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My Certified Alexa Skills

In my last post just a few days ago I noted that I hadn’t posted for many months before that.  I have been quite busy since January focusing on developing new Alexa Skills and helping several start-up companies build healthcare & non-healthcare applications with a voice component.  I wanted to take this opportunity to post an updated table with all my 21 Alexa Skills, their descriptions, and Quick Links to them in the Alexa App on an Echo/Alexa device user’s smartphone.  Just click on the link of any of the listed Skills to check it out.   In case you don’t use Alexa, I should explain what a Skill is.  Very simply, the term “Skill” is the name Amazon has given to the applications that work with their Echo & Alexa devices.

If I were to categorize my Skills, most of them would fall into one of the following three categories:

  • Humor
  • Organizational
  • Health & Wellness

Let me mention a few of them:

In the Humor category, Our Little Secret, provides a comical peek into what you might be saying in your home.  In it, a fictional brother & sister with psychic abilities give Secrets and Deeper Thoughts.  All the responses are entirely fictitious, but it makes you wonder what you would hear if “walls could talk!”  While the Secrets are free, the user must pay a low, one-time fee to hear the Deeper Thoughts.  Another humorous Skill is Wine Jester in which Alexa gives comical reviews of any wine you may place before her.

An example of Organizational Skills is Your Expert Log which enables the user to log experts that they may have heard about in different professions, such as, physicians, handymen, and others for retrieval later. My Favs allows the user to log their favorite meals and restaurants to be retrieved randomly. Conference Contact Helper was created after I attended a recent conference to help track the contacts made at conferences and the associated to-do list items.

Most of my certified Skills fall into the category of Health & Wellness. These first two were developed to help us focus on the goodness in our world and help improve one’s psychological health.  Kindness Counts lets the user record kindnesses for which they are the doer, recipient, or witness.  Gratitude Log lets the user log three of their blessings at a time.  After they have logged several sets, they can ask Alexa to play three randomized blessings at a time.  Healthy Text Scheduler allows the user to schedule text messages about healthy eating to help them form healthier behaviors surrounding their nutritional behaviors.  Track My Dose was designed to help individuals manage as-needed medications, so they know when to take the next dose.  They can even schedule reminders at the time the next dose can be taken.  Finally, Symptom Helper helps the user organize the symptoms they wish to discuss with their healthcare provider before an upcoming visit.  They answer several questions posed by Alexa, and she organizes that information into a concise statement that can be entered into a custom list on their Alexa App that can be shared with the clinician.

For Your Health – Dr. Bob

Click the link below to go to a table of my Alexa Skills or click the Download button on the right to download its PDF file:

Some Use Cases For Alexa In Healthcare – Part 4

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It’s been quite a while since I last posted, but here it is!  This will be the last in my series about use cases for voice in healthcare delivery.  I presented these at the Project Voice Conference this past January.  At the end of this post, you’ll find a link to that presentation.

These last two use cases deal with follow-up care after a procedure and with a healthcare team that focuses on helping the patient follow their physician’s recommendations.

POST PROCEDURE USE CASE – PROTOTYPE MY FOLLOWUP CARE

Concept:

  • To provide a vocal interface for patients in addition to the usual printed post-procedure instructions.
  • Would allow for variations among Providers Instructions for each procedure will be grouped by common components/categories, such as:
    • Activity
    • Bathing
    • Diet
    • Medications
    • Wound Care
  • Instructions would be time specific as measured by days from procedure date

My Prototype Includes:

  • Web/EMR-based application to enter post-procedure instructions by or on behalf of the practice
  • MySQL database to host the necessary tables
  • Alexa Skill to allow Users/Patients to access their instructions

Example of All Instructions 3 Days Post LASIK Eye Surgery:

  1. Regarding Activity – DO NOT rub or squeeze your eyes.  Avoid eye make-up.  Avoid dusty and dirty environments.  No swimming or sports.  No driving until permitted by your doctor
  2. Regarding Diet – You may resume your usual diet
  3. Regarding Meds Post Procedure – Use Eye Drop One 4 times during the day.  Eye Drop Two 4 times during the day.  Eye Drop Three 2 times during the day.  Eye Drop Four every half hour while awake.  Use Eye Drop Five before sleeping. 
  4. Regarding Routine Meds – Take routine medications as usual
  5. Regarding Wound Care – Plastic eye shields are to be taped over your eyes anytime you sleep for one week.  Please use the medical tape provided by your physician

