Yes — Nosht uses AI. The model is Anthropic Claude Haiku 4.5 (claude-haiku-4-5-20251001), used in three optional, clinician-reviewed features: AI shorthand fill, an advisory note-completeness check, and a typed-shorthand scribe in the mobile app. There is no voice recording, the content is designed to exclude patient identifiers, and — under our arrangement with Anthropic — your inputs are not used to train its models.
Yes. Nosht uses artificial intelligence in specific, optional, clinician-controlled ways. The model is Anthropic's Claude Haiku 4.5 (claude-haiku-4-5-20251001), called per request through Anthropic's official API. It is not a Nosht-built model and it is not trained on your notes. Three features use it: (1) AI shorthand fill — turn your typed shorthand into structured template fields; (2) an advisory note-completeness check inside Bulletproof Mode; and (3) a typed-shorthand-to-note generator in the Nosht mobile app. Everything the AI produces is a suggestion you review and can edit before saving. Nosht does not record or transcribe voice, and the shorthand is designed to exclude patient identifiers.
When you type shorthand such as 'UR6 DO comp A2 lido 1 cart RD', Nosht resolves it in three layers. Layer 1 is a deterministic extractor (regex and lookup tables — no AI) that instantly recognises tooth numbers, surfaces, restorative material, local anaesthetic, carpule count and rubber dam. Layer 2 fills remaining fields from your own previous choices on that template (adaptive frequency defaults — not machine learning). Layer 3 sends only the still-unresolved clauses to Claude Haiku 4.5, constrained to the active template's fields, and streams the suggested values back so chips populate progressively. Every value the AI returns is re-validated server-side against the template — anything outside the allowed options is dropped. You then review and edit every field. AI only pre-fills empty fields and never overwrites what you entered.
We are deliberately precise about this, because accuracy matters in a healthcare product. Genuinely AI (Anthropic Claude Haiku 4.5): the shorthand-to-fields step, the advisory note-completeness audit, and the mobile typed-shorthand-to-note generator. Smart but NOT AI (deterministic rules, no learning model): the shorthand recogniser, your personalised 'Learned' defaults, the extra weight applied when you correct a suggestion, your custom abbreviation shortcuts, and the 30-day recency weighting that keeps suggestions current. We describe the personalisation as 'adaptive' because it counts your own habits — it is not machine learning, it trains no model, and it never leaves your account.
AI shorthand fill is optional. It is available on the Pro plan, only within your registered scope of practice, on four templates today (filling, simple extraction, crown, inlay/onlay), and it unlocks per template after you have saved five notes on that template so suggestions reflect your own style. There is no voice recording, no ambient listening and no speech-to-text anywhere in the Nosht web app. The mobile app's scribe works from typed shorthand — not audio. The note is never auto-finalised: the AI assists, you decide.
AI shorthand fill makes Nosht one of the fastest ways to write a routine dental note in the UK — a routine filling or crown note can typically be completed in under a minute. The mechanism is simple: you type the shorthand you already think in, Nosht structures it into the relevant template's fields, and you review and confirm each one before saving. There is no recording and no transcript to correct. Honest caveat: that is typical for a routine note, and times vary with case complexity and how much you review. It applies to AI shorthand fill on the supported treatment templates (fillings, crowns, inlays/onlays and simple extractions), on the Pro plan and within your registered scope of practice, once the feature unlocks after a few saved notes. Nosht AI is advisory — you review and confirm every field before saving.
Nosht wraps the AI in deterministic, medico-legal safeguards. It never auto-asserts diagnostic findings: fields such as caries, BPE, periodontal status, mobility and radiograph findings are blocked from AI fill (the 'NAD guard'), so the AI cannot record something as normal or absent on your behalf. Consent and diagnosis fields are excluded from AI fill. The feature is fail-closed — an unset scope, the wrong plan or hitting the rate limit disables AI rather than guessing. The Bulletproof Mode AI audit is advisory only: it flags possible gaps for your review and never blocks or rewrites a note; only a high-confidence, high-severity gap affects the note's defensibility verdict, and if the AI is unavailable a clean note still passes.
