Bedside & specialty nurses
ICU, ED, med-surg, telemetry, OB, oncology, peri-op, and more — scan what changed in your unit before, during, or after a shift.
About NurseJet
Nurses don’t have time to search PubMed, guideline bodies, journals, and specialty organizations every day. NurseJet collects credible nursing sources, summarizes the updates that matter at the bedside, has a human review every draft, and links each brief straight to the exact original article or guideline — never a homepage.
Who it’s for
Everyone sees the same reviewed daily edition. Your unit preference only sets which tab opens first — it doesn’t spin up a separate AI feed.
ICU, ED, med-surg, telemetry, OB, oncology, peri-op, and more — scan what changed in your unit before, during, or after a shift.
Plain-English summaries with the evidence type labeled, so you learn to tell a guideline from a single study from a news item.
A shared, source-verified starting point for journal club, in-services, and EBP assignments — every claim links to the original.
One reviewed daily edition for the whole unit, instead of forwarded PDFs and screenshots with no link back to the source.
Every update goes through the same pipeline so you get something fast to read without losing the thread back to the evidence.
NurseJet pulls metadata — title, author, date, abstract, and link — from approved databases, guideline bodies, and nursing organizations via APIs, RSS, official pages, or admin submission.
An AI layer drafts a plain-English title, a 2–3 paragraph summary, key takeaways, and unit-specific practice implications — using “the guideline recommends” / “the study found” language, never inventing findings.
Nothing reaches the feed until a human reviewer approves it. Admins can edit summaries, fix tags, set evidence level, flag paywalled items, and reject anything unsafe or unsupported.
Every published summary carries citations that link to the original source, so you can verify the details and read the full article or guideline yourself in one click.
The citation rule
A citation is only useful if you can land on the page that actually supports the claim. “See the CDC website” isn’t a citation. Before a brief can publish, NurseJet requires a direct link to the specific article, guideline, PDF, PubMed record, or DOI — and the database enforces it as a backstop.
Ingestion is restricted to a whitelist of research databases, guideline bodies, and nursing organizations.
AI drafts the summary; a human approves, edits, or rejects it before anyone sees it on the public feed.
When only an abstract or metadata is available, the brief says so — no overstated certainty.
NurseJet only summarizes from credible nursing, medical, guideline, and evidence-based-practice sources. Every card shows its source, and every summary links back to the original article, guideline, or abstract.
Scope & limits
Professional education and awareness only