It documents that you knew errors were possible and signed anyway.
When an AI scribe hallucinates a dangerous drug combination into your Plan — and you sign it — this disclaimer becomes evidence of negligence, not defense against it.
"Doctor, what specific steps did you take to verify the accuracy of this note before you signed it?"
Free. Always. Your safety attestation record builds with every note you verify. Your license. Your credential. Yours to keep.
Join Charter Cohort →The first 500 providers who define the Vaultus safety standard. Named co-investigator in the peer-reviewed safety publication. Input into rule development. A portable safety credential that grows with every note. First access to CE credit when Joint Accreditation is granted. The cohort closes at 500 providers.
Join Now — Free →Your patient's information never touches our servers. We read the note, extract safety signals only, and destroy the rest immediately. We cannot leak what we do not keep.
The safety layer uses hard-coded rules only. No language model. No probabilistic output. No hallucination possible. Binary pass or fail.
Vaultus is permanently free to providers. Revenue comes from de-identified safety signal data licensed to clinical research and quality organizations — not from you.
I'm a practicing family nurse practitioner. I also served as a medical officer in the California State Guard, including a deployment to a skilled nursing facility during COVID — no protocols, no infrastructure, just clinical judgment and whatever we could build fast enough to matter. For that work, I was awarded the Medal of Merit.
That experience taught me something: the gap between what AI generates and what a provider needs to safely sign is not a training problem. It's a verification problem.
AI scribes are getting better. They're also hallucinating drug interactions, missing contraindications, and generating notes that look right but aren't. The current best practice — a Mayo Clinic professor said it plainly — is teaching providers to carefully read the note before signing. That's the state of the art.
Vaultus is what comes next.
Every note runs through 129 hard-coded clinical safety rules before your signature. Not AI. Not probabilistic. Rules derived from national guidelines, FDA labeling, and regulatory standards — rules that either fire or they don't. The safety decision is never a guess.
If the note is clean, you see nothing. The silence is the signal.
If something fires, you know exactly what it is, why it matters, and what the guideline says.
Free to every provider. No subscription. No EHR integration required.