Healthcare & Life Sciences

Dr. Chatbot will see you now! AI in Healthcare

Complimentary article from James Hoshor, Senior Mobile Strategist & Client Partner Manager at Anexinet. He has over 20 years experience in executive leadership, strategic planning, marketing and business development in information technology. For the past 10 years, James has worked with many clients across multiple industries, including financial services, insurance, retail and manufacturing, approach mobile strategically to identify and deliver solutions that result in market differentiating solutions and great user experiences.
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What is one key thing all healthcare organizations strive for?

Improved patient experience!
An annual Localytics study revealed the average smartphone user has 30 installed apps but regularly uses fewer than five. And nearly one in four (23%) stop using an app after opening it just once. What this tells us is businesses must continue to devise and deliver novel approaches to customer engagement.

According to a recent survey by CB Insights, over 550 startups incorporated AI into their solution offerings for 2016. Industries such as healthcare, automotive, security, finance and advertising are allocating portions of their annual budgets for implementing chatbots and AI technologies to achieve key business drivers–improving customer experiences and increasing employee productivity. This is literally a big deal. Some of the largest brands (e.g., Bank of America, Facebook, Starbucks, eBay) are all making significant investments in chatbots and AI technologies.

Before I share what all the hype is about with chatbots in healthcare, lets first make sure we all understand what chatbots are. Simply put, Chatbots are programs a user interacts with via a conversational interface. Instead of clicking buttons to execute the program’s functions, with a chatbot, the user types (or says) a command for the program to execute. I’m sure you’ve already used one of these well-known chatbots: Amazon Echo, Google Home, and Apple’s Siri.

But chatbots can’t possibly replace real-live trained and experienced doctors, right?

Or can they? For the past decade, robots have been performing jobs once exclusive to humans, from manufacturing cars to filling warehouse orders. As artificial intelligence and neural networks continue to evolve and perfect their interpersonal communication skills chatbots and AI technology will become more commonplace, even in healthcare. In the near future, instead of consulting a doctor for a diagnosis, you might just interface with an AI chatbot in a mobile app.

Can you imagine what this might look like?

chatbot2.png

Me: Hello “chatbot”

Chatbot: Hi James, how can I help you?

Me: I have a fever, headache and the chills.

Chatbot: Your smartwatch reports a temperature of 101 F and pulse and blood pressure readings within the range of normal. How long have you had the headache?

Me: On and off for the past couple days.

Chatbot: Do you have any other symptoms?

Me: No

Chatbot: You reported the same symptoms last week. I recommend you see your doctor. Let’s go ahead and schedule an appointment.

This is no longer the stuff of science fiction. Mobile apps like Your.Md already incorporates chatbots and AI to help consumers find local specialists, ask health-related questions and even check their symptoms. Earlier this year, the UK’s National Health Service launched a trial with Babylon Health, a startup developing an AI chatbot.

The future of chatbots in healthcare

The role of chatbots in healthcare is to help free-up valuable physician-time by reducing or eliminating unnecessary doctor’s appointments. With costs increasing daily, healthcare organizations are looking for ways to keep them down while improving the patient experience. Not to mention a global shortage of healthcare professionals makes it increasingly necessary for us to augment care with technology in order to allow doctors to focus on more critical patient needs.

Let’s face it many of the world’s population have limited access to healthcare, though most have smartphones. If downloading a free mobile healthcare app means the difference between suffering needlessly and getting an accurate diagnosis and a recommended treatment, well what could be more invaluable?

But in order for chatbot/AI adoption to really take off in healthcare, we as consumers need to become more comfortable trusting the technology is successful (or even appropriate) for diagnosing health issues. Similarly, healthcare organizations will also need to become comfortable trusting the technology and determine best practices for incorporating chatbots in the delivery of services to patients. Discover why healthcare needs APIs.

The push to meet patient demands for greater control over their healthcare decisions will eventually be the driver that forces the healthcare industry to adopt new technologies. Such patient demand only compounds the challenge of moving an unprecedented volume, velocity and variety of data while delivering better outcomes, lowering costs and operating under increasing regulatory pressures. Axway is one company that’s leading the charge by providing the healthcare industry with a seamless, value-focused digital ecosystem to turn a chronic condition into a powerful cure. Further, with secure, flexible infrastructures that ensure HIPAA-compliant data exchange, Axway fosters breakthrough clinical collaboration that drives new value-based models, greater patient engagement, and better results for patients and the healthcare providers who treat them.

Some key chatbot takeaways

Here are some key chatbot take-aways healthcare organizations should consider:

  • Healthcare organizations need to develop a strategy for implementing emerging technologies like chatbots and AI. First, define the bot’s scope of knowledge. Remember, in order to deliver great patient experiences chatbots need to be simple and feel natural. An effective chatbot must be available 24/7, understand what patients need, and engage them in conversation while providing responses and guidance to resources, along with personalized, intelligent recommendations.
  • Once you have devised a strategy, be sure to leverage leading-edge technologies and machine learning that gets smarter over time as it receives more data through patient interactions. Many chatbot and AI solutions are available today. Be sure to choose one that has the right level of personality, sentiment and that understands the context. We recommend an Anexinet Proof-of-Concept to identify the best solution to meet your business objectives and ensure the best patient experience.
  • Chatbots and AI are only successful if they have access to the right data. Healthcare organizations should possess a large inventory of FAQs based on data from online forms, emails, and call centers. Over time, as more and more patients interact with them, chatbots will become smarter in answering questions and evaluating conversations.

How to learn more

For more info, check out this recent Healthcare IT News article, “From science fiction to real world: Emerging technologies poised to disrupt healthcare.”

Or, take a listen to the Device Squad podcast from Anexinet. This episode discusses voice recognition and language processing strategies and the role they’ll play in our everyday lives.
Lastly, if you’re thinking about incorporating chatbots and AI into your enterprise mobile strategy and want to learn more about implementing the technology or about the role they might play or the benefits they might offer your enterprise, reach out to Anexinet. In just three weeks, their Emerging Technologies Kickstart will provide the guidance you need to help business and IT leaders realize first-hand the benefits of adopting cutting-edge technology by developing a working proof-of-concept app and an actionable plan to start delivering value for your organization.

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