Skip to content

General practice · Updated May 2026

Noteless for general practice & family medicine

Whether Noteless is the right ambient AI scribe for general practice & family medicine, based on our independent review and what Noteless publishes about itself.

Noteless logo
NotelessProvisional

Nordic ambient scribe with ISO 27001 + CE-marked status, an explicit no-training-on-customer-data position and seven-language consultation support — production-deployed across Norway, Denmark and the Netherlands.

4.4/ 10

Why Noteless for general practice & family medicine

A serious Nordic ambient-scribe contender with strong privacy credentials: ISO 27001, CE-marked, an explicit no-training-on-customer-data position and no audio retention. Seven consultation languages, structured outputs covering referrals, summaries and certificates, and offices on the ground in Oslo, Bergen, Copenhagen and Amsterdam — production deployments across Norway, Denmark and the Netherlands. Provisional until hands-on tested. Trade-offs: pricing isn't publicly disclosed (sales-led), EHR integration is largely copy-into-EHR rather than deep write-back, and HIPAA / SOC 2 aren't publicly enumerated (single-region GDPR + ISO 27001 posture).

Noteless lists General Practice, Physiotherapy, Multi-specialty among its supported specialties — which is why this page exists, and the basis for placing Noteless on /specialty/general-practice.

What to weigh in general practice

These are the things that actually differ between an ambient scribe that fits general practice & family medicineand one that doesn’t. Read the full Noteless review for the hands-on take on each.

  • Real-time SOAP / structured-note formats and good templating
  • Your EHR integration depth — copy-into is okay; bidirectional write-back is better
  • Pricing that scales for a busy clinician (cost per visit, not per minute)
  • Multilingual / dialect support if your patient population needs it

Sourced posture

HIPAA
Not disclosed
SOC 2
Not disclosed
GDPR
Yes
Trains on your data?
No (states it does not)