During the pilot program, emergency fitness professionals at Brigham and Women Hospital will need to use Rose Platshape, which assesses resilience by tracking degrees of well-being and detecting adjustments in real time. Every day, the platshape collects users’ knowledge in the form of questionnaires and free response log entries, which can be completed in as little as 30 seconds.
The Rose platform works through patented Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Natural Language Processing (NLP) technology, which identifies key symptoms and precautionary markers of the presence and/or advancement of intellectual fitness symptoms in a user’s answers to questions and indications. Array Rose may stumble upon the first precautionary symptoms of many intellectual fitness problems, adding anxiety, depression and trauma.
In addition to tracking the user’s well-being, the platform also provides the user with a personalized flow of organized content from Rose’s library of more than 1,000 articles and videos, depending on the history, habit and entries of the app.
Catalyst – Health 2.0, which develops and implements pilot and commercialization programs for fitness generation, facilitated the process of a variety of pilot programs, a component of its Open Quick Response Calls initiative to connect fitness care providers to the virtual fitness network in reaction to the pandemic.
“Instead of fragmented equipment and systems to address exhaustion, we want to identify and address system-wide points that lead to exhaustion, while selling a fitnessy for our fitness care workers,” said Dr. John Shivdat, advisor and president of Rose and Medical Director of the Health System at the HCA Coliseum in Georgia. “Rose is designed to meet this challenge: proactively identifying others with a greater threat of exhaustion and customizing interventions and content based on their unique desires, while providing intellectual fitness professionals with the knowledge and data they want to deliver personalized content more successfully and effectively. Matrix »
Drs. Hanni Stoklosa and Desiree Azizoddin of Brigham and Women’s Hospital’s Department of Emergency Medicine headed the call for a virtual platform to assist MS doctors. “Brigham’s Department of Emergency Medicine Welfare Committee is fully aware and in a position to assist physicians who treat patients loyally with this COVID-19 pandemic,” Dr. Stoklosa said. Drs. Stoklosa and Azizoddin also thank iHub Partners Digital Health for their help in advancing this idea.
Rose is a comprehensive generation solution that provides a HIPAA-compliant intellectual aptitude tracking platform based on clinical trials and studies at Johns Hopkins University. With just 30 seconds of daily use, healthcare professionals and their patients can use Rose to monitor intellectual fitness, control stress levels, identify triggers, and anticipate more excessive events. Rose offers a cellular app for the 43 million Americans with intellectual diseases and a tool based on synthetic intelligence that allows healthcare professionals to monitor their patients. (AskRose.com)