Nearly three-fifths of U.S. hospital‑affiliated doctors say their electronic health records still slow them down. Now they have drawn a clear roadmap for relief, and artificial intelligence sits at the top.
In a second‑quarter survey of 274 physicians and advanced practitioners, Black Book Research asked clinicians to name the single improvement that would make their EHRs more useful in daily practice. Thirty‑seven percent chose AI‑powered documentation automation, far outpacing every other option on the ballot.
The message is unambiguous: doctors want their notes to write themselves—accurately, in the background, and in real time—so they can get back to the bedside.
Burnout Fuels The Demand
Black Book’s poll lands as burnout reaches what the American Medical Association calls “crisis levels.” The research firm puts the rate at 55 percent among hospital‑employed physicians. Doctors cite paperwork as the chief irritant, and they say EHR templates force them to spend as much as half of every shift typing, clicking and correcting.
“Addressing these top concerns, particularly documentation automation and interoperability, is critical not only to reducing clinician burnout but to ensuring consistent and high-quality patient care,” said Doug Brown, founder of Black Book.
He warned that unless EHR vendors act quickly, many clinicians will look for a system—and an employer—that lightens that load.
Six Priorities, One Clear Winner
Respondents ranked six areas where EHRs could improve. Their answers reveal how far the nation’s digital charting systems must travel before they feel like help instead of a hindrance:
- AI‑powered documentation automation, 37 percent – Clinicians want ambient tools that listen to the encounter, draft structured notes, and file coded data without extra clicks.
- Interoperability and seamless data exchange, 26 percent – Doctors lose precious minutes hunting for lab results trapped in another hospital’s silo.
- Clinician‑centric user‑experience redesign, 17 percent – Three‑quarters of those polled blame clunky screens for daily frustration.
- Sharper clinical decision support, 12 percent – Fewer alarms, more relevant prompts.
- Mobile, device‑agnostic access, 7 percent – Most physicians check charts after hours; they expect the experience to match modern banking apps.
- Faster system responsiveness, 4 percent – Half the sample said slow load times dent their productivity at least once a month.
The ranking mirrors HealthOrbit AI’s own customer feedback. More than 80 percent of the clinicians who pilot our ambient scribe report saving at least two hours per day on documentation time they now spend counselling patients or finishing the clinic on schedule.
Doctors Set A Deadline
Physicians are not content to wait until the next major software release. Seventy‑eight percent expect their current EHR to make “significant progress” by the end of 2025. Forty‑two percent say they will switch vendors if change stalls, and 86 percent have already sent formal letters outlining their concerns.
That sense of urgency is reshaping the market, said Brown. “Hospitals cannot afford talent flight,” he explained. “Reducing clicks is becoming as important as salary when it comes to recruiting and keeping physicians.”
How HealthOrbit AI Closes The Gap
HealthOrbit AI was built for this moment. Our MedOrbit ambient scribe harnesses large‑language models tuned for medical safety to capture the visit conversation, draft a complete note, and push coded data back into the EHR—all inside the regulatory guardrails of HIPAA, GDPR and NHS DTAC. Nothing leaves the secure cloud; no extra dictation is required.
In recent pilots across the United States, the United Kingdom and the Gulf region, doctors using MedOrbit cut documentation time by 55 percent on average. Because the transcript is linked to each data field, clinicians can verify the record in seconds, not minutes.
Interoperability, the second‑ranked priority in Black Book’s poll, is built into HealthOrbit AI’s architecture as well. Our FHIR‑native engine pulls allergy lists, problem histories and lab values from any certified EHR, then feeds structured notes back without manual mapping. The result: a unified patient story that travels with the person, not the facility.
A Human‑first Design
Physicians in the survey asked vendors to start each interface with a simple question: “What does the doctor need to see next?” HealthOrbit AI applies that principle across its suite:
- The review screen shows only one checkbox per SOAP section—either accept the draft or edit inline.
- Decision‑support nudges appear in plain language, triggered only when the model spots a potential safety gap.
- The mobile view keeps the most recent vitals and medications on a single scroll, avoiding the multi‑window hunt that doctors say fuels late‑night burnout.
Beyond Documentation
While AI notes grabbed the headline, the poll’s other findings point to a broader transformation. Doctors want tools that keep pace with consumer technology. They expect voice commands, smart summaries and collaborative workspaces that mirror the way teams actually deliver care.
HealthOrbit AI’s RevOrbit coding assistant and MedOrbit follow‑up manager answer those calls. Together, the platform turns the EHR from a passive archive into an active partner—flagging reimbursement gaps, reminding patients of next steps, and surfacing population‑level insights that administrators can act on.
The Road To 2026
Black Book’s survey carries a warning for every IT department: physicians will judge progress by calendar pages, not release notes. EHR vendors that treat AI as a side project risk losing market share and, more critically, losing clinicians.
HealthOrbit AI invites healthcare leaders to see what a purpose‑built, AI‑driven workflow looks like today—not in a future roadmap. Our team will walk your clinicians through a live demo, answer compliance questions, and map out a deployment that fits your care model.
Ready to cut documentation time in half and give your doctors a system they love? Book a demo with HealthOrbit AI today and discover how ambient intelligence can turn your 2026 EHR priorities into reality.



