Featured practice resource
Help clinicians walk in prepared.
A pre-appointment brief that helps the provider walk in with patient context, clinical readiness, unresolved actions, decision friction, and a clear next step.
Chair Brief
Provider-ready before the door opens.
Connect patient intent, clinical readiness, patient memory, unresolved work, and the next action after the visit.
The pack includes printable PDF, editable DOCX, usage examples, rollout checklist, and local review notes.
Why clinics use it
It closes the gap between the front desk, the assistant, and the provider.
A Chair Brief makes the patient’s story, open questions, clinical readiness, and next action visible before the provider enters the room.
A patient arrives for a treatment consult and the provider does not know the cost concern raised on the phone.
An anxious patient has to repeat the same concern to the assistant and then again to the dentist.
A hygiene visit reveals unbooked treatment, but nobody knows the last follow-up status.
An emergency appointment moves quickly and patient context disappears in the rush.
A provider enters the room without knowing the patient previously declined treatment because of timing.
The morning huddle lists appointments but does not explain what each patient needs today.
One-page Chair Brief
Short enough for daily use. Specific enough to change the conversation.
Patient Snapshot
The provider should instantly understand who is in the chair, why they are here, and whether this visit needs special handling.
Visit Goal
A visit can fail even when the clinical work is correct if the patient goal is not understood.
Clinical Readiness
The Chair Brief does not replace the clinical record. It tells the provider what must be reviewed before the conversation or procedure begins.
Patient Memory
The difference between a cold visit and a trusted visit is often remembering the concern the patient already told the practice.
Unresolved Actions
Open work should not depend on someone remembering it in the hallway.
Provider Prep
The brief should change how the provider opens and closes the appointment.
Detailed version
For consults, anxious patients, emergency visits, and high-value treatment.
Complex visits need more than an appointment note. The full Chair Brief pack gives teams a way to surface clinical readiness, patient concerns, cost friction, trust barriers, and follow-up responsibilities before the provider enters.
Clinical readiness
Decision context
Experience context
Conversation plan
Completed example
Show the team what a useful brief looks like.
patient
Sarah M. - returning patient - crown consult
concern
Wants to understand whether the crown is urgent and what the cost will be.
memory
Prefers text. Delayed treatment last time because the insurance estimate was unclear.
anxiety
Worried about pain and being pressured into treatment.
unresolved
Treatment estimate sent last month. No follow-up call completed.
open With
I know you had questions about timing and cost last time. Let us walk through it clearly today.
next Action
Send estimate summary and schedule a follow-up call within 24 hours if not booked today.
Team workflow
A Chair Brief only works when ownership is clear.
Front desk
Captures the patient’s stated concern, pending forms, payment or insurance question, preferred communication channel, and any unresolved follow-up from calls or messages.
Assistant / clinical team
Confirms room readiness, radiographs, medical alerts, lab case status, procedure notes, and anything the provider must review before entering.
Provider
Reviews the brief before entering, uses the opening line, confirms patient concerns, and records the next action after the visit.
Treatment coordinator / manager
Tracks unbooked treatment, pending estimates, follow-up promises, and whether the next action was completed.
Clinic rollout
Built to become a habit, not a downloaded file that dies.
Start with one visit type: crowns, implants, emergency appointments, or anxious patients.
Assign who fills each section before the morning huddle.
Keep the first version short enough to complete in under two minutes.
Use a completed example in team training so the expected level of detail is clear.
Review five real visits after one week and remove fields the team does not use.
Track whether follow-up promises, treatment handoffs, and patient confidence improve.
Printable + editable version
Get the clinic-ready Chair Brief pack.
Enter your work email to access the printable PDF, editable DOCX, completed example, rollout checklist, and local review notes.
What the pack includes
Printable one-page Chair Brief
Editable DOCX version
Detailed complex-visit version
Completed example
Team ownership map
14-day rollout checklist
Local review notes
Relaya.one
In Relaya, the Chair Brief becomes live practice presence.
Calls, messages, forms, payments, booking notes, patient memory, treatment context, unresolved actions, and follow-up can feed the provider before the visit begins.
This resource supports operational preparation. It does not replace the clinical record, diagnosis, informed consent, health-history review, privacy obligations, payer rules, or local documentation requirements.