Created November 15, 2025
Systematically review the patient's electronic medical record (EMR) for any information related to potential Opioid Use Disorder (OUD), high-risk factors, or contraindications for initiating or continuing opioid therapy. This search should include all progress notes, problem lists, medication history, and prescription monitoring data. Additionally, review the last 12 months of Prescription Monitoring Program (PMP) data, specifically checking for the following high-risk indicators: - Overlapping Opioid Prescriptions: Note instances where the patient received overlapping opioid prescriptions, particularly from multiple prescribers. - Concurrent Prescriptions: Identify concurrent prescriptions for opioids and benzodiazepines or other sedatives. - Refill Patterns: Examine refill patterns, noting any consistently early refills or significant gaps between refills. - Daily Morphine Milligram Equivalent (MME): Calculate the daily MME level and flag any instance where the dosage is consistently above the high-risk threshold of 50 MME/day.
Specialty: Emergency Medicine
AI Tool: Evidently
Jane Doe, 66 year-old female
See what the response to this prompt looks like in Evidently by running this prompt on Jane, one of our synthetic, de-identified patients.
See what the response to this prompt looks like in Evidently by running this prompt on Jane, one of our synthetic, de-identified patients.
Jane Doe, 66 year-old female
66 YEAR OLD
Anytown, USA
Jane Doe is a synthetic patient from a publicly de-identified, PHI-compliant dataset. Jane has a very complex medical history, which provides a great sandbox for exploring how prompts can affect information retrieval in complex patient record data. Jane's patient record contains 1,500 scanned documents, 400 imaging documents, 400 data elements, and 18 faxes.
Evidently's prompt responses pair the patient record with an expansive medical knowledge graph consisting of millions of medical concepts and the billions of connections between them.