Can Smart Rooms Improve Rehab Patient Autonomy & Outcomes?
Being a hospital patient has been called ‘one of the most dis-empowering situations one can experience in modern society
– "Patient engagement in the inpatient setting: a systematic review”, National Library of Medicine
Rehab patients suffer dis-empowerment even more than typical hospital patients. Not only are they suddenly dependent on a care team for almost all of their needs, but they’re often confronting the prospect of reduced autonomy once they get back home.
By adding voice controls to their rooms, hospitals can re-empower rehab patients. Aiva Health lets patients use Amazon Alexa smart speakers to control TVs, lights, blinds, thermostats, medication education and even nurse call systems – creating a Smart Room. Early results show that rehab patients and staff love their Smart Rooms, as it promotes patient engagement and self-sufficiency while freeing up nurses to focus on higher-value care.
Being a hospital patient has been called ‘one of the most dis-empowering situations one can experience in modern society
– "Patient engagement in the inpatient setting: a systematic review”, National Library of Medicine
Rehab patients suffer dis-empowerment even more than typical hospital patients. Not only are they suddenly dependent on a care team for almost all of their needs, but they’re often confronting the prospect of reduced autonomy once they get back home.
By adding voice controls to their rooms, hospitals can re-empower rehab patients. Aiva Health lets patients use Amazon Alexa smart speakers to control TVs, lights, blinds, thermostats, medication education and even nurse call systems – creating a Smart Room. Early results show that rehab patients and staff love their Smart Rooms, as it promotes patient engagement and self-sufficiency while freeing up nurses to focus on higher-value care.
Being a hospital patient has been called ‘one of the most dis-empowering situations one can experience in modern society
– "Patient engagement in the inpatient setting: a systematic review”, National Library of Medicine
Rehab patients suffer dis-empowerment even more than typical hospital patients. Not only are they suddenly dependent on a care team for almost all of their needs, but they’re often confronting the prospect of reduced autonomy once they get back home.
By adding voice controls to their rooms, hospitals can re-empower rehab patients. Aiva Health lets patients use Amazon Alexa smart speakers to control TVs, lights, blinds, thermostats, medication education and even nurse call systems – creating a Smart Room. Early results show that rehab patients and staff love their Smart Rooms, as it promotes patient engagement and self-sufficiency while freeing up nurses to focus on higher-value care.
Being a hospital patient has been called ‘one of the most dis-empowering situations one can experience in modern society
– "Patient engagement in the inpatient setting: a systematic review”, National Library of Medicine
Rehab patients suffer dis-empowerment even more than typical hospital patients. Not only are they suddenly dependent on a care team for almost all of their needs, but they’re often confronting the prospect of reduced autonomy once they get back home.
By adding voice controls to their rooms, hospitals can re-empower rehab patients. Aiva Health lets patients use Amazon Alexa smart speakers to control TVs, lights, blinds, thermostats, medication education and even nurse call systems – creating a Smart Room. Early results show that rehab patients and staff love their Smart Rooms, as it promotes patient engagement and self-sufficiency while freeing up nurses to focus on higher-value care.
What Makes a Patient Room Smart?
Smart Rooms offer digital interaction with devices and processes that are otherwise inaccessible to many rehab patients:
TV (power, volume, channels)
Lights
Thermostats
Blinds or shades
Beds
Medication education (via the TV or a digital device)
Nurse call (via control of the pillow-speaker)
Many rehab patients are not able to use the pillow-speaker that controls these devices in a typical hospital room. This can deepen their sense of helplessness and sometimes cause them to not even ask for something they want.
One rehab nurse described patients who felt bad that they “had to call for literally every single thing. It’s too hot in the room; you had to call the nurse to get them to come in to turn on the thermostat. It’s the blinds; the sun is in my eyes. So can you please turn the light on? Can you please do that? So they felt like they were always a hassle or a burden on staff”. 1
Nurses of course are there to help, but every room entry to adjust the thermostat or lights means less time on more high-value bedside care. Smart Rooms let patients handle those tasks themselves.
What Makes a Patient Room Smart?
