AI Medical Scribes Show Modest Time Savings in Large Study
- •Study of 1,800 clinicians shows 16 minutes saved per eight-hour shift using AI scribes.
- •Primary care and female clinicians observed higher efficiency gains than other medical specialties.
- •Despite small time savings, AI scribes significantly improve clinician well-being and reduce burnout.
The promise of ambient AI—artificial intelligence that operates in the background to document patient-clinician interactions—has long been touted as a solution for physician burnout. However, a landmark study involving 1,800 clinicians across five academic medical centers suggests the reality is more nuanced. The research, spanning 2023 to 2025, found that AI scribes saved doctors roughly 16 minutes of documentation time for every eight hours of patient care. While this sounds minor, the cumulative effect allowed adopters to see one additional patient every two weeks, demonstrating a small but measurable boost in clinical throughput.
Interestingly, the data revealed that the benefits of automated documentation are not evenly distributed. Primary care physicians and female clinicians reported higher time savings than their peers in other specialties. This discrepancy highlights a growing need for medical institutions to move beyond simple deployment and focus on how to optimize these tools for specific clinical workflows. It appears that the effectiveness of the technology depends heavily on integration strategy and the specific nature of the medical specialty.
Perhaps the most striking finding is the mismatch between raw time savings and clinician sentiment. Although clinicians only gained back about two minutes per hour, previous research consistently shows dramatic improvements in physician satisfaction and professional exhaustion. This suggests that the value of AI scribes lies less in the sheer volume of time recovered and more in the cognitive offloading they provide. By removing the mental burden of manual note-taking during visits, AI allows doctors to focus more on the human connection with their patients.