Voquill is an AI coworker built specifically for pathologists, designed to compress the documentation tax that consumes roughly a third of the field's annual spend. Pathology is a $30 to $40 billion specialty that is structurally understaffed, with shortages projected to widen by 25 percent over the next decade. Voquill targets the moment where pathologists actually lose time: dictating, formatting, and signing out case reports rather than examining slides. By listening as the pathologist works, it drafts a sign-out ready report in real time, learning each user's reporting style and routing findings to the correct fields.

The product behaves like an AI resident sitting beside the microscope. Push-to-talk control governs when the system listens, snippets and templates carry over from existing workflows, and the platform integrates with established LIS and IMS systems so labs do not have to migrate. Voquill also surfaces reimbursement code suggestions to help maximize billing accuracy, and operates under HIPAA and CAP compliance with SOC 2 reportedly in progress. The result is a documentation co-pilot that is calibrated to pathology rather than a generic medical scribe.

Voquill is a Spring 2026 Y Combinator company founded by Michael Gibson, Henry Habib, and Josiah Saunders. CEO Michael Gibson spent five years at Techcyte, rising from junior engineer to VP of Engineering and leading the AI team that shipped digital pathology systems used at Mayo Clinic and other major reference labs. Early traction includes 25 plus pathologists at a leading Fortune 500 lab who report saving around 20 percent of case writing time daily.