For clinical reviewers

GLP-1 refill review,
at a glance.

ScriptLens reads each case in your review platform and instantly highlights the answers that fail your clinic's acceptance criteria — with a per-case patient summary at the top. Faster reviews, fewer misses. The physician still makes every decision.

ScriptLens: 1 disqualifier · 2 flags
Age54
State⛔ SPECIAL STATE — Kentucky (KY)
Current weight212 lbs (4 lbs lost last mo)
BMI32.2 (calc)
Current GLP-1Tirzepatide, 15mg
Dose requestIncrease current dose
Adverse reactionsNone reported
⛔ SPECIAL STATE: Kentucky (KY) ⚠️ PRIOR GLP-1: Tirzepatide, 15mg

Everything a reviewer needs, surfaced automatically

ScriptLens runs the moment a case opens — no clicks, no copy-paste. It works across all your storefronts and inside the Begin Review panel.

Disqualifier highlighting

Red-flags answers that fail criteria — pancreatitis, insulin use, pregnancy, suicidal ideation, restricted states, and more — right on the offending question.

⚠️

Informational flags

Yellow-flags things worth a look: prior GLP-1 use with medication and dose, warfarin, prediabetes, BMI below range, age over 74, adverse reactions.

📋

Per-case summary

Age, state, current weight and monthly loss, BMI, current GLP-1, dose request, previous prescription, and medications — all at the top of the case.

🧮

Smart BMI

Calculates the current BMI from height and current weight — ignoring goal figures — even when the form only reports weight and weight lost.

📍

Special-state control

Automatically flags patients in states you can't prescribe into, so restricted cases never slip through.

Jump to issues

Click any flag in the summary to scroll straight to the question that triggered it. No hunting through a long form.

How it works

Passive, on-device, and read-only. ScriptLens never approves, denies, submits, or changes anything.

Open a case

ScriptLens detects the intake or refill questionnaire automatically on any storefront.

It reads the answers

All evaluation happens locally in your browser against your clinic's acceptance criteria.

Flags appear

Failing answers are outlined red, notable ones yellow, with a summary panel up top.

You decide

The physician reviews the flags and makes the call. ScriptLens only highlights.

Built privacy-first

ScriptLens runs entirely inside your browser. It collects no data and transmits nothing off your device — including any patient health information on the pages you view. That's a deliberate design choice for a tool used with real patient data.

Read the full privacy policy

Licensing

ScriptLens is licensed per clinic. Reach out and we'll get your reviewers set up — self-serve purchasing is coming soon.

Pilot

Try it with your review team.

  • Up to 5 reviewers
  • All storefronts & refill support
  • Email support
Contact us
Most clinics

Clinic

For a full review operation.

  • Unlimited reviewers on your domain
  • Domain-restricted install & auto-updates
  • Custom acceptance criteria
  • Priority support
Request access
Clinical use notice: ScriptLens is a review aid that highlights information for a licensed clinician. It does not make medical decisions, approve, or deny prescriptions. All prescribing decisions are made by the reviewing physician.

Questions

Does any patient data leave the browser?

No. All evaluation happens locally on your device. ScriptLens transmits nothing — see the privacy policy.

Can we restrict it to our organization?

Yes. We publish privately to your Google Workspace domain, and your Workspace admin can force-install it on managed Chrome browsers. Reviewers on unmanaged Chrome can install via a private link instead.

Does it work on refill and check-in forms?

Yes — intake, refill, and check-in questionnaires across your storefronts, plus the Begin Review panel. The summary adapts to what each form reports.

Can we customize the criteria?

Yes. Acceptance criteria — disqualifiers, thresholds, restricted states, and per-storefront question mappings — are configurable for your clinic.

Does ScriptLens ever approve or submit anything?

Never. It only highlights and summarizes. Every clinical decision stays with the physician.