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Latest revision as of 13:56, 28 January 2026
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Twofold Health is an American healthcare technology company founded in 2024 and headquartered in New York, United States.[2] The company develops artificial intelligence (AI) software for clinical documentation, with a focus on automating medical note creation and patient progress tracking.[2][3]
Twofold Health was founded in 2024 by Elad Maymon, Gal Steinberg, and Michael Tzach.[4] The company was formed in response to the administrative and documentation requirements within healthcare systems.[4][5][6]
Products and technology
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The company has an AI medical scribe platform intended for use during clinical encounters,[2][7] functioning as an AI scribe that captures spoken interactions between clinicians and patients and converts them into structured medical documentation.[2] This approach is intended to reduce the need for manual note-taking during or after patient visits.[7][8][9]
Twofold Health software incorporates AI transcription in healthcare, using automated speech recognition and natural language processing to generate clinical notes and progress records from conversations that occur during care delivery.[2][10] These tools are intended to support ongoing patient tracking and to integrate with existing clinical documentation workflows.[10]
Regulatory compliance and data protection
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Twofold Health states that its platform is designed to comply with U.S. healthcare data protection regulations, including the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)[11] and the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act.[12]
- ^ “Twofold Health”. builtinnyc.com. Retrieved 28 January 2026.
- ^ a b c d e “Clinicians Are Getting Their Patients Back When They Stop Typing”. HealthTech Magazines. Retrieved 27 January 2026.
- ^ Rivers, Alex (21 May 2025). “Beyond the Hype: 6 Ways AI is Transforming Healthcare Providers”. ibtimes.co.uk. Retrieved 27 January 2025.
- ^ a b Littrell, Austin (23 December 2025). “Progress tracking tops list of administrative burdens as value-based care expands, survey finds”. Medical Economics. Retrieved 27 January 2025.
- ^ E. Klein, Hayden (9 December 2025). “Clinicians Cite Progress Tracking as Top Barrier in Value-Based Care”. The American Journal of Managed Care. Retrieved 27 January 2025.
- ^ Trang, Brittany (3 December 2025). “AI scribe clinical trial results are here. What do they actually reveal?”. Stat (website). Retrieved 27 January 2026.
- ^ a b Steinberg, Gal (19 December 2025). “The Unintended Consequence Of Value-Based Care”. Healthcare Business Today. Retrieved 27 January 2026.
- ^ “Clinicians Are Getting Their Patients Back When They Stop Typing”. HealthTech Magazines. Retrieved 27 January 2026.
- ^ L. Longyear, Robert; A. Berenson (January 2026). “Artificial Intelligence Payment Policies: Challenges For CMS And The Medicare Physician Fee Schedule”. Health Affairs. Retrieved 28 January 2026.
- ^ a b Murgia, Madhumita (5 January 2025). “Healthcare turns to AI for medical note-taking ‘scribes’“. Financial Times. Retrieved 27 January 2026.
- ^ Palmer, Katie (24 July 2025). “As ambient scribes face off, Doximity lures doctors with a free option”. Stat (website). Retrieved 27 January 2026.
- ^ Trang, Brittany (20 August 2025). “AI scribe companies promise to help doctors bill more. Who will pay the extra cost?”. Stat (website). Retrieved 27 January 2026.