Smart Rooms offer digital interaction with devices and processes that are otherwise inaccessible to many rehab patients:
TV (power, volume, channels)
Lights
Thermostats
Blinds or shades
Beds
Medication education (via the TV or a digital device)
Nurse call (via control of the pillow-speaker)
Many rehab patients are not able to use the pillow-speaker that controls these devices in a typical hospital room. This can deepen their sense of helplessness and sometimes cause them to not even ask for something they want.
One rehab nurse described patients who felt bad that they “had to call for literally every single thing. It’s too hot in the room; you had to call the nurse to get them to come in to turn on the thermostat. It’s the blinds; the sun is in my eyes. So can you please turn the light on? Can you please do that? So they felt like they were always a hassle or a burden on staff”. 1
Nurses of course are there to help, but every room entry to adjust the thermostat or lights means less time on more high-value bedside care. Smart Rooms let patients handle those tasks themselves.
What Makes a Patient Room Smart?
Smart Rooms offer digital interaction with devices and processes that are otherwise inaccessible to many rehab patients:
TV (power, volume, channels)
Lights
Thermostats
Blinds or shades
Beds
Medication education (via the TV or a digital device)
Nurse call (via control of the pillow-speaker)
Many rehab patients are not able to use the pillow-speaker that controls these devices in a typical hospital room. This can deepen their sense of helplessness and sometimes cause them to not even ask for something they want.
One rehab nurse described patients who felt bad that they “had to call for literally every single thing. It’s too hot in the room; you had to call the nurse to get them to come in to turn on the thermostat. It’s the blinds; the sun is in my eyes. So can you please turn the light on? Can you please do that? So they felt like they were always a hassle or a burden on staff”. 1
Nurses of course are there to help, but every room entry to adjust the thermostat or lights means less time on more high-value bedside care. Smart Rooms let patients handle those tasks themselves.
What Makes a Patient Room Smart?
Smart Rooms offer digital interaction with devices and processes that are otherwise inaccessible to many rehab patients:
TV (power, volume, channels)
Lights
Thermostats
Blinds or shades
Beds
Medication education (via the TV or a digital device)
Nurse call (via control of the pillow-speaker)
Many rehab patients are not able to use the pillow-speaker that controls these devices in a typical hospital room. This can deepen their sense of helplessness and sometimes cause them to not even ask for something they want.
One rehab nurse described patients who felt bad that they “had to call for literally every single thing. It’s too hot in the room; you had to call the nurse to get them to come in to turn on the thermostat. It’s the blinds; the sun is in my eyes. So can you please turn the light on? Can you please do that? So they felt like they were always a hassle or a burden on staff”. 1
Nurses of course are there to help, but every room entry to adjust the thermostat or lights means less time on more high-value bedside care. Smart Rooms let patients handle those tasks themselves.
The two main types of hardware used to interact with a Smart Room are a mobile device – typically an iPad – or a smart speaker like an Amazon Echo, which comes with Amazon’s Alexa voice assistant. At Aiva we’ve focused on smart speakers. Unless they’re connected to the bed, iPads are notoriously difficult for nurses to keep track of, powered and logged in. And even when they’re attached to the bed, nurses say that tablets can be problematic for patients.
“The biggest issue is that you always have a screen in your face,” reported a nurse from Neilsen Rehabilitation Hospital at the University of Utah. “People don't want that; they don't want to have a screen 18 inches from their face all day, every day.” 2
Because they allow a 100% hands-free experience, voice assistants like Alexa improve accessibility for a wider range of patients.
The two main types of hardware used to interact with a Smart Room are a mobile device – typically an iPad – or a smart speaker like an Amazon Echo, which comes with Amazon’s Alexa voice assistant. At Aiva we’ve focused on smart speakers. Unless they’re connected to the bed, iPads are notoriously difficult for nurses to keep track of, powered and logged in. And even when they’re attached to the bed, nurses say that tablets can be problematic for patients.
“The biggest issue is that you always have a screen in your face,” reported a nurse from Neilsen Rehabilitation Hospital at the University of Utah. “People don't want that; they don't want to have a screen 18 inches from their face all day, every day.” 2
Because they allow a 100% hands-free experience, voice assistants like Alexa improve accessibility for a wider range of patients.
