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Return to Virginia Business - December 2002

Nurse Diane

She speaks six languages fluently, comprehends 2,600 different diseases and provides consistent information to her patients. But she doesn’t wear a crisp white cap.

Meet Nurse Diane, an interactive touch-screen computer system developed to provide information to patients before they are discharged from the hospital. With the medical industry suffering from a severe shortage of nurses, Nurse Diane — short for “discharge information and needs educator” — helps save time and resources all around. It takes regular nurses about a minute to program Nurse Diane with a patient lesson, on everything from information on diabetes to pain management.

The result is a 30-minute interactive session between a patient and Nurse Diane, which provides information about his or her medical condition. “Instructions are printed out at the end of the lesson so the patient can take the text home with them,” says Reid Carter, co-founder of Patient Education Programs, the Richmond-based software development company that designed Nurse Diane. “When the lesson is over the [real] nurse spends a couple of minutes answering any questions the patient might have.” Nurse Diane is also equipped with a special pacing system to ensure comprehension, and quizzes her patients periodically. If a patient does not understand a portion of the lesson, Nurse Diane e-mails an alert to the real nurse at the nurse’s station. When the lesson is over, a human version can go over that portion of the lesson again.

Nurse Diane was tested at Virginia Commonwealth University’s Medical College of Virginia Hospitals earlier this year. Carter and his partner, Richard Cross, developed the program last year after meeting with their company’s advisory board and with health professionals at MCV in March. Carter and Cross started fundraising efforts on Sept. 11, 2001 and, despite the terrorist attacks, raised the capital they needed by the end of December.

“We were financed by Greystone Capital [Management LLC] in Richmond,” Carter says. “We have had only one round of funding and are hopeful that it will be all we need.”

The Nurse Diane system costs between $12,000 and $15,000, depending on the sophistication of programming, or $195 to $395 per month. Current customers include Bon Secours’ Mary Immaculate Hospital in Newport News, which ordered six Nurse Dianes, and the cardiology department at Johns Hopkins University, which ordered one.

— Holly M. Rodriguez

Return to Virginia Business - December 2002


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