Introduction: Artificial intelligence (AI) models trained on audio data may have the potential to rapidly perform clinical tasks, enhancing medical decision-making and potentially improving outcomes through early detection. Existing technologies depend on limited datasets collected with expensive recording equipment in high-income countries, which challenges deployment in resource-constrained, high-volume settings where audio data may have a profound impact on health equity.
Methods: This report introduces a novel protocol for audio data collection and a corresponding application that captures health information through guided questions.
Results: To demonstrate the potential of Voice EHR as a biomarker of health, initial experiments on data quality and multiple case studies are presented in this report. Large language models (LLMs) were used to compare transcribed Voice EHR data with data (from the same patients) collected through conventional techniques like multiple choice questions. Information contained in the Voice EHR samples was consistently rated as equally or more relevant to a health evaluation.
Discussion: The HEAR application facilitates the collection of an audio electronic health record ("Voice EHR") that may contain complex biomarkers of health from conventional voice/respiratory features, speech patterns, and spoken language with semantic meaning and longitudinal context-potentially compensating for the typical limitations of unimodal clinical datasets.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fdgth.2024.1448351 | DOI Listing |
Front Digit Health
January 2025
Center for Interventional Oncology, NIH Clinical Center, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, United States.
Introduction: Artificial intelligence (AI) models trained on audio data may have the potential to rapidly perform clinical tasks, enhancing medical decision-making and potentially improving outcomes through early detection. Existing technologies depend on limited datasets collected with expensive recording equipment in high-income countries, which challenges deployment in resource-constrained, high-volume settings where audio data may have a profound impact on health equity.
Methods: This report introduces a novel protocol for audio data collection and a corresponding application that captures health information through guided questions.
Patient Educ Couns
January 2025
Department of Education Studies, University of Bologna, Via Filippo Re 6, Bologna, 40126, Italy. Electronic address:
Objective: Electronic health records (EHRs) have increasingly become integral to contemporary medical consultations, including pediatric care. This study aims at exploring the interactional use of the EHR during naturally occurring pediatric well-child visits, focusing specifically on how pediatricians and parents manage knowledge concerning infants' growth inscribed in the EHR.
Methods: Conversation analysis is used to analyze 23 video-recorded Italian well-child visits involving two pediatricians and twenty-two families with children aged 0-18 months.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak
December 2024
North West London NIHR Patient Safety Research Collaboration, Institute of Global Health Innovation, Imperial College London, Room 1035/7, QEQM Wing, St Mary's Campus, London, W2 1NY, UK.
Background: The proliferation of electronic health records (EHR) in health systems of many high-income countries has ushered in profound changes to how clinical information is used, stored, and disseminated. For patients, being able to easily access and share their health information electronically through interoperable EHRs can often impact safety and their experience when seeking care across healthcare providers. While extensive research exists examining how EHRs affected workflow and technical challenges such as limited interoperability, much of it was done from the viewpoint of healthcare staff rather than from patients themselves.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransgend Health
October 2024
Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Department of Surgery, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
Purpose: High quality data regarding long-term clinical and patient-reported outcomes (PROs) of genital gender-affirming surgery (GGAS) are lacking, and transgender and non-binary (TGNB) community voices have not historically been included in research development. These factors limit the utility of current research for guiding patients, clinicians, payers, and other GGAS stakeholders in decision-making. The Transgender and Non-Binary Surgery (TRANS) Registry has been developed to meet the needs of GGAS stakeholders and address limitations of traditional GGAS research.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJAMA Netw Open
August 2024
Division of Clinical Informatics and Digital Transformation, University of California, San Francisco.
Importance: Electronic health record (EHR) work has been associated with decreased physician well-being. Understanding the association between EHR usability and physician satisfaction and burnout, and whether team and technology strategies moderate this association, is critical to informing efforts to address EHR-associated physician burnout.
Objectives: To measure family physician satisfaction with their EHR and EHR usability across functions and evaluate the association of EHR usability with satisfaction and burnout, as well as the moderating association of 4 team and technology EHR efficiency strategies.
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