The two main types of hardware used to interact with a Smart Room are a mobile device – typically an iPad – or a smart speaker like an Amazon Echo, which comes with Amazon’s Alexa voice assistant. At Aiva we’ve focused on smart speakers. Unless they’re connected to the bed, iPads are notoriously difficult for nurses to keep track of, powered and logged in. And even when they’re attached to the bed, nurses say that tablets can be problematic for patients.
“The biggest issue is that you always have a screen in your face,” reported a nurse from Neilsen Rehabilitation Hospital at the University of Utah. “People don't want that; they don't want to have a screen 18 inches from their face all day, every day.” 2
Because they allow a 100% hands-free experience, voice assistants like Alexa improve accessibility for a wider range of patients.
The two main types of hardware used to interact with a Smart Room are a mobile device – typically an iPad – or a smart speaker like an Amazon Echo, which comes with Amazon’s Alexa voice assistant. At Aiva we’ve focused on smart speakers. Unless they’re connected to the bed, iPads are notoriously difficult for nurses to keep track of, powered and logged in. And even when they’re attached to the bed, nurses say that tablets can be problematic for patients.
“The biggest issue is that you always have a screen in your face,” reported a nurse from Neilsen Rehabilitation Hospital at the University of Utah. “People don't want that; they don't want to have a screen 18 inches from their face all day, every day.” 2
Because they allow a 100% hands-free experience, voice assistants like Alexa improve accessibility for a wider range of patients.
20,000 Interactions per Month
The world’s first 100% voice-powered Smart Rooms launched in the last couple of years at Jefferson Health’s Magee Rehab Hospital in Philadelphia, BayCare Health’s Wesley Chapel Hospital outside Tampa and Memorial Rehabilitation Institute in Miami – all Aiva clients. Magee has been Smart the longest, with voice control of lights, blinds, thermostats and (more recently) TV. Utilization statistics show how helpful voice assistance can be.
The Alexa devices are in all of Magee’s 83 rooms and used daily by patients.
The typical user interacts with Aiva 14 times per day.
The entire facility generates more than 20,000 interactions per month.
Half of patient interactions are Smart Room commands.
Lights and TV commands are the most common, and each one reminds patients how they can do things for themselves. Jefferson producedabout their experience, and here are videos from Memorial and BayCare.
20,000 Interactions per Month
The world’s first 100% voice-powered Smart Rooms launched in the last couple of years at Jefferson Health’s Magee Rehab Hospital in Philadelphia, BayCare Health’s Wesley Chapel Hospital outside Tampa and Memorial Rehabilitation Institute in Miami – all Aiva clients. Magee has been Smart the longest, with voice control of lights, blinds, thermostats and (more recently) TV. Utilization statistics show how helpful voice assistance can be.
The Alexa devices are in all of Magee’s 83 rooms and used daily by patients.
The typical user interacts with Aiva 14 times per day.
The entire facility generates more than 20,000 interactions per month.
Half of patient interactions are Smart Room commands.
Lights and TV commands are the most common, and each one reminds patients how they can do things for themselves. Jefferson producedabout their experience, and here are videos from Memorial and BayCare.
20,000 Interactions per Month
The world’s first 100% voice-powered Smart Rooms launched in the last couple of years at Jefferson Health’s Magee Rehab Hospital in Philadelphia, BayCare Health’s Wesley Chapel Hospital outside Tampa and Memorial Rehabilitation Institute in Miami – all Aiva clients. Magee has been Smart the longest, with voice control of lights, blinds, thermostats and (more recently) TV. Utilization statistics show how helpful voice assistance can be.
The Alexa devices are in all of Magee’s 83 rooms and used daily by patients.
The typical user interacts with Aiva 14 times per day.
The entire facility generates more than 20,000 interactions per month.
Half of patient interactions are Smart Room commands.
Lights and TV commands are the most common, and each one reminds patients how they can do things for themselves. Jefferson producedabout their experience, and here are videos from Memorial and BayCare.
20,000 Interactions per Month
The world’s first 100% voice-powered Smart Rooms launched in the last couple of years at Jefferson Health’s Magee Rehab Hospital in Philadelphia, BayCare Health’s Wesley Chapel Hospital outside Tampa and Memorial Rehabilitation Institute in Miami – all Aiva clients. Magee has been Smart the longest, with voice control of lights, blinds, thermostats and (more recently) TV. Utilization statistics show how helpful voice assistance can be.
