EIT Digital and its European partners today launched a new European care innovation to help elderly people prepare for visits to their doctor. Medical consultations have a small time limit, and elderly people, in particular, can find it difficult to ask the right questions about their conditions, which can make it difficult to get the best treatment. The EIT Digital innovation the Virtual Training Doctor lets you practice conversations beforehand in order to be better prepared for visits to the doctor.
The first version of this care innovation will be unveiled today at EIT Digital‘s BeNeLux Innovation Day in Eindhoven by two of the five partners of the European consortium that developed it.
The Virtual Training Doctor (De Oefendokter in Dutch) is an EIT Digital innovation activity aimed at enhancing elderly people’s communication skills and supporting shared decision making with health care practitioners. In this serious game the user practices with a virtual medical expert. They learn to ask the right questions and make their goals and wishes clear so they can play an active role in their consultation. This improves one to one communication between the health care practitioner and patient, enabling them to decide together on the best treatment.
โGood communication and shared decision making are vital for well being and health. It increases therapy adherence and reduces re-hospitalisationโ, says Johan Jeuring, activity lead and professor of Software Technology for Learning and Education at the University of Utrecht. โDuring their education, health care professionals learn how to communicate with patients. The aim of De Oefendokter is to train patients in their communication with professionals.โ
Theย Virtual Training Doctorย is one of EIT Digitalโs Digital Wellbeing action line innovation activites. It has been developed by theย University of Utrechtย together withย DialogueTrainer,ย Vilans, theย University of Edinburghย and theย Politehnica University of Bucharest. This international collaboration has huge advantages, says Jeuring. โThanks to the collaboration with European partners who work on natural language processing, we were able to add advanced language technology to the product. Also, we were given the chance to trial it with elderly patients in Scotland for example.โ
This article is produced in a collaboration withย EIT Digital.ย Read more about ourย partneringย opportunities.
01
How Leipzig became a hub for energy and medical tech startups with IRL and SpinLab support