Press

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store