{{ js_integration_head_start() }} {{ head_elements() }} {{ head_css() }} {{ head_js() }} {{ js_integration_head() }} {% if "Hatch_CallMyDoc" in theme_meta.name %} {% endif %} {{ include_default_custom_css(content.include_default_custom_css, template_meta.include_default_custom_css, domain_settings.include_default_custom_css) }} {{ include_attached_css(content_group.attached_stylesheets or domain_settings.attached_stylesheets, content.enable_domain_stylesheets, template_meta.enable_domain_stylesheets, theme_meta.enable_domain_stylesheets, domain_settings.enable_domain_stylesheets) }} {{ include_attached_css(template_meta.attached_stylesheets, content.enable_layout_stylesheets) }} {{ include_attached_css(content.attached_stylesheets) }} {{ require_attached_js(template_meta.attached_js) }}
Skip to content
CallMyDoc mobile notification w-nav-overlay{display:none !important;}.navbar .button-wrap-3{display:none !important;}._2-col-grid{grid-template-columns:1fr !important;gap:20px !important;}.hero-heading{font-size:28px !important;line-height:1.2 !important;}.section-heading{font-size:24px !important;}.paragraph-18px{font-size:15px !important;}.footer-wrap{grid-template-columns:1fr 1fr !important;}.section{padding:40px 0 !important;}.base-container{padding:0 16px !important;}}@media(max-width:479px){.hero-heading{font-size:24px !important;}.footer-wrap{grid-template-columns:1fr !important;}.footer-item{text-align:center !important;}}#cmd-nav details{border-bottom:1px solid rgba(255,255,255,0.1);}#cmd-nav summary{color:#fff;font-family:Roboto,sans-serif;font-size:17px;font-weight:600;padding:14px 0;cursor:pointer;list-style:none;-webkit-tap-highlight-color:transparent;outline:none;user-select:none;-webkit-user-select:none;}#cmd-nav summary::-webkit-details-marker{display:none;}#cmd-nav details>summary::after{content:"+";float:right;font-size:12px;color:rgba(255,255,255,0.5);transition:transform 0.2s;}#cmd-nav details[open]>summary::after{content:"\\2212";}#cmd-nav .cmd-sub{padding-bottom:4px;}'; document.head.appendChild(s); })();
Veradigm App Exchange Partner

AI Phone Automation for Rheumatology Practices on Veradigm

CallMyDoc integrates with Veradigm Pro — every patient call documented automatically. No message relay, no phone tag, no lost calls.

60–80%
of calls resolved
without staff callback
Biologic refills, lab inquiries, flare questions — all automated
11 min
median after-hours
physician response
Platform average across 27M+ calls, 2014–2025
27M+
patient calls
handled since 2014
Zero breaches, zero lost calls

Veradigm Pro Integration — Built for Rheumatology

CallMyDoc integrates with Veradigm Pro. Your Rheumatology team keeps their existing workflows while AI handles the phone volume.

Every rheumatology call documented in Veradigm Pro automatically

Biologic infusion scheduling handled without staff relay

DMARD refill requests processed and documented automatically

On-call routing matches your Veradigm provider schedule

Rheumatology Call Scenarios — Handled Automatically

These are the calls your Rheumatology practice gets every day. CallMyDoc handles them inside your Veradigm workflow.

Biologic infusion scheduling & DMARD refills

Biologic infusion scheduling, DMARD refill requests, and prior authorization status calls are handled without staff involvement and documented in Veradigm automatically.

Acute joint flare & medication side effect triage

After-hours calls about acute joint flares and biologic side effects are triaged by urgency — emergencies escalated immediately, stable calls documented with full context for morning review.

Lab result inquiries (CRP, RF, anti-CCP)

Lab result inquiries, including CRP, RF, and anti-CCP questions, are handled and routed appropriately, with all interactions documented in Veradigm Pro automatically.

How CallMyDoc Handles Rheumatology Calls on Veradigm

Rheumatology practices field a unique mix of urgent clinical and routine administrative calls. Here is how CallMyDoc triages, routes, and documents each one directly inside your Veradigm workflow.

