Quippe boosts POC
- MedicompSys promoted Quippe as a shared foundation for point-of-care diagnostics to improve workflow and capture revenue. - The post claims Quippe yields a 100% productivity boost and captures roughly 20% more revenue for POC diagnostics. - The framing pushes the build-versus-buy debate toward platform-level workflow control and operations ownership. (x.com)
Medicomp Systems is pitching Quippe as the software layer underneath point-of-care diagnostics, arguing clinics should buy a shared workflow platform instead of building one from scratch. (medicomp.com) On its homepage, Medicomp says Quippe delivers a “100% Increase in Point-of-Care Productivity” and a “20% Increase in Revenue Capture.” Its Quippe Clinical Workspace page separately says the product “cut our documentation time in half.” (medicomp.com 1) (medicomp.com 2) Quippe is sold as a clinical data foundation that turns dictated or typed notes into structured, coded data for billing, interoperability, and compliance. Medicomp said on February 25, 2025 that it would show those capabilities at the HIMSS Global Health Conference in Las Vegas on March 3-6, 2025. (medicomp.com) In healthcare operations, point-of-care diagnostics only generate revenue if the test, diagnosis, and supporting documentation are captured in a billable form. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services says providers are responsible for documenting each encounter “completely, accurately, and on time.” (cms.gov) That is why Medicomp’s pitch centers less on a single test and more on control of the workflow around it. Quippe’s product pages say it can normalize free text to standard vocabularies, improve coding specificity, and support billing, reporting, and clinical quality measures inside the encounter. (medicomp.com) The company has been pushing that platform message across products. On August 26, 2025, Medicomp said Altera Digital Health embedded Quippe into TouchWorks Note+, combining ambient listening, natural language processing, large language models, and Quippe’s coding layer to create structured data for clinical use and billing. (prnewswire.com) Medicomp’s broader argument is that health-tech vendors should stop rebuilding the core clinical data layer themselves. Its site tells developers to “focus on delighting your users, instead of building and maintaining the core,” while describing Quippe as an “enterprise-ready” framework that can be embedded into any electronic health record or health-tech environment. (medicomp.com) Outside vendors make similar revenue-cycle claims about point-of-care workflows, but the exact lift varies by setting and implementation. A recent National Institutes of Health reimbursement guide for diagnostics says payment depends on coding, coverage, and documentation strategy, not just the test itself. (seed.nih.gov) The open question is whether buyers accept Medicomp’s numbers as broadly transferable or treat them as case-study marketing. The company’s latest materials keep returning to the same bet: if Quippe owns the workflow at the bedside, it can also own more of the documentation and revenue path that follows. (medicomp.com)