Two jhqvamc use cases win in robots with benefits competition | va mountain home health care | veterans affairs

Va

Two jhqvamc use cases win in robots with benefits competition | va mountain home health care | veterans affairs"


Play all audios:

Loading...

Mountain Home , TN — Two JHQVAMC robotic use case submissions won separate categories in the Robots with Benefits virtual competition sponsored by Veterans Benefits Administration’s Business


Automation Office and the Office of Information and Technology Robotics Process Automation Center of Excellence held Feb. 1, 2022. Staff members at JHQVAMC developed the COVID-19 Positive


Test Notification (CPTN) and the Encounter Action Required Reporting (EARR) robots in partnership with CGI Federal and IBM, respectively. CPTN won the award for best value, while EARR was


deemed the overall competition winner. Veterans Benefits Administration partnered with robotics companies Ibility and UiPath to host the competition during which competitors utilized Robotic


Process Automation (RPA) to build software robots aimed at automating manual processes. Software robots—instead of people—do repetitive and lower-value work, such as logging into


applications and systems; moving files and folders; extracting, copying, and inserting data; filling in forms; and completing routine analyses and reports. Advanced robots can even perform


cognitive processes, like interpreting text, engaging in chats and conversations, understanding unstructured data, and applying advanced machine learning models to make complex decisions.


“When robots do these types of repetitive, high-volume tasks, humans are freed to focus on the things they do best and to enjoy more innovating, collaborating, creating, and interacting with


customers,” said Kerwin Fulton, Group Practice Manager at JHQVAMC. “Enterprises get a boost, too, through higher productivity, efficiency, and resilience. It’s no wonder that RPA is


rewriting the story of work.” At JHQVAMC and across Veterans Health Administration, the robots will give employees more time to serve Veterans’ needs, said Heather Brewer, Chief Health


Informatics Officer at JHQVAMC. “VA has many processes which are highly manual in nature,” said Brewer. “The processes that we automated using RPA are vastly scalable and would be easily


shared with the entire VA network.” Brewer, who helped develop the EARR robot, said the notification process was designed to decrease instances of incomplete documentation by efficiently


notifying the proper staff to clear any errors. The existing system requires staff to manually pull a report, import data into Microsoft Excel, format the report, and then email it. She said


the recipient list contains over 200 staff who must process the information before sending it to end users for disposition. “The ‘bot’ will do all of those steps without human


intervention,” said Brewer. “Because this process is automated, the ‘bot’ forwards additional information to the user helping identify the issues. The old process did not,” she added.


Michael Leek, a program analyst at JHQVAMC, worked to develop the CPTN robot, which helps initiate timely notification of positive COVID tests for employees. Earlier notification of positive


tests helps the medical center’s infection control by automatically providing information so that measures can be taken as quickly as possible, helping prevent the spread of COVID-19 to


other staff and patients. The CPTN initiative was an interdisciplinary effort that included Monica Brase, Infection Control Coordinator, and COVID-19 Contact Tracing Providers, Steffan Chase


and Christal Whitehead. Leek said the staff members who developed both projects worked under the direction of Dr. David Hecht, Chief of Staff at JHQVAMC.  He said Dr. Hecht’s guidance,


encouragement and leadership gave these robotic initiatives the needed support for success, both within the VA healthcare system and as winners in the Robots with Benefits competition. In


the case of both robots, Brewer and Leek designed the processes, produced prototypes, and provided necessary code to the CGI Federal and IBM teams, who took the processes and made several


enhancements. Brewer and the IBM team that created EARR are scheduled to present its robot during a live robot demonstration that will take place in Washington later this year, but a date


has not yet been set.


Trending News

Command performance | Nature

Access through your institution Buy or subscribe Some while ago Daedalus proposed the use of pulsed magnetic fields in p...

Co2 increases oceanic primary production

ABSTRACT The regulation of oceanic primary production of biomass is important in the global carbon cycle because it cons...

Car t-cell therapy for the management of refractory/relapsed high-grade b-cell lymphoma: a practical overview

ABSTRACT The goal of this review is to firstly address the concept of chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR T-cell) ther...

Haematologists do it | Bone Marrow Transplantation

> ‘Making good wine is a skill: making fine wine is an art’. >  > Robert Mondavi (1913–2008). American wine mak...

Chromatin-remodelling factor chrac contains the atpases iswi and topoisomerase ii

ABSTRACT Repressive chromatin structures need to be unravelled to allow DNA-binding proteins access to their target sequ...

Latests News

Two jhqvamc use cases win in robots with benefits competition | va mountain home health care | veterans affairs

Mountain Home , TN — Two JHQVAMC robotic use case submissions won separate categories in the Robots with Benefits virtua...

The most commonly reported variant in asxl1 (c. 1934dupg;p. Gly646trpfsx12) is not a somatic alteration

Access through your institution Buy or subscribe We read with great interest the recent reports of recurrent mutations i...

News oneindia archives of 2021: daily and latest news archives sitemap of 2021 - news oneindia

To Start receiving timely alerts please follow the below steps: * Click on the Menu icon of the browser, it opens up a l...

In response to: ‘information bias in measures of self-reported physical activity’

Access through your institution Buy or subscribe We thank the editors for the opportunity to respond to the issues raise...

Coppola's next is 'antoinette'

Sofia Coppola, last year’s Oscar winner for best original screenplay for “Lost in Translation,” has selected her next pr...

Top