The Alexa devices are in all of Magee’s 83 rooms and used daily by patients.
The typical user interacts with Aiva 14 times per day.
The entire facility generates more than 20,000 interactions per month.
Half of patient interactions are Smart Room commands.
Lights and TV commands are the most common, and each one reminds patients how they can do things for themselves. Jefferson producedabout their experience, and here are videos from Memorial and BayCare.
For their part, Memorial Rehab currently holds the record for most interactions in a day – 120 from a single patient! Prior to Aiva, the patient was having to use “sip & puff” equipment that requires you to lean over and mouth a tube to call for help. Now he just uses his voice. When asked about his use of Alexa, the patient said, “I feel like George Jetson.”
Added Dr. Joanne Delgado-Lebron at Memorial, this technology has brought independence and a sense of control for my patients with spinal cord injuries. They no longer must rely on someone else to assist them for room control functions.”
For their part, Memorial Rehab currently holds the record for most interactions in a day – 120 from a single patient! Prior to Aiva, the patient was having to use “sip & puff” equipment that requires you to lean over and mouth a tube to call for help. Now he just uses his voice. When asked about his use of Alexa, the patient said, “I feel like George Jetson.”
Added Dr. Joanne Delgado-Lebron at Memorial, this technology has brought independence and a sense of control for my patients with spinal cord injuries. They no longer must rely on someone else to assist them for room control functions.”
For their part, Memorial Rehab currently holds the record for most interactions in a day – 120 from a single patient! Prior to Aiva, the patient was having to use “sip & puff” equipment that requires you to lean over and mouth a tube to call for help. Now he just uses his voice. When asked about his use of Alexa, the patient said, “I feel like George Jetson.”
Added Dr. Joanne Delgado-Lebron at Memorial, this technology has brought independence and a sense of control for my patients with spinal cord injuries. They no longer must rely on someone else to assist them for room control functions.”
For their part, Memorial Rehab currently holds the record for most interactions in a day – 120 from a single patient! Prior to Aiva, the patient was having to use “sip & puff” equipment that requires you to lean over and mouth a tube to call for help. Now he just uses his voice. When asked about his use of Alexa, the patient said, “I feel like George Jetson.”
Added Dr. Joanne Delgado-Lebron at Memorial, this technology has brought independence and a sense of control for my patients with spinal cord injuries. They no longer must rely on someone else to assist them for room control functions.”
The Benefits of Self-Sufficiency
Smart Rooms are a relatively new phenomenon, but studies and interviews with patients, clinicians and therapists point to a few key benefits:
In-Patient Autonomy
“It’s given me a sense of independence back,” said Shyneika Taylor, a spinal unit patient at Magee Rehab. “There’s a lot of things that Alexa can do for me so I don’t necessarily have to call staff all the time.” 3
A core tenet of rehab is rebuilding the patient’s belief that they can manage most if not all aspects of their daily life. In the crucial first weeks after surgery, patients are establishing mindsets and habits that may determine the course of their recovery. The more they can do for themselves, the stronger a sense of independence they develop.
The Benefits of Self-Sufficiency
Smart Rooms are a relatively new phenomenon, but studies and interviews with patients, clinicians and therapists point to a few key benefits:
In-Patient Autonomy
“It’s given me a sense of independence back,” said Shyneika Taylor, a spinal unit patient at Magee Rehab. “There’s a lot of things that Alexa can do for me so I don’t necessarily have to call staff all the time.” 3
A core tenet of rehab is rebuilding the patient’s belief that they can manage most if not all aspects of their daily life. In the crucial first weeks after surgery, patients are establishing mindsets and habits that may determine the course of their recovery. The more they can do for themselves, the stronger a sense of independence they develop.
