In healthcare, innovative and lifesaving technology is unavoidable—it’s seemingly everywhere. Patient-provider technology is rapidly evolving into a seamless communication stream that connects patient with caregiver, establishing unrelenting ‘big data’ for clinical decision support.  EHR systems such as Cerner and Epic, robots that perform surgery, smart and wireless IV pumps and even robots roaming the hallways of our hospitals delivering food and supplies! How could there possibly be a patient, or even worse still, a group of the most vulnerable patients in our hospitals that are not well-served by technology? How is it possible that a group of patients is completely let down and shunned by lack of innovation? Why were these patients and the caregivers that provide for them left behind in the technological revolution designed to improve entire healthcare populations?

Let’s take a minute to examine the details and the scope of this seemingly unbelievable situation. In our nation’s hospitals, roughly 3.9 million patients per year end up in our ICU’s in a non-verbal, non-mobile state1. These patients cannot summon a caregiver, and even if they could – they couldn’t communicate with their caregiver to explain why they’re reaching out to them. These non-verbal patients are at a three times greater risk of a preventable adverse event than patients that can communicate with their caregivers2. This issue costs our hospitals nearly $29 billion per year. Several studies examining patient-provider communication have indicated that the quality of the communication played a significant role in medical outcomes and in both patient and caregiver satisfaction3-6.

Current hospital-based solutions used to communicate with non-verbal, non-mobile patients is straight out of the 18th century. However, there is no one to blame here–this is not hospital leadership’s fault. Why? Because hospital providers are using what is most readily available to them: lip-reading, patient scribbling, laminated paper-based communications boards, etc. Technology born of last century.

If patient empowerment is truly the future of healthcare—how do we include the non-verbal, non-communicative patient in this promising future if current standard communication protocols in our nation’s hospitals leave them feeling frustrated, forgotten and without a voice? Voxello has a solution that brings these patients into the 21st century of patient empowerment and communication directly impacting patient outcomes and provider stress with the noddle® technology that literally gives these patients a voice and empowers them to be active participants in their own care. We invite you learn more on our website

 

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  1. Zubow and Hurtig, 2013
  2. Bartlett, et al 2008
  3. Hoffman et al., 2005
  4. Balandin et al., 2007
  5. Hemsley et al, 2007
  6. Hemsley et al., 2011
  7. Cohen et al., 2005