> I still don't want a fucking audio recorder in my doctor's office ...
If I got a copy of the raw recording I might consider it. Maybe. Having that audio recording would be valuable to me.
It's very irksome medical providers I visit have signs posted prohibiting audio and video recording by patients. My medical appointments aren't exceedingly complex, but a reference audio recording would be handy.
I suppose I could exercise civil disobedience and just record anyway since it's not illegal in my state. Still, it irks me.
> If I got a copy of the raw recording I might consider it. Maybe. Having that audio recording would be valuable to me.
We wouldn't be able to provide it because it's never kept. It's transcribed directly, and then only the note summary is kept. This is to ensure the recording and transcript can't leak (because they don't exist). This was one of my first questions for all of these tools. Where does the data go, how is it processed, what happens. One company refused to talk about it, so I refused to talk to them.