Lennox reads clerking notes as they're written and surfaces cited NICE & RCEM red flags before discharge — so a tired doctor at 4am never has to catch everything alone.
Most negligence claims trace back to a diagnosis missed at first presentation. Not because doctors don't care — because the conditions make it inevitable.
13-hour shifts and life-or-death decisions at 4am. Fatigue is the single biggest human factor behind missed red flags.
One junior doctor, a corridor full of patients. There is no time for a second look — and often no senior free to give one.
First impressions anchor. Once "?renal colic" is written down, the tearing pain and the pulsatile mass stop getting read.
No new workflow. No new training. Lennox sits quietly alongside the EPR and acts before the decision — not after harm.
The clerking note is written exactly as it is today. Nothing changes for the clinician.
The moment notes are written, Lennox is already reading them — directly from the EPR.
Every note is checked against NICE & RCEM red-flag criteria for the highest-harm conditions.
A quiet, cited flag at the point of decision — never more than 3 differentials, 1 test, 1 escalation.
Tearing abdo→back pain, pulsatile fullness, presyncope, 77M smoker, FHx aneurysm — β-blocker may be masking tachycardia.
NICE NG156 · RCEM rAAA ToolkitBefore CT KUB. Do not delay definitive care if unstable.
RCEM rAAA ToolkitDo not discharge. Document the discussion.
NICE NG156Lennox acts at the point of decision, while there is still time to change the outcome.
Every safety rule is enforced in code — not just asked of the AI.
Every flag must cite a named NICE or RCEM guideline. If Lennox can't ground a concern in a real source, it raises nothing — hallucinated citations are structurally impossible.
Never more than 3 differentials, 1 investigation and 1 escalation per case. Fewer, better flags — because an ignored alert protects nobody.
Lennox surfaces considerations; the clinician decides. Every output carries that framing — by design, and for the regulator.
Every flag is logged with its citations on an append-only audit trail. When a decision is questioned later, the evidence is already there.
Problem → solution, narrated, with our bear doing the heavy lifting. Sound on. 🔊
The rarest combination in NHS health-tech: a doctor who lives the problem daily, and an engineer who ships AI in regulated environments.