Interactive patient communication development system for reporting on patient healthcare management

A modular interactive system and method for customizing health education to an individual at a remote terminal to induce a modification in a health-related behavior of the individual. The automated system includes a questionnaire generator for questioning the individual to determine his or her motivational drivers and comprehension capacity. The questionnaire generator is a graphical user interface that allows a clinician to graphically attach questions to answer to action. A processor then generates a script program based on what the clinician has attached together. A profile generator receives answers entered by the individual from the remote terminal and generates a motivational driver profile and a comprehension capacity profile of the individual. A translator receives clinical data relating to a current health condition of the individual and translates the clinical data, the motivational driver profile, and the comprehension capacity profile into a profile code. An educational fulfillment bank matches the profile code to matching educational materials and transfers the matched educational materials to the remote terminal. An evaluation program evaluates educational responses of the individual and provides profile updates for targeting subsequent educational material to the individual based on the educational responses.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates generally to a modular interactive development system and method for reporting on patient management, and in particular to an automated content delivery program able to connect remote users across independent platforms to a central database of libraries whereby a patient's health can be scored dynamically.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates to the field of health management, particularly to an automated interactive system and method for reducing the risk associated with a monitored client.

For example, the know art includes a number of health-management systems for providing outpatient services to patients with chronic health conditions such as asthma and diabetes. However, these systems are incapable of administering a treatment protocol responsive to the patient's current profile and of updating the profile in response to the administered protocol.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

This invention presents a flexible and scalable system in content development for patient management healthcare. Due to the modular object oriented-structure, individual content modules (“dialogs”) can be mixed into an unlimited number of updateable customized programs, addressing individual as well as co-existing disease states (“co-morbid”) in any combinations, and with automated content variation for improved patient compliance. A dialog is the smallest content object in the FlexCube content structure. Its content addresses issues related to a unique set of symptoms, behaviors or knowledge related to a specific aspect of managing a certain disease referred to as an aspect of care.

In its basic format, each dialog contains questions related to signs and symptoms, behaviors and knowledge with answers categorized as high, medium or low risk answers. For each answer there is a relevant follow up, which can be a teaching statement, an acknowledgment, a motivational statement or a new question that will explore the patient's condition in more depth. While the logical branching within a dialog is driven by patient answers, no dependency exists between individual dialogs.

Dialogs are located in a common pool organized by library. From this library each individual dialog is referenced for participation (appearance) in programs and daily sessions. A dialog's behavior in a program (schedule, position, reporting) is defined at the time of the dialog creation or it is custom defined during the program content selection process. In this way dialogs maintain their integrity while being used and re-used in several client programs. They combine freely with other dialogs in user defined program selections, allowing an unlimited combination of aspects of care and co-existing diseases. Finally, they are easily accessible for revisions and updates.

The present invention provides an object-oriented dialog and modular toolkit structure that enhances quality control options. Also included are the centrally located content objects that offer overview and tracking of the currently active content, global error correction and global update of content to current standards of care. Because the present invention splits up interfaces for content creation and content selection into separate modules, the present invention exercises control over customer's access to content development in compliance with current and future Federal Drug Administration labeling. Finally the system's structure limits logical branching errors to within a dialog, thereby offering a more robust and less error prone system overall.

Since the content of a dialog and the output of a dialog is related and mapped to a specific aspect of care, the user will have the power and flexibility to model risk evaluation and outcomes reporting around custom selected aspects of care.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENT

The present invention includes an object-oriented content structure in which the smallest content object, a care specific dialog, is located in a central library from where its characteristics (operators) are composed and referenced by a modular set of tools located at a client computer.

FIG. 1is a block diagram depicting a system10's compositional and referenced components. Compositionally, the system10relies on four system components for dialog or program creation. Additionally,FIG. 1illustrates two other system components that interact with the referenced components of the system. A dialog Composer20, further referenced inFIG. 2, which is used to author dialog content by an aspect of care. A Program Composer30, further referenced inFIG. 7, is a user interfaced click and drag assembly platform for composing programs (a virtual content defined collection of dialogs). On a computer desktop, content dialogs are selected (referenced) for use in disease/client specific programs, with program specific tagging of individual dialog attributes related to frequency (scheduling) and reporting. A Program Patient Linker40is a user interface integrated into the desktop on which patients are assigned to programs. During the assignment process patient identification and patient specific metrics are added to the program. A Care Reporter50, further referenced inFIG. 9, is a user interface for easy patient result lookup, triage and trend reports. Reporting requirements set in the Program Composer30determine which reports are displayed.