CHRONIC CARE COACH USE CASE

Concept:

  • Can be used in healthcare systems where team health coaching has been implemented to extend their reach to those with the highest risk of bad outcomes.  (Some Accountable Care Organizations use such multidisciplinary teams.)
  • To help the most vulnerable Patients manage their Chronic Conditions using Alexa as a Chronic Care coach
  • Patients identified through predictive modeling with approval of managing Physician to work with the Care Team
  • Issue identification & solution in care dimensions of:
    • Medication Adherence
    • Appointment Adherence
    • Self-Management
  • Patients invited to use the skill to serve as a bridge between active Care Coaching & self-care
  • Capability of reaching more patients by Care Team

IN CONCLUSION

These are some use cases that I think would be great opportunities to leverage the power of a voice assistant, such as, Alexa, in the delivery of healthcare. However, their complete implementation would require:

  • Access to EMR/EHR database
  • Development of EMR/EHR pages by vendors
  • Input from relevant practice
  • Implementation by medical practice

So, if you are a clinician or represent an Electronic Health Record vendor who wants to explore any of these, please let me know. I’ll be looking forward to your comments.

For Your Health – Dr. Bob

Here is a link to this presentation:

Some Use Cases For Alexa In Healthcare – Part 3

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In my last post, I showed some of the information that the patient could provide before their office visit displayed on their physician’s Electronic Health Record (EHR) screen. The physician could use this information to better connect with their patient and identify patients that are being affected by loneliness. Here I’ll talk about two other use cases for Alexa, the Scribe and, the Zebra Finder.

The Scribe would enable the physician to carry on a conversation with the patient and speak the elements of his or her examination of that patient without needing to break their contact with the patient. No more turning from the patient to the computer keyboard. Ideally, the Scribe would present two versions of the encounter, one in the language of medicine that would become part of the EHR and the other that the patient could understand and suggest edits if needed.

While the Scribe would be used for every office visit, the Zebra Finder would only be used for the difficult cases with which the doctor gets confronted from time to time. In medical school, you are taught that when you assess a patient’s symptoms you should think that common things occur commonly. Or, in other words, when you hear hoofbeats, think horses, not zebras! However, sometimes a patient has a rare condition, a zebra.

An experience of mine in my early clinical years led me to propose Zebra Finder as another use case for Alexa in healthcare delivery. After I completed my Internal Medicine training, I joined a three-man Internal Medicine group outside Washington, D.C. One Friday evening when I was on-call, one of my associate’s patients was admitted to the hospital. He was a gentleman about 30 years old who had been having a fever for over 2 weeks without a diagnosis after undergoing extensive outpatient testing. Many tests, including chest x-ray, blood & urine cultures were all negative. Yet the patient was very ill and warranted hospitalization. While examining this patient, in addition to his fever of about 102 degrees, two things were abnormal:

  1. He had tender lymph nodes in his right armpit, and
  2. A small, circular, pale patch of skin on his right hand near his thumb that was anesthetic. In other words, he couldn’t feel me touch him there.

Years ago during my training, I had seen a patient who also had an anesthetic patch of skin which is indicative of Hansen’s Disease, better known as leprosy. So, based upon my exam and remembering this fact that was lodged somewhere in my brain, leprosy was my working diagnosis. Further testing confirmed the diagnosis. I recount this story not to boast, but to show how a small bit of information can be important in medicine. For some reason, that nugget of medical knowledge popped into my head. This is especially important since the amount of medical information a person going through medical training must absorb continues to explode.

So, Zebra Finder would have Alexa connect through artificial intelligence to a database of medical information. It would help the physician when they are faced with a challenging case. The physician would tell Alexa the patient’s problems and physical findings. Then Alexa would guide the physician in their examination & testing required. It would be especially useful in more remote areas of the country where access to specialists is limited.

Well, these were the use cases I have identified for Alexa during an office visit. Next time I’ll talk about some after the visit. Please feel free to leave your comments.

For Your Health – Dr. Bob

Some Use Cases For Alexa In Healthcare – Part 2

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Since my last post about a use case for Alexa before an office visit, I had some additional ideas and I also received some feedback from a few sources.

