Anonymous ID: 54b08b July 28, 2022, 4:23 a.m. No.16900108   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16883687

So fuckin easy to spot..1 post answering another 1 post..Small shill team of 10 or less with no military involvement..Or just a little hivemind clown who keeps ip hopping answering themselves..Imagine living that life

Anonymous ID: 54b08b July 28, 2022, 4:26 a.m. No.16900674   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16885983

>Bakers and Note Takers please step up

can bake till rally starts

dough claimed

 

PS: if anon has feedback or suggestions for dough optimization lemme hear it, not a fan of the current layout.. personally

Anonymous ID: 54b08b July 28, 2022, 4:31 a.m. No.16901517   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://hbr.org/2020/04/how-hospitals-are-using-ai-to-battle-covid-19

 

How Hospitals Are Using AI to Battle Covid-19

 

On Monday March 9, in an effort to address soaring patient demand in Boston, Partners HealthCare went live with a hotline for patients, clinicians, and anyone else with questions and concerns about Covid-19. The goals are to identify and reassure the people who do not need additional care (the vast majority of callers), to direct people with less serious symptoms to relevant information and virtual care options, and to direct the smaller number of high-risk and higher-acuity patients to the most appropriate resources, including testing sites, newly created respiratory illness clinics, or in certain cases, emergency departments. As the hotline became overwhelmed, the average wait time peaked at 30 minutes. Many callers gave up before they could speak with the expert team of nurses staffing the hotline. We were missing opportunities to facilitate pre-hospital triage to get the patient to the right care setting at the right time.

 

The Partners team, led by Lee Schwamm, Haipeng (Mark) Zhang, and Adam Landman, began considering technology options to address the growing need for patient self-triage, including interactive voice response systems and chatbots. We connected with Providence St. Joseph Health system in Seattle, which served some of the country’s first Covid-19 patients in early March. In collaboration with Microsoft, Providence built an online screening and triage tool that could rapidly differentiate between those who might really be sick with Covid-19 and those who appear to be suffering from less threatening ailments. In its first week, Providence’s tool served more than 40,000 patients, delivering care at an unprecedented scale.

 

pt 1