Compositional elements of the system10reference either one or both of the two remaining components of the system depicted inFIG. 1. A Program Scheduler60, further referenced inFIG. 8, is an engine for automated scheduling of dialogs based on attributes set in the Program Composer30, and A Dialog Library70. The Dialog Library is the principal central location of dialog content units. Dialogs are organized into body system labeled sub-libraries and stored within the Dialog Library70.

The structure of the system is developed from the integration of the four compositional components as referenced above with the two referenced components and begins with the creation of dialogs in the Dialog Composer20as depictedFIG. 2.

FIG. 2is a flow chart diagram depicting the overview of dialog creation and is referenced with more particularity inFIG. 4. Referring toFIG. 2, a patient100reports on a specific aspect of care110(i.e., foot care in a Diabetes Structure) that is addressed by a dialog125, the smallest content structure of the system, from a disease specific library120. The basic format of each dialog includes questions130related to patient self-management behaviors132, patient-reportable symptoms134, or patient knowledge136. Each question provides a choice for an answer (“output variable”)140that falls into one of three risk categories; high142medium144and low risk146. For each risk category there is an associated follow up150which is a teaching statement152, a motivational statement154or a new question156that explores the patient's condition in more depth.

While the logical branching within a dialog depends on output variables, no dependency exists between individual dialogs. Dependencies for dialogs exist outside the dialog structure in related operators.

FIG. 3is a block diagram depicting the interdependent characteristics (operators) of a dialog300in the system matrix. The interdependent characteristics include a Name Label310for the aspect of care addressed, a Library320that houses a body system specific Localization325, client specific Programs330in which the dialog is being used (referenced), a Schedule frequency340by which the dialog is being displayed to a patient in a specific program, definition of Reporting requirements350, and Patient Identification information360and metrics of each individual appliance to which the dialog is assigned.

The user interface is easy to use due to the simplicity of program structure in which the user is able to interface with the program and dialog composition aspects of the system. Simply using drag and drop content selection procedures based on a medical decision creates a process familiar to the user. The user decides what aspects of care are relevant for a given program or for an individual patient and in most cases simply selects existing content based on that decision. In all steps of dialog composition, certain steps are taken to make available the dialog in a content library.

FIG. 4is a flow chart depicting the steps in creating and storing of content data from a dialog, a user's first task is to name the dialog-to-be-created as depicted in block400. Next, the user defines the library section of block410, in which the dialog will reside. The user then identifies an aspect of care at block420to which the dialog will primarily refer. Once the naming conventions are assigned and the aspect of care is chosen, the user creates dialog programming statements at block430, in a graphical programming environment as embodied inFIG. 5. New dialog content is then stored in an appropriate user library at block440.

The user who has access to create new content does so using a simple dialog composer as embodied inFIG. 5.FIG. 5is a diagram depicting the creation components of a dialog Editor Platform. First, a user is presented with a palette500of programming statements that are represented as graphic symbols (icons) that can be dragged from the palette of available statements into a dialog construction platform505. In a typical embodiment of the present invention, the user drags a start question icon510and a three pronged answer icon520from an icon palette down to the construction platform500. The user then activates a dialog box for each icon by clicking on it with a mouse and specifying a question associated with that particular icon, for example, a Start Question Dialog515. Next, in an Answer Dialog524, the user enters three answer options relative to the start question and assigns a raw risk value to each answer526. The risk values are assigned from high to low with a corresponding text answer. “Yes” equals low risk and “no” equals high risk and “medium” equals somewhere in the middle of low and high risk. Follow up questions icons530are dragged onto the construction platform along with an associated answer icon540. An answer dialog545is then prepared. Clicking on the output icon550, the user activates the output dialog box555. Here the user defines risk state output558in detail, further depicted with more particularity inFIG. 5, defining the position of the answer relative to the axis of the risk cube. At any time during or after the dialog creation process, the user can review the dialog created, using a simulation interface to an appropriate appliance or in the alternative, the user can review the actual dialog content in a text only overview window. Once all the follow up questions, answers and output dialogs are formulated and put onto the construction platform525, the newly created dialogs are store in a user library560from where it can be referenced for participation in any user defined care management program or for later updating or editing.

