BMP scan
Xircuit lets your team capture completed BMP forms by camera or file upload and attach them immediately to the patient file. No paper chase, no lost forms — every scan is dated, labelled and access-controlled. Xircuit stores the document; clinical interpretation stays with the practitioner.
Request a demoXircuit's BMP-scan module lets practitioners photograph or upload completed body-measurement-protocol forms and attach them directly to the patient record. The scan is a documentation aid — it stores the practitioner's paper protocol in a structured, searchable format without replacing the practitioner's clinical judgement. Xircuit does not interpret measurements or provide any clinical analysis.
Capture a BMP form by photo from any device camera, or upload an existing PDF or image directly from your file system.
Every BMP scan is stored inside the patient record with a date and the recording practitioner's ID, alongside other clinical documents.
Label each scan with the measurement date, protocol type and practitioner notes so records are searchable and well-organised.
Scans are stored encrypted and are subject to the same role-based access controls as all other patient record data.
Every upload and access event is logged, so your practice can demonstrate a complete chain of custody for each document.
Practices that use Xircuit's BMP-scan module to document measurement protocols typically spend less time managing paper forms — common outcomes include faster file retrieval before consultations and a reduction in misfiled or missing documents.
No. The BMP-scan module is a documentation tool for storing practitioner-authored measurement protocol forms in the patient record. It does not interpret measurements or provide any clinical guidance. Clinical assessment and all judgement remain entirely with the practitioner.
The module accepts JPEG and PNG images captured by camera, as well as PDF file uploads. Scans are stored in their original format and are not processed or transformed by Xircuit.
Yes. There is no limit on the number of BMP scans per patient record. Each scan carries its own metadata — measurement date, protocol type and notes — so the history is clearly organised over time.