Preview — this walkthrough uses illustrative data. No real patient records are shown. Pilot launch 2026.
For Hospitals & Health Systems

Every bedside, backed by a behavioral specialist. Even at 3am.

ED nurses, PCTs, and inpatient staff get protocol-grounded behavioral guidance the moment a patient escalates — pulled from the EHR, written by a Behavioral Psychologist, and backed by a deterministic safety architecture so the dangerous recommendation is never possible.

Epic-ready (FHIR) Behavioral Psychologist daily review 24/7 bedside HIPAA-aligned

Behavioral escalations don't schedule themselves around your behavioral specialist.

Most hospitals have one BCBA covering hundreds of inpatient beds across multiple units — and none overnight. When a patient with autism, a TBI, or a dementia-related behavioral crisis escalates at 2am, the bedside nurse is on their own. NeuroPath fills that gap.

~1 BCBA
per hospital — covering every unit, every shift. Most hospitals have zero BCBA coverage overnight.
~40%
of inpatient behavioral escalations happen outside daytime consult hours, when the specialist isn't reachable.
<90 sec
from bedside intake to a protocol-grounded plan. No paging, no waiting, no improvising.
0 gaps
in the safety net — deterministic gates escalate suicidality, abuse, or medical emergencies every time, by design.

Illustrative ranges — pilot sites will publish their own measured data.

A 90-second intake. Everything else comes from the EHR.

The bedside nurse confirms the presenting concern and the triggers unique to this admission. Diagnoses, meds, prior incidents, and known de-escalation patterns pull in from the chart automatically.

EHR integrations: Epic (FHIR R4) — live in pilot sandbox today. Cerner, MEDITECH, and Allscripts on the 2026 roadmap. See the safety architecture ↓

Patient Admission Behavioral Assessment

PATIENT NAME
Maya R.
AGE & GENDER
8yo, Female
MRN
AR-2405-7891
ADMIT DATE
Apr 15, 2026

Real-Time Bedside Guidance

AI-assisted clinical decision support with deterministic safety routing

Current Situation

Maya is hitting her head against the bed rail repeatedly and screaming. Staff estimates 4-5 hits in the last 30 seconds. She is not responsive to verbal de-escalation attempts.

Time: 14:32 EDT
Location: Room 412, West Wing
Staff Present: 2 RNs, 1 PCT

NeuroPath Recommendation

🔴 IMMEDIATE (Next 30 seconds)
Physical Safety First: Interpose body or pillow between Maya's head and the bed rail; apply soft padding to the contact surface. This is a least-restrictive physical intervention to prevent injury while de-escalation options remain viable. Hold off on mechanical restraints or hands-on holds at this stage — Maya has a history of responsive de-escalation with sensory supports, and escalation to restraint would likely worsen arousal. Keep staff tone calm and voices low; Maya's arousal tracks closely with staff affect.
🟡 DE-ESCALATION (Next 2-5 minutes)
For Maya's Profile: Use calm, quiet voice. Request weighted blanket from cart (room 412 chart notes this as most effective). Offer sensory break in quiet space (hallway nook or empty room). Avoid sudden movements. Do not enforce eye contact. Reduce room lighting if possible.
🟢 PREVENTION (After de-escalation)
Trigger Analysis: Check log — similar escalations occurred at 13:10 (lunch transition) and 11:45 (PT session end). Implement 10-minute sensory prep before routine changes. Assign consistent staff member for next 2 hours to maintain predictability.
⚠️ SAFETY-NET ALERT
Self-injurious behavior detected. Episode automatically logged to patient record (2026-04-17 14:32). If frequency exceeds 3 episodes/hour, system will alert charge nurse and attending physician. Current hourly rate: 2 episodes. Continue monitoring.

Shift Handoff Profile

One-page behavioral summary for shift changes — printable or tablet-viewable

MR

Maya R.

8 years old, Female
Admitted: Apr 15, 2026
ELEVATED RISK
Diagnoses
Autism Spectrum Disorder (Level 2), Generalized Anxiety Disorder, ADHD
What Works
✓ Weighted blanket
✓ Quiet, dimmed spaces
✓ Consistent staff
✓ Sensory prep before transitions
✓ Visual schedules
What Doesn't Work
✗ Loud noises / sudden sounds
✗ Unexpected changes to routine
✗ Forced eye contact
✗ Multiple staff members at once
✗ Bright lighting
Current Medications
Risperidone
ASD-associated irritability
0.5 mg PO BID
Melatonin
sleep onset
3 mg PO qHS
Known Triggers
Sensory overload, routine changes, transitions between activities, loud/unexpected sounds
Last 24 Hours
11:45
Escalation during PT (1 episode, 2 min duration)
13:10
Escalation during lunch transition (2 episodes, 3 min total)
14:32
Self-injurious behavior — responsive to weighted blanket
16:00
Stable — quiet space + sensory regulation
This Shift Focus
Monitor for escalation around dinner prep and evening routine (historical trigger times). Have weighted blanket and sensory break space prepped. Minimize staff transitions if possible.