I thought a measure of loneliness might be useful and with a little research, I found the De Jong Gierveld 6-Item Loneliness Survey. I’ve added it to my demo Alexa Skill I’ve called Office Visit Prepper.  See a sample of the EMR page below:

Sample EMR Page

Sample EMR Page

It shows the patient’s Goals, Barriers and Loneliness Survey responses requested by Office Visit Prepper.

There also were concerns from both patients and primary care physicians (PCP) regarding the lack of the physician’s access to specialist visit notes at the time the PCP office visit with the patient.  I believe Alexa could also help solve this issue but the process is quite a bit more complicated.  Let me suggest 2 approaches.  Each requires that Alexa has access to both the patient’s health insurance records and the PCP.s EMR.  Alexa could then determine what specialist visits occurred and whether the PCP’s EMR had those electronic records.  Then there could be a passive option to help solve this issue and an active one that would occur as part of the information gathering of a Skill like Office Visit Prepper:

  1. Passive – The patient gets informed that records from some specialists are missing and Alexa asks the patient to contact the specialist offices to have them forward the information to the PCP.  Ideally, these would be in an electronic format.
  2. Active – Alexa informs the patient of the missing records and asks the patient for permission to obtain them.  Once the patient approves, Alexa contacts the specialist offices to get the records sent to the PCP.

My plan is to post some more of my ideas for Alexa helping care delivery.  Next time I’ll talk about two use cases during the office visit.

I look forward to your comments about the uses cases I have posted and others you would like to see implemented in healthcare delivery.

To Your Health! – Dr. Bob

Part 2 – Steps You Should Take During Your Hospital Stay

In my last post I talked about steps you can take prior to an elective hospitalization or procedure to try to make sure that you experience quality care from a customer care perspective.  Now I’ll turn to what you can do while you are in the hospital or other healthcare facility.

It’s a little more difficult for you alone to assure you get quality customer service there.  For one thing, you will meet several healthcare professionals there whose actions will contribute to the level of customer service you experience plus, in most instances, you won’t be fully aware of what’s going on.  Remember, the staff take direction from your physician though they usually report to the institution’s Nursing Supervisor.  Most healthcare teams look to the attending physician to set the tone.  If you experience any issues, discuss them with the Nursing Supervisor or your physician.  The following tips should help prevent such issues from arising.

Don’t Go It Alone

Perhaps the most important thing you should do while hospitalized is to have a friend or relative with you as much as possible during your stay.  Between the stress of being ill and side effects of anesthesia and other medications, you will not be as alert nor as mentally sharp as usual.  Your communication skills will be diminished during this time.  You need a knowledgeable advocate at your bedside who can help you communicate with your caregivers.

Communication Is Critical

Part of effective communication includes maintaining a positive relationship with the staff taking care of you.  It should be obvious that a positive relationship will naturally cause the staff to be more likely to go the extra mile for you. It’s important to understand their perspective.  Each of them has been trained to do his or her job to maximize your clinical outcomes, but not every one of them is encouraged to vary from standard procedures.  They don’t usually have the authority to change how they perform their tasks.  However, if you ask them respectfully to make an exception and do something differently, most will either follow your suggestions, if they can, or ask their supervisor.  Think of the example of the Nursing Assistant checking my friend’s temperature on her neck after it had been covered with a blanket and finding the temperature to be above normal (Details).  She should have rechecked it later after the blanket was off for a while.  My friend had been a bit curt with the Nursing Assistant.  When you act rudely, you may feel you make your point, but the staff member who is the target of your tirade will only do what they are required to do.  It comes down to showing respect and putting yourself in their place.  I have personally seen patients get arrogant and rude with some healthcare staff which alienates the very people they should want to have on their side.

In summary, I believe the key to helping assure you get quality customer care during a hospital or outpatient stay is Communication.  This includes:

  • Having someone present who can help you communicate with the clinical staff,
  • Discussing your concerns with the appropriate staff, &
  • Doing so in a respectful way. Keep in mind the Golden Rule!

Next time I’ll discuss what you can do after your hospitalization or procedure to optimize the quality of the customer service that is part of the healthcare experience.  Comments are welcome!

For Your Health – Dr. Bob