Early Experiences with Ambient Listening Devices

John HalamkaBy John Halamka, MD
Twitter: @jhalamka

BIDMC has a long tradition of testing speculative technologies with the notion that breakthroughs often require tolerance for failure. For example, we’ve embraced blockchain in healthcare because we believe public ledgers have promise to unify medical records across institutions.

Over the past few months, we’ve developed healthcare applications for Alexa, Amazon’s ambient listening device that combines natural language processing and easy to use application program interfaces. We have also tried Google Home.

Here’s our experience thus far.

1.  We’ve used Alexa in a pilot inpatient setting (not real patients). Here are the questions/use cases we’ve implemented with back end interaction to our operational systems.

Alexa, ask BIDMC:

  • What’s my room number
  • Who’s on my care team or List my care team
  • What is my diet or What can I eat
  • Call a nurse or I need a nurse or Send in a nurse
  • Give me some inspiration or Inspire me
  • I need spiritual care or Request spiritual care
  • I need a social worker or Request social work
  • What’s my care plan for today or What are my planned activities for today
  • Ok, thanks or Stop or You can stop

2.  Sentiment analysis
What is sentiment analysis – the process of computationally identifying and categorizing opinions expressed, especially in order to determine whether the author’s attitude towards a particular topic, product, etc., is positive, negative, or neutral.

We are beginning to use sentiment analysis on social media mentions of BIDMC. We have done a pilot to spot out BIDMC mentions on Twitter and with Google democratizing their sentiment analysis API at the conference a few weeks ago we are working on ingesting the feeds. Conceptually the same approaches can work on Alexa to analyze mood and urgency. We will try it in an attempt to communicate emotion as well as text in the ambient listening workflow.

3.  HIPAA Compliance
Alexa and Google Home are not “HIPAA compliant” i.e. neither Amazon nor Google will sign business associate agreements for ambient listening technologies. Both organizations are working on policies and controls that would enable them to sign such agreements for their speech driven products. Once we sign BAAs, we’ll explore use cases like a surgeon asking for patient data without needing a browser/keypad.

In the meantime, we’re not using patient identified data in ambient listening applications. The questions above are anonymous – the HIPAA 18 identifiers (i.e. names, social security numbers, addresses etc.) are not included in the data stream.

We’re exploring a few other use cases outside of HIPAA controls, such as querying knowledge bases – commonly asked questions delivered via an ambient listening infrastructure.

4.  Accuracy
We have not had any unexpected misunderstandings when parsing spoken language. There is a famous You Tube video illustrating a 3 year asking for hickory dickory dock and getting a pornographic response. The only issue we’ve had is that Alexa can be sensitive to ambient voices, causing it to respond to an unasked question.

5.  Expanding the use cases to the outpatient scheduling domain
Amazon has offered Lex as a service that can be used to embed natural language processing in mobile apps that could be used for patient self scheduling. We hope to support a use case of patients in their homes requesting appointment/referrals and interacting entirely with Alexa instead of having to place a phone call or visit a website.

Thus far, we’ve been very impressed with the capabilities of these conversational services. The web was our focus 1996-2012. Mobile has been our focus 2012 to the present, what I call the post-web era. I can imagine that by 2018 we’ll enter the post-mobile era and have conversational interfaces based on ambient listening devices in patient and provider locations.

John D. Halamka, MD, MS, is Chief Information Officer of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Chairman of the New England Healthcare Exchange Network (NEHEN), Member of the HIT Standards Committee, a full Professor at Harvard Medical School, and a practicing Emergency Physician. This article was originally published in his blog Life as a Healthcare CIO and is reprinted here with permission.