FIG. 6is a block diagram illustrating the three dimensional aspects of the dynamically determined risk state output scale which in the Dialog Composer,FIG. 5, is referenced at block558. The X-axis610scales whether the answer to a question dialog sets the risk at a certain risk level on a 9 point risk scale or whether the answer moves the patient risk state in a certain direction and by how much, thereby creating an accumulated risk profile. Additionally, the answer to a dialog is incorporated as a value in a mathematically calculated risk state that may incorporate other answers as well, creating a composite, weighted risk state. The Y-axis620refers to the actual aspect of care in which the risk will be incorporated. The Z-axis630incorporates the expression of risk530, i.e, whether the risk is assigned to a sign or symptom632, a behavior634, or a knowledge expression636. This dynamic model allows for very sophisticated risk profiling including risk trend alerts, composite risk profiling by aspects of care and profiling by risk expression. The dynamic risk “foot prints” available at any time can serve as triggers for automated content selection.

Once dialogs are named, created and assigned to an aspect of care and the risk output is assigned to the appropriate dialog, a user of the system can then use the Program Composer30to create the program that eventually is assigned to a patient.

FIG. 7is a flowchart depicting the creation of “programs” using the Program Composer User Interface (“UI”). The UI is a platform for selecting library resident Dialogs created as depicted inFIG. 6, for participation in user-defined care management programs. In a typical embodiment of the present invention, the first step is to name the future program block700. Next, at block710, a user selects the disease libraries from which the program dialogs are created. Simultaneously, at block720, the user checks the Utilities Library to add dialogs to the program that are not disease specific like generic greetings. This gives the user access to the detailed content of both of these libraries organized by aspects of care and their respective dialogs. Creating the program is now a simple task of adding dialogs to the program list, see block730, and at block740to define the delivery of the dialogs as a user can choose specific delivery of the dialogs on a daily750, weekly752, or any other754programmed timed basis. Additionally, at block742, a user checks the priority of dialogs to set parameters necessary for the correct scheduling of the dialogs in the program. Options are to force the scheduler to include the dialog block744, or to assign dialogs as fillers, block746. The later could be the case, for example, with trivia type dialogs, entertainment dialogs etc. Also, the user has the opportunity to decide the placement of dialogs in daily sessions. Greetings, for example, should be checked as “always first.” The user can review the complete created program using the “View Selection” link, block760. Using a very simple interface, the user has now created a totally custom made program. At block770, the program is now available for assignment to any of the user's patients or for later modification by the user by adding or deleting dialogs. The present invention embodies the assignment by way of a Linker User Interface (“Linker UI”) as depicted inFIG. 8.

FIG. 8is a flow chart depicting the Linker UI, which is a platform for assigning or “linking” care management programs to patient populations or to individual patients. The first step at block800is to retrieve patient's name(s) to be used on the work platform through a filtering or sorting procedure defined by the user. Next, at block810, the user marks the patient(s) and the care management program to be assigned. Finally the user creates the “Link” to activate a dialog box that allows the user to specify a time frame in which the program will run for the selected patient(s), block820. Should the user wish to link the patient to other programs all that is needed is to repeat the process. To process the linking of an entire population or part of a population a user selects all patients, block800, and assigns all of them, block810, to a program.

The last step in the creation of a system program is the creation of a Reporter User Interface (“Reporter UI”) which creates patient reports specific to patient results that in turn can initiate program actions based on those results.FIG. 9is a flow chart depicting the Reporter UI and the creation of reports. The layout of the Reporter UI is completely consistent with that of the Linker UI depicted inFIG. 8. First a user retrieves patient names through a filtering process, block902. The user filters, at block900, names through the programs by either risk search, block904, the aspects of care, block905, within each program, or the risk expression, block906, as defined as a symptom, behavior or knowledge, block908, factor. This is done to allow a user to trend a risk profile, block910, for the patient in the aspect of care where the patient has scored, for example, a high-risk profile as depicted inFIG. 6. A user can configure the Reporter UI to display block920the actual answers or results that led to the exampled high-risk profile. Lastly, at block930, a patient is assigned to a program based on the risk profile or Aspect of Care. Reports assigned to patients can now for example, allow the user to see details for each aspect of care, order a report printed or write a note that will be associated with a linked event.

While this invention has been described in terms of several preferred embodiments, there are alterations, permutations, and equivalents that fall within the scope of this invention. It is therefore intended that the following appended claims be interpreted as including all such alterations, permutations, and equivalents as fall within the true spirit and scope of the present invention.