Alexa-Teladoc Deal the Latest Shoutout to a Future of Voice-Assisted Healthcare

In This Article:

Teladoc, telehealth, Amazon, Alexa
Teladoc, telehealth, Amazon, Alexa

Voice is projecting itself deeper into how we monitor health and receive care, as various types of voice technology are vying for the spot in the chorus of treatment modalities.

The latest evidence comes from telehealth platform Teladoc, which announced its new integration with Amazon Alexa for “voice-activated general medical virtual care.”

In a press release, Teladoc Health Chief Product Officer Donna Boyer said, “Teladoc Health’s collaboration with Amazon is yet another step in breaking down barriers to healthcare access. By introducing and integrating our virtual first care experience with Echo devices, we are providing an innovative and convenient way for users to connect with a doctor. We are meeting consumers where they are, to continue to deliver value and high-quality care to members.”

See also: Teladoc Health Launches Amazon Collaboration

The new Alexa skill enables users to say, “Alexa, I want to talk to a doctor.” An Echo smart speaker will then contact a Teladoc physician who calls the user back.

Voice is where more research and development is being focused on clinical settings, as voice recognition technology improves to the point that doctor’s feel safe using it to dispense care.

It was already ramping up before COVID, but much has changed in the last two years.

As industry site Voicebot.ai reported in January, “Interest in using voice assistants for healthcare services was already high in 2019 with over 50% of consumers expressing interest. That interest climbed marginally to 56% in 2021 and shows that demand for voice assistant-enabled services still significantly outstrips the availability offered by healthcare providers.”

Related: Voice Takes its Place as Digital Front Door to Better Patient Experience

While voice is a new way for patients and clinicians to connect in-home, voice has other massive implications for use inside medical settings, as ambient and conversational artificial intelligences (AIs) listen to doctor-patient discussions, take dictation and even analyze comments to inform treatment.

Providers are hearing the message and moving as quickly as tech and budgets will allow.

As Healthcare IT News reported, “Users of the leading voice-recognition tools acknowledge that the technology delivers better caregiver productivity. However, they also point out that ambient artificial intelligence, or the underlying assumption about software that can make sense of a conversation and provide clinical decision support in real-time, is still very nascent.”

Microsoft’s acquisition of Nuance Communications in 2021 is by far the biggest indication to date of how the computing world wants to take voice from nascent to necessary in healthcare.