ePeople AI alternative

Focused referral packet review for teams comparing autonomous admissions assistants.

Some AI admissions products emphasize automated portal handling, facility-specific rules, and responses back to admissions workflows. AdmitScore™ is narrower: a pilot-ready packet review layer that shows payer risk, documentation gaps, high-cost medication questions, and financial planning context for staff to verify.

AdmitScore and VeriSight Analytics are not affiliated with ePeople AI. This page helps SNF teams compare scope and workflow fit.

Scope control

AdmitScore is decision support, not autonomous admissions.

That is deliberate. A controlled pilot can prove whether the facility trusts the packet review output before expanding into portal automation, EHR workflow, or broader operational changes.

Autonomous workflow evaluation

Consider broader assistants when the buyer wants portal monitoring, response automation, and facility-specific rules embedded across intake operations.

Focused AdmitScore pilot

Consider AdmitScore when the buyer first needs a staff-verifiable review of packet contents, documentation gaps, payer risk, and high-cost medication questions.

Staff verification

AdmitScore outputs are prompts and planning aids, not final decisions or automated portal responses.

PHI boundary

Public forms do not collect PHI. Secure intake and BAA scoping come before any real referral packet review.

FAQ

Questions SNF teams ask when comparing ePeople AI and AdmitScore.

Is AdmitScore affiliated with ePeople AI?

No. AdmitScore and VeriSight Analytics are not affiliated with ePeople AI.

How is AdmitScore different from an autonomous admissions assistant?

AdmitScore is intentionally scoped as a staff-verifiable referral packet review layer, not an autonomous acceptance, denial, portal-response, or EHR workflow.

Does AdmitScore make final admission decisions?

No. AdmitScore supports staff review. Facility staff make final clinical, operational, payer, legal, and financial decisions.