Tali doesn't "auto-generate" minutes in a way that bypasses compliance requirements. It helps create more timely, meaningful interactions and supports cleaner documentation workflows for what your team actually does.
Tali surfaces patients who are ready to engage and flags meaningful signals that lead to reimbursable follow-up. It reduces time wasted on cold outreach and repetitive clarifications so coordinators can focus on threshold-moving work.
Examples include symptom changes, missed measurements, adherence drift, and patient questions that indicate confusion or emerging risk. The point is to convert passive patients into actionable, compliant engagement moments.
Tali improves timing by highlighting patients showing real-time engagement signals instead of forcing blanket outreach. Coordinators spend less time chasing and more time on patients most likely to respond and benefit.
Tali structures patient-reported data (symptoms, vitals, adherence) and keeps interactions reviewable. This makes it easier to document what happened, why outreach occurred, and what was addressed—without messy free-text trails.
Yes—Tali is designed to work alongside existing CCM/RPM platforms rather than replacing them. We focus on strengthening engagement and triage while minimizing duplicate documentation.
Tali prompts patients when measurements are missed and makes logging simpler through guided flows. Out-of-range values are flagged with context so your team can act without manually hunting for trends.
Tali categorizes signals by urgency and relevance so teams can work the highest-yield queue first. Prioritization is driven by your thresholds, protocols, and what the patient is signaling in real time.
It's designed to align expectations around measurable operational or engagement lift within the first 60–90 days. The specifics depend on your program size, workflow, and baseline performance metrics.
Hiring adds capacity, but it doesn't fix low contact rates, poor timing, and repetitive low-acuity workload. Tali increases the efficiency of existing staff by automating routine clarification and surfacing the right patients at the right time.
Programs typically see improvement by shifting effort toward patients most likely to engage and by creating more meaningful touchpoints. The exact lift depends on your baseline contact rates, panel mix, and workflow adoption.
Timelines vary based on integration complexity and governance, but the implementation is designed to be straightforward. We start by aligning on care plans, thresholds, escalation rules, and how signals flow into your team's workflow.
Yes. Tali is designed to replace most day to day portal messaging by acting as a 24/7 extension of the care team. It delivers care plan aligned guidance, supports RPM workflows, captures structured updates beyond vitals, and escalates only clinically meaningful signals for human review so the inbox becomes exceptions, not the workflow.
Tali is designed to embed within Epic and other leading EHR workflows so teams don't have to context-switch. It supports enrollment, care-plan reinforcement, and triage signal visibility inside the tools care providers already use.
Tali excels at reinforcing discharge instructions, answering routine follow-up questions, and tracking symptoms/vitals that often drift at home. It helps surface early escalation signals before small issues become avoidable visits.
Tali delivers patient-specific, care-plan-aligned guidance on demand in plain language. That deflects repetitive "clarification" traffic while keeping teams informed when real intervention is needed.
Triage is driven by care provider-defined protocols, thresholds, and scope boundaries. Out-of-range readings, risk signals, and off-protocol requests are escalated with context, while routine guidance stays automated.
Tali does not diagnose or provide unbounded medical advice. It reinforces assigned care plans and escalates anything that implies risk, treatment changes, or content outside the defined scope.
Patients can log symptoms and vitals through guided flows, with Bluetooth uploads supported where applicable. Missed measurements trigger follow-ups, and out-of-range values are flagged for clinical review.
Signals are categorized by risk level to help teams prioritize quickly. Alerts and routed conversations are visible to the care team within the established workflow, with context to support decision-making.
Implementation depends on integration, governance, and rollout scope. Our approach is designed to minimize disruption by embedding into existing workflows rather than introducing another standalone tool.
Tali is built for clinical-grade security and reliability with HIPAA compliance and GDPR/SOC-aligned practices. Data access, behavior, and escalations are designed to be controlled and reviewable.
Tali reinforces your specialty protocols exactly as assigned, including post-op instructions, medication plans, and condition-specific thresholds. It escalates deviations that matter while keeping routine education automated.
Tali is built for broad medical coverage, but specialty impact is often strongest where protocol precision and symptom surveillance are critical. Common examples include cardiology, pulmonology, oncology, neurology, and orthopedics.
Triage is governed by your thresholds and escalation rules, so alerts are driven by meaningful deviations—not generic anxiety signals. Messages implying safety risk or off-protocol requests route for review with clear risk categorization.
Yes—your care plans, ranges, and workflows define what Tali reinforces and what must be escalated. This keeps the system clinically consistent with how your practice already delivers care.
Tali reinforces medication instructions in plain language and helps patients stay aligned to the regimen you prescribed. It also reduces repetitive clarifications by answering routine questions on demand within protocol.
Caregivers can be included when appropriate to support adherence and monitoring between visits. The experience is designed with privacy and safety controls so collaboration doesn't compromise governance.
Yes—Tali supports structured tracking and can support Bluetooth uploads where applicable. It's designed to be device-agnostic, with your care provider-defined thresholds driving what gets flagged.
If a message falls outside the approved care-plan scope or implies treatment changes, it's routed for clinical review. That keeps patient support safe while protecting care providers from unnecessary noise.
Specialty teams often see improved adherence, earlier identification of meaningful deviations, and reduced clarification workload. The goal is fewer preventable complications and less operational drag between visits.
Tali is built to work alongside your EHR and communications workflow rather than forcing a new system. It reinforces protocols between visits and surfaces only the signals your team needs to act on.