Biologic & Immunosuppressant Safety Triage

Rheumatology patients on immunosuppressive therapy live in a precarious balance between disease control and infection risk. A patient on adalimumab who develops a cough and fever may have a simple URI — or reactivated tuberculosis. A patient on rituximab with progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy symptoms (confusion, vision changes, weakness) has a medical emergency. A patient on tofacitinib with new chest pain needs cardiovascular evaluation given the JAK inhibitor's black box warning. Traditional answering services have no framework for these medication-specific risk assessments. CallMyDoc's AI is configured to recognize medication-specific danger signals in rheumatology. When an immunosuppressed patient calls with fever above 100.4°F, the system treats this as potentially serious regardless of other symptoms — because the threshold for concern is fundamentally different for someone on methotrexate plus a biologic than for the general population. The AI captures current medications, temperature, associated symptoms, and recent exposure history, then routes based on your practice's immunosuppression triage protocols. Patients experiencing infusion reactions, injection site reactions beyond normal parameters, or new symptoms that could indicate drug-induced lupus or demyelination receive immediate clinical attention. Immunosuppressed Patient Emergency Protocols Fever >100.4°F on any immunosuppressant → immediate provider notification (infection risk). New neurological symptoms on rituximab/natalizumab → ER directive + urgent provider alert (PML concern). Chest pain on JAK inhibitor → ER guidance + provider notification. Severe infusion reaction (anaphylaxis signs) → 911 directive. Active shingles on biologic therapy → same-day clinical callback. All calls include complete current medication list in the notification. Pre-Biologic Screening Calls TB test results, hepatitis B screening, vaccination status — all captured and routed to your clinical team before biologic initiation. Lab Monitoring Coordination CBC, CMP, hepatic panel due dates tracked. Patients calling about abnormal results receive priority routing with lab values captured for your review.

Disease Flare Assessment & Management

Rheumatologic flares are unpredictable and debilitating. A patient with rheumatoid arthritis wakes up with hands so swollen they can't open a medication bottle. A lupus patient develops a new rash across her cheeks and chest with joint pain and fatigue. A gout patient is experiencing the worst pain of his life in his big toe at 3 AM. An ankylosing spondylitis patient has worsening back stiffness that's now affecting his ability to drive. Each of these calls requires clinical assessment — not a message that says "patient called about joint pain." CallMyDoc performs structured flare assessments over the phone. For RA patients, the AI captures which joints are affected, morning stiffness duration, functional limitation, and whether symptoms are new or represent an established flare pattern. For lupus patients, the system screens for organ-threatening manifestations — new rash distribution, oral ulcers, pleuritic chest pain, proteinuria symptoms, or neurological changes — that distinguish a mild flare from one requiring urgent intervention. For gout, the AI differentiates acute gouty arthritis from potential septic joint (fever + single hot joint = emergency). Every flare call is documented with disease-specific severity data that lets your provider make treatment decisions efficiently. RA Flare Protocol Joint count, stiffness duration, functional impact, current DMARD/biologic regimen, last dose timing — structured for your clinical decision-making. Lupus Severity Screening Rash pattern, joint involvement, serositis symptoms, renal symptoms, CNS involvement — organ-threatening manifestations trigger immediate escalation. Crystal Arthropathy Triage Gout/pseudogout urgency assessment. Single hot joint + fever = septic joint concern → ER. Classic podagra = urgent colchicine/steroid protocol.

Infusion Center & Specialty Pharmacy Coordination

Rheumatology practices with infusion centers manage a complex scheduling ecosystem. Infliximab infusions require precise timing (week 0, 2, 6, then every 8 weeks) with adjustments based on clinical response. Rituximab infusions are scheduled based on B-cell counts and clinical symptoms. Tocilizumab, abatacept, and belimumab each have their own dosing schedules and pre-infusion lab requirements. Add post-infusion monitoring for delayed reactions, and your phone lines become a scheduling and clinical coordination hub. CallMyDoc manages the entire infusion coordination call volume. Scheduling requests are handled with awareness of infusion-specific timing requirements — the AI knows that an infliximab patient calling to reschedule needs a new appointment within the dosing window, not "whenever is convenient." Pre-infusion lab reminders and results routing ensure patients arrive ready for treatment. Post-infusion calls within 24 hours reporting symptoms (headache, nausea, rash, breathing difficulty) receive priority clinical triage. Specialty pharmacy coordination calls — authorization status, medication shipment tracking, copay assistance — are routed to your administrative team with payer information captured. Infusion Call Routing URGENT — Provider Alert Anaphylaxis symptoms post-infusion, severe delayed reaction (serum sickness), new infection signs within 48 hours of infusion SAME-DAY — Clinical Queue Mild infusion reactions (headache, flushing), injection site reactions persisting >48 hours, pre-infusion lab abnormalities SCHEDULING — Infusion Center Infusion appointments, rescheduling within dosing windows, pre-infusion lab scheduling, chair time coordination ADMINISTRATIVE — Auth Team Prior authorization status, specialty pharmacy coordination, copay assistance, step therapy appeals, biosimilar switches

