Bhopal: A 55-year-old man admitted to AIIMS Bhopal with high fever and breathlessness could soon receive rapid, guideline-based treatment after clinicians use a digital decision support tool at his bedside. The institute is set to integrate a high-quality, physician-authored, point-of-care clinical decision support system for its clinicians, residents, nurses and students.
Enhanced Care Quality
For patients visiting AIIMS Bhopal, the new system is expected to make care more uniform, safer and more up-to-date, even though the technology will largely remain behind the scenes. Clinicians will be able to instantly cross-check diagnoses, drug doses and treatment options, potentially cutting errors and improving outcomes.
Comprehensive Specialty Coverage
Covering a wide range of specialties – including emergency medicine, cardiology, neurology, pediatrics, obstetrics, oncology, critical care and infectious diseases – the tool brings structured, evidence-based guidance to the point of care.
In the case of a 55-year-old man with suspected severe pneumonia, for instance, the software could, within minutes, provide risk-stratification criteria, recommended laboratory tests and evidence-based antibiotic options for community-acquired pneumonia. An integrated calculator would help estimate mortality risk and guide early transfer to the intensive care unit.
Accessibility and Features
According to institute officials, the software will be accessible round-the-clock on computers and mobile devices (Android and iOS), with offline capability for use in wards and areas with poor internet connectivity. Its content is peer-reviewed by specialist doctors, presented in a structured, searchable format and updated regularly as new medical evidence emerges. The system includes medical calculators, drug information and interaction checkers, and interactive clinical pathways to guide clinicians step by step through common conditions.
Training and Consistency
AIIMS Bhopal says the goal is to enhance quality of care by giving healthcare professionals real-time access to evidence-based information at the bedside. The rollout is also expected to strengthen clinical training for residents and medical students, helping teams make more consistent, guideline-based decisions in busy OPDs, wards and emergency departments.



