Clinical Documentation Systems
Documentation is the layer where clinicians spend the time they did not expect to spend. SOAP, DAP, BIRP, and GIRP formats each have a defensible reason to exist and a clinical context where one outperforms the others. The new AI-assisted note tools (Mentalyc, Blueprint, Eleos, and the EHR-native generators) are reshaping the category, but the gap between vendor demos and real clinical use is wide.
Reviews here cover both the format-by-format guidance (when to use BIRP versus DAP for which population) and the AI-assist tooling, evaluated by the criteria that actually matter for clinical and legal defensibility: accuracy on niche presentations, audit-trail transparency, the BAA terms, and the time-savings claim measured against real session loads.
DAP Notes Explained: Format, Examples & When to Use Them (vs SOAP/BIRP)
DAP notes are the leanest of the three established formats for therapy documentation. They're also the easiest to write badly. Most of the bad ones share the same two mistakes.
BIRP Notes: Complete Guide with 5 Examples by Specialty
BIRP keeps the clinical thinking in the note. It's slower than SOAP and harder than DAP, and that's most of the reason it survives.