Orlando Health, a non-profit healthcare provider in Central Florida, US, has expanded its inpatient virtual care capabilities by implementing ThinkAndor's Virtual Nursing Module.
This technology is designed to optimise patient care and advance Orlando Health's efforts to digitise hospital operations.
It leverages advanced artificial intelligence such as Open AI and ChatGPT, and machine learning algorithms to improve patient care and streamline hospital operations.
This approach establishes a unified virtual command centre, improving interventions, outcomes, and resource scalability by over 100%, resulting in significant operational efficiencies.
It automates over 40% of nursing workflows, including patient registration, nurse engagement, and discharge planning.
Besides, it provides real-time expert assistance, automates intervention opportunities, and coordinates care with caregivers and families.
Orlando Health workforce optimisation and redesign assistant vice president Darius Love said: “Orlando Health embraces AI-powered technologies through our commitment to delivering exceptional patient care.
“The use of this technology will provide patients with an extra layer of support under our care and assist our dedicated team members by putting a virtual set of eyes and ears in every room, which enables a safer environment for everyone.”
ThinkAndor works on improving communication and collaboration among care teams, using machine and human intelligence to deliver real-time actionable insights from electronic medical records, thereby improving patient outcomes and reducing clinician burnout.
Andor Health COO Pritesh Patel said: “We are proud to collaborate with Orlando Health to scale AI-powered virtual nursing across all its hospitals.
“Through this expanded partnership with Orlando Health and Microsoft, we aim to empower healthcare providers with actionable insights, enabling them to deliver at-scale, personalised care and support to patients, while optimising staff workflows through the ThinkAndor Clinical Co-pilot.”