Two platforms for the two hardest problems in care operations, over a shared governance layer that keeps every action attributed, traceable, and defensible.
Control medication execution at the point of care, with event-level accountability and variability-driven documentation risk reduction.
Audit pharmacy claims deterministically: overpayment and duplicate detection, financial exposure quantification, and audit-ready, defensible findings.
Enterprise governance intelligence — a unified executive view derived from controlled execution.
Medication accountability & workforce attribution at the event level.
Evidentiary governance fabric preserving trace continuity for audit and dispute readiness.
Native data ingestion supporting HL7, FHIR, and direct API endpoints for EHR and pharmacy system connectivity.
Cloud-native architecture with single-tenant dedicated environments available, built on immutable infrastructure principles.
Strict alignment with HIPAA and HITECH; architecture engineered to support SOC 2 Type II and HITRUST audit readiness.
Execution is guided, attributable, traceable, and reproducible. Inputs are normalized, actions are structured, and outputs reflect what actually occurred.
Actions run within controlled workflows: medication administration is guided step-by-step and audit rules run deterministically. Execution is structured, not freeform.
Every action is captured as it occurs. Staff actions are attributed at the event level and audit decisions are linked to specific rules and data.
Required steps must be completed, execution paths are controlled and repeatable, and variability is constrained across users and environments.
Each step is time-stamped and attributable, sequences are preserved, and audit logic and outputs remain traceable — a complete evidentiary record.
Workflow records are review-ready and audit findings are structured, reproducible, and defensible. Outputs reflect what actually occurred.
AYAANIS applies governance at the point of execution, not after the fact through reporting or monitoring, establishing discipline before it becomes a documentation gap, a survey finding, or a financial loss.