Survey: Doctors Think Virtual Assistants will Soon Drastically Change Healthcare

Eighty percent of U.S. doctors who responded to a recent survey from Burlington, Mass.-based Nuance Communications believe that within five years, virtual assistants will drastically change how they interact and use electronic health records (EHRs) and other healthcare apps, making them more efficient and freeing up time to spend on patients.
June 13, 2013
2 min read

Eighty percent of U.S. doctors who responded to a recent survey from Burlington, Mass.-based Nuance Communications believe that within five years, virtual assistants will drastically change how they interact and use electronic health records (EHRs) and other healthcare apps, making them more efficient and freeing up time to spend on patients.

Doctors stated that mobile virtual assistants could impact healthcare most by helping them access information in EHRs, and navigate through the process using conversational commands. One out of three doctors spends 30 percent or more of their day on administrative duties—activities that could be redirected or removed using voice-enabled virtual assistants. The survey also found”

  •  65 percent say the top role for a virtual assistant: more accurate, timely information to support care or alert them to missing information in records.
  • 73 percent expect virtual assistants could improve healthcare and patient engagement by helping to coordinate care between multiple caregivers.
  • 80 percent believe virtual assistants will benefit patients most by engaging them in the process, prompting them to adhere to health advice and modifying behaviors.

“Mobile virtual assistants have the potential to reinvent the way we deliver patient care,” Alireza Shafaie, M.D., Palo Alto Medical Foundation, said in a statement released by Nuance. “As a consumer, I already experience the value of mobile assistants, and would love to bring that natural, intelligence-based dialogue to my work as a primary care physician. For every one patient I see I have to communicate my recommendations in three different places. A mobile advisor that could do that on my behalf in one shot would give me back more time in what truly matters—time with my patients.”

About the Author

Rajiv Leventhal

Rajiv Leventhal

Managing Editor

Rajiv Leventhal is Managing Editor of Healthcare Innovation, covering healthcare IT leadership and strategy. Since 2012, he has been covering health IT developments for the publication's CIO and CMIO-based audience, and has taken keen interest in areas such as policy and payment, patient engagement, health information exchange, mobile health, healthcare data security, and telemedicine.

He can be followed on Twitter @RajivLeventhal

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