Myro
The clinical assistant — agentic today, embodied tomorrow.
Myro is an agentic, multimodal clinical assistant: it listens, sees, reasons and assists across the workflow — with the clinician always in control.
An agentic assistant that plays many roles
Myro is an agentic AI assistant for clinicians that plays multiple roles — from nursing care and admin tasks to a true intern or resident working with medical records, diagnosis and management across the clinical routine. It is also the brain of the future humanoid robot: physical AI in healthcare.
public/images/myro.jpgPhotoreal ~16:11 landscape of a clinician at a desk speaking naturally with an on-screen voice assistant: a calm screen showing an abstract voice waveform and a soft green (#00BF63) listening indicator, the clinician mid-conversation and clearly in charge. Cool clinical light, warm focused mood. Consented or faceless model; no patient-identifiable data, no real medical-record text, no third-party or competitor logos/UI.
What Myro helps with
From admin tasks to a clinical intern
Myro spans the whole clinical routine — taking on roles from the administrative to the genuinely clinical, always proposing rather than deciding.
Admin & documents
Document lookup, referral letters and summary reports — the paperwork that surrounds care, drafted for the clinician to review.
Nursing care
Supporting the nursing-care side of the routine, keeping track of what needs doing and surfacing it at the right moment.
Image & lab summaries
Summarising and analysing images and lab results, bringing the relevant findings together so they are easier to weigh.
Diagnosis & management
Working as an intern or resident would — on diagnosis, management plans and prescriptions — with the clinician reviewing and deciding.
How you talk to Myro
Duplex voice, plus text prompt and GUI
Myro interacts through a duplex voice system — it can listen and speak at once, like a real conversation — alongside a text prompt and a graphical interface, so you reach for whichever fits the moment.
public/images/myro-voice.jpgPhotoreal ~16:11 landscape close-up of a duplex voice interaction: a clinician talking while a screen or small device shows two interleaving green (#00BF63) waveforms suggesting simultaneous listening and speaking, plus a faint text-prompt field. Cool clinical light, natural conversational mood. Consented or faceless model; no patient-identifiable data, no real medical-record text, no third-party or competitor logos/UI.
The path: assistant, agent, embodied
Each stage is grounded in what came before — assistive throughout, with the clinician in control.
01
Assistant
Listens, sees and reasons to support the clinician.
02
Agent
Acts across the clinical workflow, under supervision.
03
Embodied
A physical assistant at the point of care.
Assistive, never autonomous
Myro proposes; the clinician decides. Even on diagnosis, management and prescriptions it works like an intern presenting to a senior — it drafts, summarises and suggests, and a clinician reviews, edits and approves. Its intended use is stated clearly, and a human is always in the loop.
- Myro proposes, the clinician decides.
- Approve, refine or override — always a human in the loop.
- Intended use stated clearly for every capability.
Works with your records
Integrates with the EHRs you already use
Myro integrates with major electronic health records, so it works inside the systems clinicians already rely on rather than asking them to leave.
In general practice — particularly in Australia — Myro works with Best Practice and Medical Director, the records GPs use day to day. In the hospital setting it integrates with OpenEMR, Epic and Cerner. The point of meeting these systems where they are is simple: a clinical assistant that lives outside the record is one more place to look, while an assistant that works with the record is one less. Myro is built to be the latter.
public/images/myro-records.jpgPhotoreal ~16:11 landscape of a clinician at a workstation with the assistant working alongside their electronic record: a screen showing an abstract structured summary and a referral-letter draft (no readable text), with a soft green (#00BF63) assist accent. Cool clinical light, productive and trustworthy mood. Consented or faceless model; no patient-identifiable data, no real medical-record content, no third-party or competitor logos/UI.
In the day-to-day
What an assistant changes about a clinical day
Most of a clinical day is not the dramatic moment of decision. It is the surrounding work — the listening, the noting, the looking-up, the keeping-track — and that is where an assistant earns its place.
Think about everything that happens around a single consultation. There is the conversation itself, which deserves full attention. There is the record of it, which has to be accurate. There are the small lookups, the half-remembered details, the threads that need to be picked up again later. A clinician carries all of that at once, and the carrying is tiring in a way that has nothing to do with the difficulty of the medicine. Myro is built to take some of that weight — to listen, to keep track, to surface the relevant thing at the relevant moment — so attention can rest where it belongs, on the person in the room.
What it does not do is take over. Myro brings voice, vision and reasoning together so it can be genuinely useful across the messy reality of a clinical day, but it offers; it does not conclude. Every suggestion it makes is something the clinician can accept, adjust or ignore, and its intended use is stated plainly for each capability so there is never any confusion about what it is for. The aim is not a clinician who defers to software. It is a clinician with a little more room to think.
What Myro does
Myro brings voice, vision and reasoning together into a single assistant that works alongside clinicians — surfacing what matters, helping with the busywork, and keeping a human firmly in the loop.
An honest scope
Myro is assistive. It supports clinical work; it does not make autonomous decisions. Its intended use is stated clearly, and the clinician is always in control.
Where it's heading
From an assistant, to an agent that acts across the workflow, toward an embodied, physical assistant at the bedside. A direction we are building toward, step by grounded step.
The direction
From assistant to agent to embodied — step by grounded step
Myro has a direction of travel, and we are open about it. But a direction is not a promise to skip the hard middle; each stage has to be earned before the next begins.
Today Myro is an agentic assistant: it listens, sees and reasons across the clinical routine — admin, nursing care, image and lab summaries, and the diagnosis-and-management work of an intern — handing what it finds to a clinician. The path ahead deepens that agency under supervision. And further out is the idea that gives the whole effort its horizon: Myro as the brain of an embodied humanoid robot, physical AI that can be genuinely present at the bedside, helping with the physical reality of care and not only its information.
We describe this openly because we think a roadmap should be honest about where it points. But the order matters, and we will not rush it. An agent that acts is only trustworthy if the assistant beneath it is sound; an embodied system is only imaginable once the agent it grows from has proven itself many times over. So the same principle runs the length of the path: assistive throughout, the clinician in control, and each step grounded in the one before. The destination is ambitious. The way there is deliberately patient.
Where Myro is heading
From an assistant, to an agent that acts across the workflow under supervision, toward the brain of an embodied humanoid robot at the bedside — physical AI in healthcare. A direction we build toward, step by grounded step.
Bring clinical AI on-site.
Myro is an agentic, multimodal clinical assistant: it listens, sees, reasons and assists across the workflow — with the clinician always in control.