Citations that still work after you hit export.
Hyperlinked medical chronology exports keep citations working after you leave the platform: Word and HTML files where every citation is a live hyperlink back to its exact source page. Links open in Word with no plugin required, HTML opens in any browser, and Bates-anchored citations survive re-sorting and re-pagination.
Course — 7 visits, improvement noted at each [p.38]
Most recent note — continue conservative care [p.140]
A Word file your team can actually verify.
Export a chronology, summary, or digest to DOCX and every citation stays a working hyperlink — click a cite in Word and land on the exact source page. Co-counsel, adjusters, and clients verify the work without an account or a viewer.
renders with its citation as a browser-native link [p.38]
that opens the cited page directly [p.140]
HTML exports open anywhere.
The HTML export is browser-native: one file, sent by email or shared drive, and the recipient clicks through citations in any browser. Same cited structure as the in-platform view, with nothing to install and nothing to license.
Citations that survive reorganization.
Citations anchor to Bates ranges as well as page positions. When the packet is re-sorted, re-paginated, or re-produced, the link still resolves to the same content — so a cite made in week one holds in month nine.
Export is where most citations die. Not here.
The moment a cited draft leaves most platforms as a flat file, the trail goes with it — “see records, generally.” Ours keeps the trail: every line in the exported file still traces to page and source, so the work product stays audit-grade and legally defensible outside the platform.
See Verifiable AI CitationsBuild it cited. Send it cited.
Three steps between the record and a work product anyone can verify, anywhere.
Chronology, summary, or digest — every line already linked to its source page in-platform.
The citations convert to live hyperlinks in the exported file. Nothing is flattened away.
Recipients click any line to its source — in Word or a browser, no account needed.
Who sends hyperlinked exports.
Anyone whose work product gets challenged after it leaves the building.
Hyperlinked exports, answered.
Yes. Every citation in the DOCX is a real hyperlink: click it in Word and it opens the exact cited page. The links are part of the document itself, so forwarding the file forwards the verification trail with it.
The HTML export is a single browser-native file. Recipients open it in any browser and click through citations exactly as you would in-platform — no plugin, no viewer install, no login.
Yes — that is the point of the feature. The exported file carries its own linked citations, so a reviewer without a Medrecords account can still trace any line back to its source page.
Chronologies, medical summaries, record Q&A results, and deposition digests all export with live citation links, in DOCX or HTML. The same citation discipline applies to each: if a line can’t be sourced, it is flagged rather than stated.
Citations anchor to Bates ranges as well as page positions. If the packet is later re-sorted or re-paginated, the anchor still resolves to the same underlying content, and anchors that turn ambiguous are flagged for review instead of silently pointing at the wrong page.
Related capabilities.
Same engine, same citation standard — outputs and anchors that travel with the exported file.
Attested, deposition-ready reports on your template — the outputs these exports carry.
ExploreA bookmarked PDF outline of the sorted record, generated automatically.
ExploreSequential Bates numbers and confidentiality legends, stamped and held stable.
ExploreExport a file. Click a citation. Land on the page.
Upload one file and get back a hyperlinked sample export you can click through in Word or a browser. Handled under our BAA; never used to train a model.