Unit Dashboard

Real-time behavioral risk overview for all patients on the unit

12
Patients on Unit
3
Behavioral Incidents Today
1
Elevated Risk
Maya R.
8yo F
ASD, GAD
James T.
12yo M
ADHD
Sofia C.
9yo F
Anxiety Disorder
Lucas M.
11yo M
OCD
Emma S.
10yo F
Depression
Alex P.
13yo M
Bipolar II
Noah D.
7yo M
ASD
Ivy L.
14yo F
Eating Disorder
Oliver K.
6yo M
Developmental Delay
Zara N.
11yo F
PTSD
Kai H.
10yo M
Social Anxiety
Mira B.
9yo F
Selective Mutism
Maya R.
8yo F · Room 412
Self-injurious behavior tracking

Incidents Logged Today

11:45 — Maya R., Room 412
Behavioral escalation during PT transition. Duration: 2 min. Response: Sensory regulation, staff calm presence.
13:10 — Maya R., Room 412
Self-injurious behavior (head to rail). Duration: 3 min. Response: Weighted blanket, quiet space, responsive.
14:32 — Maya R., Room 412
Self-injurious behavior (head to rail). Duration: 5 min. Response: De-escalation protocol, safety monitoring activated.

Safety is an architecture, not a disclaimer.

Three deterministic guarantees sit between the LLM and the bedside. If the system can't satisfy all three, it escalates to a human — it doesn't guess.

01 — DETERMINISTIC GATES

Dangerous recommendations are not possible.

Suicidality, abuse disclosure, medical emergencies, and restraint-threshold events are intercepted by hard-coded rules before the LLM ever generates a plan. The model can't suggest "give a time-out" if the patient disclosed SI — the route is already fixed to crisis resources + charge nurse.

Rule-based, regex + structured triggers. Auditable. Versioned.
02 — CLINICAL REVIEW SAMPLE

A Behavioral Psychologist reviews a daily sample of every deployment.

Dr. Matt Edelstein, Behavioral Psychologist reviews a 33% random sample of production recommendations daily. Disagreements feed back into the protocol layer. If inter-rater agreement on behavioral function falls below threshold, the affected decision class auto-pauses — the unit gets a direct-to-clinician channel instead of a degraded AI.

See how reliability is enforced →
03 — CITATION-BACKED OUTPUT

Every recommendation points at its source.

Each bedside plan is grounded in the patient's EHR + a named clinical protocol (Edelstein v2.11 sleep hygiene, toilet training, etc.). Nurses see why — the triggering diagnosis, the specific protocol, the guideline citation — not just a black-box answer. Compliance and QA teams get the full audit trail.

Source-of-truth: clinical-protocols/*.docx
ALSO BUILT IN
Restraint threshold monitoring. Least-restrictive alternatives tracked; alerts when exhausted.
Incident auto-documentation. Every session auto-logged to the EHR with a full audit trail.
Medication safety. Behavioral output cross-checked against active meds (Risperidone, Methylphenidate, etc.).
TJC & CMS alignment. Reporting aligned with Joint Commission behavioral health standards.
Post-incident debrief prompts. Staff safety routines built in, not bolted on.
Inter-rater dashboard. Transparent reliability metrics for your QI committee.

Built by the clinicians and operators who will be on the other end of the phone.

NeuroPath isn't a generalist AI company that added a healthcare skin. The clinical methodology is authored by a Behavioral Psychologist who has spent his career across the continuum of care. The product and go-to-market are led by an operator who has already shipped it into schools.

CLINICAL DIRECTOR & CO-FOUNDER

Dr. Matthew Edelstein, Psy.D., BCBA-D

Licensed clinical psychologist and board-certified behavior analyst. Over a decade across the continuum of care — developmental and inpatient behavioral health. Authors every protocol in NeuroPath's source-of-truth library and conducts the daily clinical review sample.

Current focus
Authors and maintains NeuroPath’s clinical protocol library (sleep hygiene, toilet training, sibling contingency, de-escalation). Leads the daily clinician review sample on every deployment.
CEO & CO-FOUNDER

Manal Mehta

Product and operations lead. Shipped NeuroPath’s first classroom deployment into Rural Maryland Public Schools in 2026, and is extending the same clinical engine into hospital inpatient units.

Current focus
Running the Maryland schools pilot end-to-end; standing up hospital inpatient pilots across pediatric behavioral health units in 2026.

Request Your Pilot

A 30-day structured pilot with clear milestones — not a vague "pilot someday" conversation.

WEEK 1
Integration & training
Epic sandbox connection, nurse & charge onboarding, protocol library review.
WEEKS 2–3
Shadow mode
Recommendations surface to the unit, but a BCBA-D reviews every one before bedside use.
WEEK 4
Live & measured
Real-time bedside use, with pre-defined outcome metrics (restraint frequency, time-to-guidance, staff burden).
WHAT YOU BRING
  • One unit & a clinical champion
  • EHR sandbox access (Epic today)
  • Baseline behavioral incident data
WHAT WE BRING
  • Deployment & integration engineering
  • BCBA-D clinical oversight
  • Outcome measurement & weekly reporting

We'll reply within 24 hours to schedule your demo. Prefer email directly? info@neuropathhealth.com

FOR SCHOOLS
Teacher co-pilot & IEP support →
Live in Rural Maryland Public Schools.
FOR HOSPITALS · YOU'RE HERE
Bedside clinical decision support
Epic-ready. BCBA-D review sample. 24/7.
FOR FAMILIES
Home Compass for caregivers →
In-the-moment coaching in 14 languages.