EMRs were built for billing. ABOG was built for boards.
Neither was built for you.
PDI Med is the first tool designed around how OB/GYN physicians actually think —
turning a note you already wrote into a complete ABOG entry in seconds.
Case log collection has always been considered acceptable shadow work — the administrative burden that lives between clinical excellence and board certification. Build your spreadsheet. Go back through charts. Find the missing fields in July. That's just how it works.
But you're a physician in the first years of independent practice. You may have a family. You have a demanding schedule. Your time is not free — and the hours you spend on this are hours taken from your patients, your rest, and your growth.
"Shadow work is work. It's always been expected. It's never been easy. PDI Med changes that."
When I graduated residency in July 2025, I checked my institution's EMR — not built for ABOG queries. I asked IT for a data pull — the format didn't exist. I searched for software built specifically for this — nothing. So I built PDI Med.
Paste any clinical note. The parser extracts category, diagnosis, GA, procedures, and all ABOG required fields in about 10 seconds. No template. No special formatting.
Missing uterine weight? Category at max? Normal delivery listed? Wrong section? Flags fire at commit — when you can still fix them, not in July when you can't.
De-identified. Board-formatted. Ready to paste into ABOG's portal. The export ABOG requires is the file PDI Med generates. Architecture and compliance, aligned by design.
Your de-identified cases. A simulated ABOG oral board examiner. "What else?" until you run out. Structured debrief after every session. Included. Free. Unlimited.
Somewhere between the delivery, the consult, and the next patient already waiting — the documentation that ABOG actually needs never gets written. Not because you're careless. Because nothing in your workflow was designed to capture it.
So it accumulates. A week of unlogged cases becomes a month. February arrives and you're reconstructing encounters from memory, cross-referencing notes you wrote at 6am, hoping you didn't miss a category. The anxiety isn't about the work — it's about not knowing what you've lost.
No other physician would build this tool. No hospital has an incentive to. So it never got built.
Until now.
The de-identification and clinical intelligence architecture underlying PDI Med is patent-pending. Filed before launch. Before revenue. Before any of this.
Not because we feared competition. Because the architecture deserved to be protected before it was shared. That's the signal: we were serious enough to do the work before asking you to trust us.
30 days free. $49/month after — founding price, locked forever. Goes to $99/month when the founding cohort closes.
I am not a neutral observer of this platform. I am collecting my own cases under the same ABOG requirements as every physician who uses it alongside me. If something falls short, I am the first to know. — Dan Bristow, MD