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Commonwealth Care Alliance with Dr. John Loughnane

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Manage episode 221141688 series 2413376
Content provided by Teri Fisher, MD, Teri Fisher, and MD. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Teri Fisher, MD, Teri Fisher, and MD or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

In this episode, Teri welcomes Dr. John Loughnane, the Chief of Clinical Innovation and the Medical Director of Life Choices Palliative Care Program at Commonwealth Care Alliance. Dr. Loughnane will talk about some of the fascinating and impactful work they are doing in the voice first health space.


Key Points from Dr. John Loughnane

  • How Commonwealth Care Alliance is using voice first technology to help the lives of their patients.

Commonwealth Care Alliance (CCA)

  • A nonprofit community based healthcare organization that focuses on individuals with complex medical behavior health and social needs including persons with disabilities.
  • It was one of the first dual-eligible special needs plans which provided patients with both Medicare and Medicaid which means they had both complexity of their medical issues and social determinants.
  • The plan had a significant risk adjusted premium. Each month CCA was given a certain amount of dollars which was risk adjusted to patients’ medical complexity and some level of their term service support needs which created a capitated amount of dollars that CCA used to create care systems to better care for the most vulnerable populations.
  • Dr. Loughnane started the Palliative Care/End-of-Life Program at CCA.
  • He has been taking care of patients with physical disabilities. Caring for these patients presented different challenges which led Dr. Loughnane and his colleagues to start thinking about how to build a care system that met all the highlighted needs. Voice technology came up as the best solution for interacting with the patients especially those without classic functional abilities.
  • Winter Street Ventures: The CCA’s health technology accelerator affiliate

Voice Use Cases

  • They have a pilot program with their voice first technology partner, LifePod Solutions.
  • They did an original grant-funded pilot program which was using voice in the typical reactive asking which taught them a lot of lessons that they then used to strategize in a more formal process to start working on a more proactive voice first technology solution.
  • Use case one: patients, especially those with severe medical diseases, intellectual disability and physical disability want to have social connection because they really suffer from loneliness. For example, twice a day the LifePod asks a patient who loves music whether he wants to hear their favorite music. The patient says yes and gets to engage with the music. Other patients want to connect with the news or call different people which the LifePod makes so much easier and engaging.
  • Use case two: using the voice first technology to give people reminders about healthcare issues like, “Get up and move”, “Dance”, “It’s time to take your medication”, and many others. This is patient-focused and non-judgemental. They are asking patients what they would like voice to do for them.

Future Scenarios

  • Once they have full HIPPA compliance, the care plans can be individualized to each patient’s needs.
  • Voice will connect patients with similar health problems by forming social groups. This will enable learning and shared experiences. It will be a way to build a voice community.
  • Voice will continue to enable patients to control their homes, environments, schedules and have an organization component. Patients will be able to define what works for them and what works for their families.

Potential shifts in where healthcare is provided

  • With voice first technology, hospitals will be for a very small minority of patients because the technology will allow healthcare practitioners to care for patients at home. Both primary and acute care will be delivered at home through voice.

Challenges with LifePod

  • The wake words and how you phrase things is still a challenge, but it’s gotten better.
  • They need to get HIPPA compliance so they can make better care plans.
  • There needs to be an augmentation of the technology’s ability to work with voices that have physical limitations like where a patient has Parkinson’s. The sensitivities of the speakers and microphones needs to be continually worked on so the technology can benefit everyone.
  • The ongoing ability to have multiple languages should be continually worked on.

The Meaning of Voice First Health to Dr. Loughnane

  • It means patients having the ability to engage with augmented care from their medical/social/behavioral health providers in a way that they’ve never been able to deliver in the past.

Links and Resources in this Episode



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  continue reading

69 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 221141688 series 2413376
Content provided by Teri Fisher, MD, Teri Fisher, and MD. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Teri Fisher, MD, Teri Fisher, and MD or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

In this episode, Teri welcomes Dr. John Loughnane, the Chief of Clinical Innovation and the Medical Director of Life Choices Palliative Care Program at Commonwealth Care Alliance. Dr. Loughnane will talk about some of the fascinating and impactful work they are doing in the voice first health space.


Key Points from Dr. John Loughnane

  • How Commonwealth Care Alliance is using voice first technology to help the lives of their patients.

Commonwealth Care Alliance (CCA)

  • A nonprofit community based healthcare organization that focuses on individuals with complex medical behavior health and social needs including persons with disabilities.
  • It was one of the first dual-eligible special needs plans which provided patients with both Medicare and Medicaid which means they had both complexity of their medical issues and social determinants.
  • The plan had a significant risk adjusted premium. Each month CCA was given a certain amount of dollars which was risk adjusted to patients’ medical complexity and some level of their term service support needs which created a capitated amount of dollars that CCA used to create care systems to better care for the most vulnerable populations.
  • Dr. Loughnane started the Palliative Care/End-of-Life Program at CCA.
  • He has been taking care of patients with physical disabilities. Caring for these patients presented different challenges which led Dr. Loughnane and his colleagues to start thinking about how to build a care system that met all the highlighted needs. Voice technology came up as the best solution for interacting with the patients especially those without classic functional abilities.
  • Winter Street Ventures: The CCA’s health technology accelerator affiliate

Voice Use Cases

  • They have a pilot program with their voice first technology partner, LifePod Solutions.
  • They did an original grant-funded pilot program which was using voice in the typical reactive asking which taught them a lot of lessons that they then used to strategize in a more formal process to start working on a more proactive voice first technology solution.
  • Use case one: patients, especially those with severe medical diseases, intellectual disability and physical disability want to have social connection because they really suffer from loneliness. For example, twice a day the LifePod asks a patient who loves music whether he wants to hear their favorite music. The patient says yes and gets to engage with the music. Other patients want to connect with the news or call different people which the LifePod makes so much easier and engaging.
  • Use case two: using the voice first technology to give people reminders about healthcare issues like, “Get up and move”, “Dance”, “It’s time to take your medication”, and many others. This is patient-focused and non-judgemental. They are asking patients what they would like voice to do for them.

Future Scenarios

  • Once they have full HIPPA compliance, the care plans can be individualized to each patient’s needs.
  • Voice will connect patients with similar health problems by forming social groups. This will enable learning and shared experiences. It will be a way to build a voice community.
  • Voice will continue to enable patients to control their homes, environments, schedules and have an organization component. Patients will be able to define what works for them and what works for their families.

Potential shifts in where healthcare is provided

  • With voice first technology, hospitals will be for a very small minority of patients because the technology will allow healthcare practitioners to care for patients at home. Both primary and acute care will be delivered at home through voice.

Challenges with LifePod

  • The wake words and how you phrase things is still a challenge, but it’s gotten better.
  • They need to get HIPPA compliance so they can make better care plans.
  • There needs to be an augmentation of the technology’s ability to work with voices that have physical limitations like where a patient has Parkinson’s. The sensitivities of the speakers and microphones needs to be continually worked on so the technology can benefit everyone.
  • The ongoing ability to have multiple languages should be continually worked on.

The Meaning of Voice First Health to Dr. Loughnane

  • It means patients having the ability to engage with augmented care from their medical/social/behavioral health providers in a way that they’ve never been able to deliver in the past.

Links and Resources in this Episode



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  continue reading

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