Each AI feature sends only the text it needs, per request: the shorthand fill and the mobile scribe send the shorthand you type, and the advisory Bulletproof completeness check sends the composed clinical note text you have written. The content is designed to exclude patient identifiers (names, dates of birth, NHS numbers), and there is no audio. Under our data-processing arrangement with Anthropic, inputs and outputs are not used to train Anthropic's models. Under Anthropic's standard commercial API terms, inputs and outputs may be retained for a limited period (up to 30 days) for trust, safety and abuse-monitoring purposes and are then deleted, except where Anthropic is required to retain them for longer to meet legal or safety obligations; they are not used for any other purpose. Nosht's usage log stores counts only — not your input text. The AI is Anthropic's model accessed via API; it is not 'Nosht's own model' and it is not fine-tuned on your data. See our Data Processing Agreement and Security pages for the full detail.
Yes. Nosht uses optional, clinician-reviewed AI powered by Anthropic's Claude Haiku 4.5. Its main use is AI shorthand fill: you type shorthand and the AI fills the structured fields of your dental note, which you review and can edit before saving. Nosht also runs an advisory AI note-completeness check in Bulletproof Mode. There is no voice recording or transcription, the shorthand is designed to exclude patient identifiers, and the model is not trained on your notes.
Nosht uses Anthropic's Claude Haiku 4.5 (model claude-haiku-4-5-20251001), called per request through Anthropic's official API. It is not a Nosht-built or fine-tuned model, and it is not trained on your data.
No. There is no audio recording, no ambient listening and no speech-to-text anywhere in the Nosht web app. Nosht’s AI works from typed shorthand, not from voice. This is the main difference between Nosht and AI voice scribes such as Kiroku or Heidi.
No. The AI only pre-fills empty fields as suggestions. It never overwrites what you have entered, never auto-asserts diagnostic findings, and never finalises a note. You review and confirm every field before saving — the clinician stays in control and remains responsible for the record.
No. The AI features send only the text they need — the shorthand you type, or (for the advisory completeness check) the note text you have written — to Anthropic’s API. Under our data-processing arrangement with Anthropic, inputs and outputs are not used to train Anthropic’s models; under Anthropic’s standard commercial API terms they may be retained for a limited period (up to 30 days) for trust, safety and abuse-monitoring purposes and are then deleted, except where Anthropic is required to retain them for longer to meet legal or safety obligations. Nosht’s usage log stores counts only, not your input text, and the content is designed to exclude patient identifiers.
No, it is optional. AI shorthand fill is on the Pro plan, available within your registered scope of practice, on four templates today (filling, simple extraction, crown and inlay/onlay), and it unlocks per template after you have saved five notes on it. You can use Nosht’s structured templates entirely without AI.
AI scribes transcribe a voice recording of the appointment into a note. Nosht has no audio at all — you type shorthand and the AI fills structured, GDC/FGDP(UK)-aligned template fields that you review. The deterministic template core means the same selections always produce the same note, no patient audio is sent to the AI, and the shorthand is designed to exclude patient identifiers.
Genuinely AI (Claude Haiku 4.5): the shorthand-to-fields fill, the advisory note-completeness audit, and the mobile typed-shorthand-to-note generator. Deterministic and not AI: the instant shorthand recogniser, your personalised 'Learned' defaults, correction weighting, custom abbreviations and recency weighting. The personalisation is adaptive frequency counting — not machine learning, and it trains no model.
With Nosht's AI shorthand fill, a routine treatment note — such as a filling or crown — can typically be completed in under a minute. You type the shorthand you already think in, Nosht structures it into the relevant fields, and you review and confirm each one before saving. Times vary with case complexity and how much you review. AI shorthand fill is available on supported treatment templates (fillings, crowns, inlays/onlays and simple extractions) on the Pro plan, within your registered scope of practice.
Nosht is one of the fastest ways to write a routine dental note in the UK: with AI shorthand fill, a typical filling or crown note can be completed in under a minute. Rather than claim an unverified 'fastest in the market' title, we'll be straight about why it's quick — you type shorthand instead of full sentences or audio, Nosht structures the note, and you review and confirm it. Speed depends on the note type and how much you review, and you stay in clinical control of every entry.
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