Complex DMARD & Biologic Medication Management

Rheumatology medication calls are uniquely complex because nearly every drug in your formulary requires ongoing monitoring and has a distinctive side effect profile. Methotrexate patients call about mouth sores, hair thinning, GI symptoms, and missed folic acid doses. Hydroxychloroquine patients have eye exam scheduling questions (annual retinal screening). Leflunomide patients report liver enzyme concerns. Mycophenolate patients call about GI intolerance. And biologic patients — whether on TNF inhibitors, IL-6 blockers, B-cell depleters, or T-cell co-stimulation modulators — each have medication-class-specific concerns that require different clinical responses. CallMyDoc captures medication-specific clinical detail that transforms phone callbacks from interruptions into efficient clinical encounters. When a patient on methotrexate calls about mouth sores, the AI documents severity, duration, current folic acid dose, and whether they can eat — enabling your provider to decide between dose reduction, folic acid increase, or hold medication before returning the call. Biologic self-injection patients reporting injection site reactions get documented with medication name, injection site, reaction description, and timing — distinguishing a normal local reaction from one requiring medication change. Prior authorization battles for biologics and JAK inhibitors are routed to your administrative team with insurance details, denial reasons, and appeal deadlines captured.

Multi-System Autoimmune Disease Coordination

Systemic autoimmune diseases — lupus, scleroderma, vasculitis, myositis, Sjogren's syndrome — affect multiple organ systems simultaneously. A lupus patient isn't just calling about joint pain; they may be reporting new proteinuria, worsening fatigue, chest pain that could be serositis, or a rash that could indicate increased disease activity. A scleroderma patient's "difficulty swallowing" may be esophageal dysmotility requiring GI referral, while their "cold fingers" may be Raynaud's progressing to digital ulceration requiring urgent rheumatology assessment. CallMyDoc handles multi-system disease calls with appropriate complexity. The AI screens for organ-threatening manifestations across autoimmune conditions: renal involvement (lupus nephritis), pulmonary involvement (ILD in scleroderma/myositis), cardiac involvement (pericarditis, myocarditis), neurological involvement (CNS vasculitis), and hematological crises (TTP in lupus, pulmonary-renal syndrome in vasculitis). Cross-specialty coordination calls from nephrologists, pulmonologists, dermatologists, and other providers managing shared patients are routed with clinical context to your rheumatology team — not lost in a general voicemail system. Lupus Organ Screening Renal (foamy urine, edema), CNS (seizures, psychosis), cardiac (chest pain), hematologic (easy bruising, infections) — each triggers organ-specific escalation pathways. Vasculitis Emergency Triage Hemoptysis, acute renal failure symptoms, mesenteric ischemia signs, mononeuritis multiplex — life-threatening vasculitis complications receive immediate provider escalation.

43-Language Support for Diverse Patient Populations

Autoimmune diseases disproportionately affect certain populations — lupus is more prevalent and more severe in African American, Hispanic, and Asian patients. Rheumatoid arthritis affects Native American populations at higher rates. When these patients call to describe complex symptoms — joint stiffness, fatigue, rashes, swelling patterns — the nuance of their descriptions matters clinically. "My hands are swollen" versus "I can't make a fist in the morning but it gets better by noon" convey fundamentally different clinical pictures. CallMyDoc communicates in 43 languages with rheumatology-specific medical vocabulary. Patients describe their symptoms naturally in their preferred language — morning stiffness, joint locations, medication side effects, and functional limitations — and the AI captures clinically relevant details without translation loss. For medication instructions, injection technique guidance, and flare management reminders, patients receive information in the language they understand best. This eliminates the communication gaps that lead to medication non-adherence, missed monitoring labs, and preventable disease flares in linguistically diverse populations. Between biologic prior authorizations, infusion scheduling, flare calls, and lab monitoring, my staff was drowning in phone work. CallMyDoc completely changed our workflow. Urgent calls — fever on immunosuppression, severe flares, infusion reactions — reach me immediately with all the clinical data I need. The prior auth and scheduling calls are handled without my clinical team ever being interrupted. Our infusion center runs smoother and our patients feel heard.

What Practices See with CallMyDoc

27M+
patient calls handled
47%
calls resolved by AI
40
states + D.C. + USVI
Zero
lost calls, ever
8+ yrs
proven track record

Ready to See It Working in Your Rheumatology Practice?

Most Veradigm Rheumatology practices are live in under 2 weeks. No IT department required.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does CallMyDoc integrate with Veradigm Pro for Rheumatology practices?

Yes. CallMyDoc integrates directly with Veradigm Pro. Every patient call is documented in Veradigm automatically — your Rheumatology team keeps their existing workflow while AI handles call volume.

How does CallMyDoc handle after-hours calls for Rheumatology?

CallMyDoc answers every after-hours call, triages by clinical urgency, and routes only the calls that need the on-call provider. Everything is documented in Veradigm before callback — your team gets only the calls that truly require them.

How long does setup take?

Most Veradigm Rheumatology practices are fully live within 2 weeks. Setup includes EHR integration, call routing configuration, and on-call schedule setup. No IT department required.

Related: AI Phone Automation for Rheumatology Practices