X-Plain for Hospital Interactive TVs
X-Plain for Hospital Interactive TVs provides the X-Plain inpatient safety education and discharge instructions through the bedside TV. It ensures patients and their families/caregivers are adequately informed about (a) how they can play a role in the patient’s safety at the hospital and (b) how to recover at home after the patient is discharged. The X-Plain system uses multimedia tutorials to inform patients and interactive questions to verify the patient’s comprehension of the presented safety and home-care instructions. Patients and visiting family members interact with the TV using the remote control (also called a pillow speaker).
Key Benefits
- Help patients play an active role in infection control and avoiding medical errors
- Reduce readmission cost
- Meet Joint Commission and CMS standards for interactive patient education
- Enhance patient satisfaction
- Improve medical outcomes through better comprehension and compliance
- Save staff time by answering common patient questions
Software included
- Interactive multimedia tutorials for hospital safety
- Interactive multimedia tutorials for disease management and home self-care instructions
Services included
- Customized list of topics
- Content updates
- Integration with third party interactive TV and documentation system
Call us today at (866) 452-6203 or use the online form for more information.
|
|
"It [X-Plain] enables the patients to take time to understand every module according to their own pace. This saves us valuable time in going back and returning to finish up our teaching. This also gives us time to start another patient while they are watching the kiosk."
Anna Marie Marinas, RSTC Staff Nurse III Kaiser Permanente.
|
"One alternative to using computers for patient education is an Internet system that allows people to surf the World Wide Web via the television set. Its ease of operation and affordability makes it possible for organizations to provide."
(From "The Joint Commission Guide to Patient and Family Education", Joint Commission Resources, p. 24)
|
|