What is Vero Evidence?
Vero Evidence is the clinical decision-support area for asking evidence-based questions, reviewing source-backed answers, and using patient, file, Research, or Library context when relevant.
It is designed for licensed healthcare professionals who want clinical references, selected documents, and patient context in the same workflow as documentation.
Vero Evidence supports clinical reasoning. It does not replace professional judgment. Always verify outputs before using them for patient care.
How to Access Vero Evidence
Click Evidence in the left sidebar.
Type your clinical question in the message box.
Press Enter or click the send button.
You can ask general clinical questions, patient-specific questions, document-based questions, or questions against selected Evidence Collections.
Add Context With the Plus Menu
Click the + button beside the message box to choose what Vero should use for the answer.
Upload Files - attach documents or images for this question.
Patient - attach a patient profile when age, medications, allergies, history, or prior context matters.
Research - turn on peer-reviewed and authoritative source search for cited answers.
Library - select Evidence Collections such as clinic guidelines, protocols, papers, or saved web sources.
Research Toggle
Use Research when you want Vero to search peer-reviewed literature and authoritative clinical sources for cited answers.
Research on - best for guideline verification, complex cases, medication questions, screening recommendations, or answers where citations matter.
Research off - best for faster general drafting or lower-complexity support when source citations are not needed.
For jurisdiction-specific guidance, include the country, province/state, or local context when it matters.
Patient Context
When a question depends on patient-specific factors, attach a patient profile before asking.
Click the + button beside the message box.
Choose Patient.
Select the relevant patient.
Ask your clinical question.
When a patient is attached, Vero can consider available chart context such as demographics, medications, allergies, past medical history, social history, family history, and prior encounter context where available.
Evidence Collections
Evidence Collections are reusable libraries of documents and URLs. Select a collection when you want Vero to answer using clinic guidelines, local pathways, protocols, papers, or other saved sources.
Click the + button beside the message box.
Choose Library.
Select one or more collections.
Ask a question that should use those sources.
For managing collections, see Evidence Collections.
Attaching Files
Attach documents or images when you want Vero to use that material in its answer.
Click the + button beside the message box.
Choose Upload Files.
Select files from your computer.
Ask your question.
This is useful for lab results, imaging reports, referral letters, guideline PDFs, policy documents, and other clinical source material.
Evidence Hierarchy
When Research is enabled, Vero prioritizes authoritative and clinically relevant sources, including:
Official clinical practice guidelines from recognized organizations.
Systematic reviews and meta-analyses.
Randomized controlled trials and clinical studies.
Peer-reviewed medical journals.
Authoritative drug references.
Selected Evidence Collections when you choose a Library.
When evidence is limited, local, or conflicting, Vero should acknowledge uncertainty and present source-backed caveats rather than overstating confidence.
Citations
Research and Evidence Collection workflows can include citations linked to source material. Use citations to verify key claims and trace recommendations back to the supporting source.
Some answers may also show a level-of-evidence indicator when Vero can classify the source type.
Tips for Better Results
Ask focused clinical questions.
Attach a patient when age, medications, allergies, history, or prior visits matter.
Select a Library when the answer should use clinic-specific documents or saved guidelines.
Turn Research on when citations or source verification matter.
Include location when guideline, screening, billing, medication access, or referral pathways depend on jurisdiction.
Review all answers before applying them clinically.
