Summatic, and Proofmatic meet Scribematic and Codematic
Today Matic is announcing two new agents, Summatic and Proofmatic, joining Scribematic and Codematic to complete an end-to-end multi-agent system that operates across the full care-to-claim lifecycle.
The problem the announcement is actually solving
Healthcare's first wave of AI adoption produced a paradox that every operator inside a large group or system already feels: more tools, less continuity. A scribe in one tab. A coding assistant in another. A summarization product running on its own schedule. An evidence search tool the clinician opens on their phone because it lives outside the EHR. Each useful in isolation. None of them are aware the others exist.
The connective tissue in that stack is the clinician, doing reconciliation work between systems at the end of the day. That is the actual product most health systems bought, even if no one wrote it on the invoice.
Matic was built on a different premise: a clinician should never have to be the integration layer between their own tools. With today's announcement, that premise is now expressed across the entire arc of care, from chart prep through claim.
Summatic: Longitudinal patient context, present at the start of the visit
Summatic is the longitudinal care agent. It continuously synthesizes a patient's chart history, prior visits, medications, labs, payer data, and open care gaps into a dynamic, visit-relevant briefing, so providers walk into every encounter prepared, with the right context surfaced at the right moment.
What separates Summatic from conventional patient summary products is that the history doesn't flatten into a static recap. It stays interactive. Clinicians can ask freeform questions about the patient mid-encounter without breaking the recording flow. The patient's story stays whole across providers, settings, and encounters, and that richer context flows forward into documentation, so notes, codes, and claim justifications reflect the full clinical reality rather than a single visit's slice of it.
For organizations with proprietary clinical data or external integrations, Summatic plugs in via API, extending context beyond what lives in the EHR.
Proofmatic: Evidence-backed intelligence at the speed of care
Proofmatic is the clinical evidence agent. It retrieves full-text peer-reviewed biomedical research, synthesizes findings into structured, ranked answers with inline citations, and cross-references FDA drug safety data and prescribing guidance: all inside the workflow the clinician is already in.
The distinguishing move is that Proofmatic doesn't operate as a generic search box. Because it coordinates natively with Summatic and Scribematic, it can reconcile evidence against the specific patient's history, medications, and the live content of the current encounter. Every recommendation arrives in full clinical context, not as a generic answer the clinician then has to translate. And when deeper investigation is warranted, the underlying articles are one click away.
This is the difference between an evidence tool that sits next to the system of care, and one that operates inside it.
A coordinated system, not a toolbox
Most healthcare AI today is a toolbox: useful pieces, sold separately, that the clinician is expected to assemble in real time. Matic is built differently. Each agent has a highly specialized role, but the full system routes information between them automatically.
Summatic carries patient context forward across every encounter. Scribematic captures the clinical conversation and produces structured documentation. Proofmatic brings evidence-based reasoning into clinical decisions in real time. Codematic aligns documentation to coding, protecting accuracy and revenue integrity.
Documentation informs coding. Patient history informs decisions. Evidence supports action. Incoming signals are summarized, prioritized, and routed in context, so workflows stay aligned and nothing is lost between steps.
Each Matic agent supports inpatient and outpatient care, runs inside existing EHRs, and is fully configurable to a provider group's workflows, including the use of proprietary clinical data without any loss of ownership or security control.
What this means for health systems and large groups
The honest question for any executive evaluating clinical AI right now is not which scribe or which coding tool. It's whether the organization can absorb another point solution before the integration burden exceeds the value any individual tool provides.
For most large groups and systems we talk to, the math has already turned. The stack is past the point where adding helps. What's needed isn't another agent; it's a coordinated system that replaces the seams.
With Summatic and Proofmatic now joining Scribematic and Codematic, that system is whole. Context follows the patient. Evidence follows the decision. Coding follows the documentation. Automatically, in one platform, across the full care-to-claim lifecycle.
That's the architectural conversation worth having before the next pilot, not after.
