Features
Every module maps to something an analyst checks.
No generic feature list — each part of Title22 exists because it answers a specific question a DSS licensing analyst asks during a visit.
Medication Administration Records
Digital MAR with medication auto-fill pulled from each resident's centrally stored record. Every scheduled dose gets a timestamped entry attributed to the caregiver who administered it. Missed or refused doses require a reason — the system won't let a box stay blank. PRN entries capture the reason for the dose and a follow-up note on the resident's response.
Role-based caregiver access (RBAC)
Four access levels — administrator, supervisor, caregiver, and read-only — so documentation stays accountable. Caregivers see their shift's residents and tasks; supervisors see facility-wide activity; administrators see everything including audit trails. Every action is attributed to the person who took it, never to a shared login.
Multi-facility oversight
Operators running more than one licensed facility switch between them from a single account. Records, staff assignments, and residents stay cleanly separated per license number — nothing bleeds between facilities, which matters the moment DSS asks to see records for one specific home.
AI daily briefing
Each morning, a plain-language summary flags what needs attention: MAR entries with gaps, PRN doses missing a follow-up note, physician orders that haven't been reconciled with the medication record yet. It's the same trace an analyst runs during a visit — run daily instead of once a year.
Centrally stored medication records
Each medication your facility stores gets a running record: physician, pharmacy, prescription number, quantity received, and instructions for use — reconciled against what's administered and what remains on hand.
A hard line we don't cross: Title22's AI never suggests, corrects, or comments on clinical dosage information. Medication decisions belong to physicians and pharmacists. Our AI is limited to documentation completeness and compliance — nothing clinical, ever.