An honest comparison

Do you need a clinic system —
or a better prescription?

Most tools sell you a whole clinic operating system to get one feature: the prescription. Rxcript is that one feature, done brilliantly — and built for how Indian doctors actually work.

The right fit

Right-sized for a doctor who prescribes.

Too little
Paper
Fast to write — but illegible, lost, and no history.
The pad you're leaving
Just right
Rxcript
A real digital prescription — as fast as your pad, professional, with every patient's history a tap away. Nothing to learn.
Built for you
More than you need
Full EMR / HMS suites
Scheduling, billing, hospital ops — powerful, but a project to adopt and a budget to match.
Healthplix · Eka · Practo · MocDoc · DocPulse

Rxcript is deliberately right-sized for the doctor who just wants to prescribe, brilliantly.

What you're actually buying

An EMR is a box of a dozen modules. You use three.

…and the prescription — the one you use most — is the weakest part of a bloated suite.

A full EMR / clinic suite — what you pay for
Appointments✓ you use this
Billing & invoicing✓ you use this
Prescription✓ you use this
Telemedicine
Pharmacy / inventory
Lab / LIMS
CRM / marketing
Analytics / reports
Insurance / claims
Patient app
ABDM / ABHA

You buy, set up and learn the whole box — and touch three. The greyed tiles are weight you carry and rarely open.

Rxcript — what you actually buy
The prescription — done brilliantly
India drug databaseInteraction safety Your protocols & favouritesPatient history ICD-11Branded print & share

+ lightweight appointments — your front desk can book, reschedule and reassign, and queue the day.

Need full scheduling and billing? Keep a simple, focused tool for those — and skip the modules you'd never open.

A full suite makes the prescription one buried feature among a dozen. Rxcript makes that one part excellent, keeps the day's appointments light, and lets you pair a simple tool for the rest. Right-sized — not stripped-down.

For your clinic

One clinic. One prescribing standard.

For an owner, the question isn't "can my doctors prescribe?" — it's "do they all prescribe to the same standard?" Rxcript lets you curate the medicines your clinic trusts and the protocols it follows, so every doctor starts from your standard — and your brands come first because you chose them, not because pharma paid to show them.

Prescribing control
No ops suite
Full ops suite
your clinic, one standard
Rxcript Prescription pad Healthplix Eka Practo MocDoc DocPulse
No prescribing control

The others sell you operations. Rxcript gives the owner something they don't: control over how the whole clinic prescribes.

Speed you can trust

AI scribes: we watch closely, and adopt carefully.

AI scribes that write the note from a recording can help in English-first clinics1 — and we track the technology closely. But today the reality is messier, and it bites hardest in an Indian OPD. Here's the bar it has to clear before we'd put it in front of your patients:

Medico-legal risk

You sign off on a note a machine guessed at — scribes have been caught documenting entire exams that never happened.3

The time-savings fallacy

In the largest studies the savings are modest and inconsistent — not the magic the demos promise.4

Proof-reading overhead

AI notes are wordier, miss details and hallucinate — so you read and correct every one.2

Accents & "Hinglish"

Most consultations aren't in textbook English. Speech-recognition errors jump 30–50% on the accented, code-switched speech of a real visit.78

Regional languages

Even the best models miss 1 in 5 to 1 in 3 words in Indian languages — far more in Tamil, Telugu and Kannada — with patients the hardest to transcribe.56

Privacy & consent

An ambient scribe records the whole consultation and sends the audio to a third-party model. Patients are already suing over recordings made without consent,9 and recording a clinical conversation is itself regulated.10

So for now, prescribing is fast through structure, not dictation — protocols, favourites, one-tap repeat: deterministic, with no transcript to police. The day an AI scribe is accurate enough for an Indian clinic, we'll add it — we just won't trade your time or your medico-legal safety for a demo-friendly feature before then.

Where Rxcript doesn't lead — and we'll say so

  • AI voice scribe: if you want ambient voice-to-note, Eka and Healthplix offer it — we deliberately don't, to keep you clear of the documentation risks above. Our speed comes from structure, not dictation.
  • Appointments & billing: staff can book, reschedule, reassign and queue patients. What we don't do: patient self-booking, automated reminders, doctor leave/holiday calendars, or billing — keep your existing tool for those, and Rxcript runs alongside it.
  • Running a hospital? You'll want a full suite — and we'll tell you so.

See the prescription, done right — in under two minutes.

No commitment. We'll show you a real encounter end to end.

Request a demo
References
  1. Ambient AI scribes & reduced burnout — PMC, 2025.
  2. Quality of AI-generated clinical notes (thorough, but less succinct & more hallucination) — Frontiers in AI, 2025.
  3. Risks of AI scribes, including fabricated examinations — npj Digital Medicine, 2025.
  4. Modest, inconsistent time savings in large deployments — STAT, Apr 2026.
  5. Clinical-speech word-error rates of ~18–72% for Hindi and up to ~98% for Kannada (best models still ~15–35%), with patient speech the hardest — "ASR Under the Stethoscope: Biases in Clinical Speech Recognition across Indian Languages," arXiv 2025.
  6. Indian-language ASR benchmarks — Dravidian languages (Tamil, Telugu, Kannada) far worse than English/Hindi — Voice of India / AI4Bharat, 2026.
  7. ~30–50% higher word-error rates on code-switched ("Hinglish") speech — Gnani.ai.
  8. Accent-related errors in clinical speech transcription — npj Digital Medicine, 2026.
  9. Class action over patients audio-recorded by an ambient AI scribe without consent — Medscape, 2026.
  10. Recording a clinical conversation requires patient consent (all-party consent in many jurisdictions) — State-by-state consent guide, 2026.

Competitor positions are directional, based on public product information (June 2026), and are a positioning aid rather than a scored benchmark.