Walk in with every medical question already sourced.
Deposition preparation software drafts topic-organized question outlines from the deposition digest and the medical record read together — inconsistencies to probe, treatment gaps to pin down, each question cited to the page or line it's built on. Where the two sources diverge, a question is drafted with both citations attached.
Questions are drafts, not strategy: what to ask, in what order, and what to drop stays the attorney's call.
Drafted from the digest and the record, together.
The outline reads two things side by side: what the witness has already said (the deposition digest) and what the record actually shows. Where the two agree, the outline confirms; where they diverge, a question is drafted — with both sources cited.
A draft you rework, not a script you follow.
Topics arrive organized and sourced; the judgment stays out of the machine. Reorder, cut, and add in the editor, then export to your own outline format — with the citations riding along so every question still traces to its page.
Exhibits collected next to the questions built on them.
Each topic carries its record pages as exhibit references, so the document you'd hand the witness is already pulled and labeled beside the question. No flipping through the packet mid-deposition to find the page you meant.
A question you can't source is a question you can't ask.
Every question in the draft traces to the page or digest line it's built on — audit-grade and verifiable before you rely on it in the room. If the record doesn't support a question, it never makes the outline. That's the same source-linked standard as everything else on the platform.
See Verifiable AI CitationsFrom record to outline before the prep session.
Three steps — the associate hours go into strategy, not hunting for page numbers.
The medical record plus any prior testimony — the digest builds from the transcripts automatically.
Treater, expert, or party — the outline drafts by topic, with inconsistencies and gaps flagged and cited.
Reorder, cut, add your own questions, and export with exhibit references — the strategy stays yours.
Who preps with it.
Built for the litigation team — on either side of the caption.
Deposition prep, answered.
Any witness whose testimony turns on the medical record: treating physicians, IME doctors and retained experts, the plaintiff or claimant, and lay witnesses whose accounts touch the treatment history. The outline adapts to the witness — a treater gets questions about their own notes; a plaintiff gets questions about what the record says versus what was claimed.
From two sources read together: the deposition digest (prior testimony, if any) and the underlying medical record. Inconsistencies between the two become questions to probe; treatment gaps and unexplained changes become questions to pin down. Nothing is invented — every question is built on a passage it cites.
Yes — the draft is a starting point, organized by topic. Reorder topics, cut questions, add your own, and export into your own outline format. What to ask, in what order, and what to drop stays the attorney's call.
Yes. Each topic carries the record pages it draws on as exhibit references, so the documents you would hand the witness are already collected next to the questions built on them.
Yes — every question links to the page or digest line it is built on. If a question can't be tied to a source, it doesn't go in the draft. You can verify any question against the record in one click before you rely on it.
Related capabilities
The testimony summary these outlines draft from.
ExploreThe flagged inconsistencies that seed the probing questions.
ExploreSpecial reports and charts for the same case, same citations.
ExploreA version delta is a cross-exam topic waiting to happen.
ExploreSee an outline drafted from one of your own files.
Upload a record and get a cited, topic-organized draft back — then make it yours. Handled under our BAA; never used to train a model.