Late one evening in Oslo, a general practitioner finishes seeing her last patient, but her work is far from over. Like many doctors, she faces another hour or two of typing up patient notes and finishing documentation. She’s not alone – 69% of physicians report spending too much time on after-hours charting, and 62% say excessive documentation is their number-one cause of burnout. However, in the past six months, hundreds of Norwegian doctors have found relief from this paperwork burden: they’ve signed up for an AI-powered ambient scribe service called Stenoly.
Surveys show more than 50% of doctors feel burnt out, largely due to hours spent updating health records and writing notes after hours. It’s not just an inconvenience – it steals time from patients and personal life. In fact, one Harvard-affiliated study found that introducing an AI ambient scribe (a tool that listens to visits and drafts notes) led to a 21% drop in physician burnout within months.
Stenoly is not the first ambient scribe out there, but it’s quickly becoming one of the most talked about. In just six months, almost a thousand Norwegian doctors have signed up to let Stenoly handle their documentation burden. These clinicians aren’t adopting it because it’s novel – they’re doing so because it works. So, what’s behind this rapid uptake?
With Stenoly, the clinician conducts the patient visit as usual, talking and listening with full attention. Stenoly runs in the background capturing every word. There’s no need to pause to type or dictate; the clinician can maintain eye contact and build trust with the patient, rather than staring at a screen.
As the conversation unfolds, Stenoly’s secure app transcribes the dialogue in real time, accurately recognizing medical terminology and even who is speaking. Immediately after the appointment, the AI automatically distills the raw transcript into a well-structured clinical note. Key details are extracted and organized into the familiar SOAP format (Subjective, Objective, Assessment, Plan) – or into a discharge summary or referral letter as needed. The clinician simply reviews the AI-generated note, makes any quick edits or additions, and with one click exports it to their electronic health record system.
Digital scribes and AI note-taking tools aren’t entirely new – so why has Stenoly captured a quarter of Norway’s GPs so quickly? The answer lies in execution. Stenoly has differentiated itself in a few key ways:
Stenoly’s rise in Norway has been nothing short of remarkable. Launched in early 2025, it began as a pilot in a handful of clinics. The initial users were astonished at how much time they got back. As one might expect in the tight-knit medical community, word spread quickly. When a colleague discovers a tool that slashes their paperwork by half or more, doctors listen. Within half a year, those pilots grew into a nationwide wave. Today almost 1000 clinicians have signed up for Stenoly. This kind of penetration in a short time is almost unheard of for a new healthcare software product – a testament to how strongly Stenoly resonated with an urgent need.
Stenoly’s and other ambient AI scribes’ success story signals a broader shift coming to healthcare. AI scribes like Stenoly, Heidi and Ambience act almost as an invisible staff member, one that lets doctors be doctors again. The fact that so many clinicians have embraced it so quickly is a wake-up call: the old way of documenting care is broken, and when a better way comes along, doctors will jump on board.
Stenoly shows that with a laser-focused solution, even a small startup can make a big impact in a short time. As the company expands beyond Norway (they are already underway to roll it out in other countries and languages), it carries the lesson that health tech succeeds when it truly serves the user.
For a closer look at how this works in practice, you can explore Stenoly’s solution examples on their website. And if you’re curious to experience the difference firsthand, Stenoly offers a free trial so you can judge the results in your own clinic. After all, your peers in Norway have already taken the leap – and they’re not looking back. The real question is not whether such AI scribes are worth it, but whether you can afford to keep practicing without one.


