EndoLogs vs ACGME Case Logs
The ACGME Case Log System is the official record for accredited training. If you are required to report there, nothing changes that, and EndoLogs does not pretend otherwise.
What EndoLogs changes is everything around it. Instead of reconstructing cases from memory at the end of a rotation, you log each procedure in the seconds after it happens, on your phone. When it is time to enter required data, you work from your own complete, accurate record instead of a guess.
And when training ends, the personal log keeps going. Credentialing, privileging, and case-volume questions follow you for a career; EndoLogs is built to be the record that answers them.
| EndoLogs | ACGME Case Log System | |
|---|---|---|
| Role | Your personal, career-long log | Official accreditation record |
| Logging a case | A few taps on your phone between cases | Web entry |
| iPhone experience | Purpose-built procedure logging app | Web-based system |
| Quality metrics | Computed automatically as you log | Not the focus |
| Reports | One-tap PDF with breakdowns and metrics | Accreditation reporting |
| After training | Yours forever, export anytime | Stays with the accreditation system |
| Price | Free trial, then a few dollars a month | Provided through your program |
The part nobody else has
EndoLogs is phone-first. A real iPhone app built only for procedure logging, fast enough to use in the walk between rooms, with every entry synced to the web app for the workstation. Log where the procedure happens, review where the desk is.
Common questions
Does EndoLogs report to the ACGME?
No. The ACGME Case Log System is the official channel and your program governs what goes into it. EndoLogs is the personal record you keep alongside it, and the CSV export makes required data entry a transcription job instead of an archaeology project.
Why keep a personal log at all?
Because the questions do not stop at graduation. Hospitals ask for case volumes at credentialing, employers ask at interviews, and privileging committees ask for quality metrics. The physicians who can answer in one tap are the ones who kept their own log.
Try EndoLogs free for 3 days. $4.99/month after. Cancel anytime, and your data exports with you.
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