doximityscribe
May 15, 2026

How to Set Up Doximity Scribe for Your Specialty

How to Set Up Doximity Scribe for Your Specialty
# documentation
# progressnote

Templates, prompts, and Smart Edits configured for how you actually practice

Doximity Team
Doximity Team
How to Set Up Doximity Scribe for Your Specialty
Most physicians open Scribe, dictate a note, and assume the defaults will do. They're not wrong, but they're leaving time on the table. A few targeted setup choices mean the note that comes out of dictation reflects your specialty's structure and your personal style, not a generic outpatient template.

Step 1: Choose the right template for your note type

Scribe offers SOAP, H&P, Consult, and simple dictation templates, and you can build your own from scratch. The template shapes the section structure of every note you generate, so choosing one that matches how your specialty documents is the highest-leverage setup decision you can make.
A hospitalist dictating daily progress notes has different needs than a surgeon writing operative summaries or a psychiatrist documenting a mental status evaluation. If none of the built-in templates fit, build a custom one. You can create multiple templates for different encounter types if you practice across settings.

Step 2: Write a custom prompt for your specialty

Custom prompts tell Scribe how to handle your dictation before it generates a note. A well-written prompt can specify preferred section order, note length, clinical emphasis, and terminology conventions for your specialty.
A psychiatrist's prompt might prioritize mental status, risk language, and treatment plan specificity. An urgent care physician's might specify brevity and a focused problem-oriented structure. You write the prompt once, and Scribe applies it every time.

Step 3: Use Smart Edits to refine the output quickly

After Scribe generates a note, Smart Edits handles the most common post-generation adjustments in one tap:
  • "Add Billing Codes" appends billing documentation based on the note's clinical content
  • "More Concise" tightens a note that ran longer than needed
  • "More Detailed" expands a section that needs more depth or specificity
  • "Update Pronouns" corrects pronoun usage throughout the note in one step
The "Suggest a change" text field handles anything the one-tap options don't. Describe the adjustment in plain language and Scribe applies it.

Step 4: Use Refine with Ask for specialty-specific language

"Refine with Ask" connects your note to Doximity Ask, where you can make freeform requests that go beyond Smart Edits. Reframe the assessment in your specialty's referral language, add context that didn't make it into the dictation, or restructure a section entirely, without rewriting from scratch.

The result

A Scribe setup that reflects your specialty means the note coming out of dictation is closer to what you'd write yourself. Review time drops. The note needs a read-through, not a rewrite. Try it free with your existing Doximity account.


Comments (0)
Popular
avatar

Dive in

Related

Education
Doximity Scribe Smart Edits: The Fastest Way to Refine a Scribe Note
By Doximity Team • May 15th, 2026 Views 2
Education
Scribe is now part of your Dialer call, before it even starts
By Doximity Team • May 15th, 2026 Views 4
Education
How to Review a Doximity Scribe Note in Under 60 Seconds
By Doximity Team • May 15th, 2026 Views 0
Education
Your First Week with Doximity Scribe: A Day-by-Day Guide
By Doximity Team • May 15th, 2026 Views 2
Education
Doximity Scribe Smart Edits: The Fastest Way to Refine a Scribe Note
By Doximity Team • May 15th, 2026 Views 2
Education
How to Review a Doximity Scribe Note in Under 60 Seconds
By Doximity Team • May 15th, 2026 Views 0
Education
Your First Week with Doximity Scribe: A Day-by-Day Guide
By Doximity Team • May 15th, 2026 Views 2
Education
Scribe is now part of your Dialer call, before it even starts
By Doximity Team • May 15th, 2026 Views 4
© 2026 Doximity
Terms of Service
Your Privacy Choices