“Every single piece of control that you give back to someone who’s lost it is really important for every aspect of their life,” according to Dr. Jeffrey Rosenbluth, Medical Director of the Spinal Cord Injury Acute Rehabilitation program at the Neilsen Rehabilitation Hospital. 4
Autonomy doesn’t just improve the quality of a rehab patient’s stay. It’s also been shown to improve recovery. One NIH study found that “an increase in their autonomy (particularly in self-determination, independence and self-care) … was found to be related to regained abilities and self-confidence, and to patients' strategies (e.g. taking initiative, being assertive).” 5
The Benefits of Self-Sufficiency
Smart Rooms are a relatively new phenomenon, but studies and interviews with patients, clinicians and therapists point to a few key benefits:
In-Patient Autonomy
“It’s given me a sense of independence back,” said Shyneika Taylor, a spinal unit patient at Magee Rehab. “There’s a lot of things that Alexa can do for me so I don’t necessarily have to call staff all the time.” 3
A core tenet of rehab is rebuilding the patient’s belief that they can manage most if not all aspects of their daily life. In the crucial first weeks after surgery, patients are establishing mindsets and habits that may determine the course of their recovery. The more they can do for themselves, the stronger a sense of independence they develop.
The Benefits of Self-Sufficiency
Smart Rooms are a relatively new phenomenon, but studies and interviews with patients, clinicians and therapists point to a few key benefits:
In-Patient Autonomy
“It’s given me a sense of independence back,” said Shyneika Taylor, a spinal unit patient at Magee Rehab. “There’s a lot of things that Alexa can do for me so I don’t necessarily have to call staff all the time.” 3
A core tenet of rehab is rebuilding the patient’s belief that they can manage most if not all aspects of their daily life. In the crucial first weeks after surgery, patients are establishing mindsets and habits that may determine the course of their recovery. The more they can do for themselves, the stronger a sense of independence they develop.
Smart Home Training
Using Aiva “is good practice for when I go home to get [an Alexa device] of my own,” said Ms Taylor, the Magee patient. “So it just makes life a little more easy and convenient.”
Of course, Smart Room technologies got their start in residences, where people add voice-controlled smart devices like lights, thermostats, blinds, TVs, doors and even appliances. That kind of control is a nice convenience for most people – but it can be absolutely critical for rehab patients.
“A lot of our patients are able to get these devices or already have these devices in their home because they’re consumer-friend products,” said Natalie Pondok, MSOT, OTR/L, Ms Taylor’s therapist at Magee. “We work with patients on being able to use their voice … in order to control things in their environment.” 6
In this respect, smart hospital rooms provide important training so that patients can transition smoothly to whatever smart technology they have at home. As Memorial Innovation Executive Jesus Diaz, MBA, MSN, RN, LSSGB, postedon LinkedIn: “This tech really helps them in their care journey – while they’re in the hospital and it will even help them as they go home.”
Smart Home Training
Using Aiva “is good practice for when I go home to get [an Alexa device] of my own,” said Ms Taylor, the Magee patient. “So it just makes life a little more easy and convenient.”
Of course, Smart Room technologies got their start in residences, where people add voice-controlled smart devices like lights, thermostats, blinds, TVs, doors and even appliances. That kind of control is a nice convenience for most people – but it can be absolutely critical for rehab patients.
“A lot of our patients are able to get these devices or already have these devices in their home because they’re consumer-friend products,” said Natalie Pondok, MSOT, OTR/L, Ms Taylor’s therapist at Magee. “We work with patients on being able to use their voice … in order to control things in their environment.” 6
In this respect, smart hospital rooms provide important training so that patients can transition smoothly to whatever smart technology they have at home. As Memorial Innovation Executive Jesus Diaz, MBA, MSN, RN, LSSGB, postedon LinkedIn: “This tech really helps them in their care journey – while they’re in the hospital and it will even help them as they go home.”
Smart Home Training
Using Aiva “is good practice for when I go home to get [an Alexa device] of my own,” said Ms Taylor, the Magee patient. “So it just makes life a little more easy and convenient.”
Of course, Smart Room technologies got their start in residences, where people add voice-controlled smart devices like lights, thermostats, blinds, TVs, doors and even appliances. That kind of control is a nice convenience for most people – but it can be absolutely critical for rehab patients.
“A lot of our patients are able to get these devices or already have these devices in their home because they’re consumer-friend products,” said Natalie Pondok, MSOT, OTR/L, Ms Taylor’s therapist at Magee. “We work with patients on being able to use their voice … in order to control things in their environment.” 6
In this respect, smart hospital rooms provide important training so that patients can transition smoothly to whatever smart technology they have at home. As Memorial Innovation Executive Jesus Diaz, MBA, MSN, RN, LSSGB, postedon LinkedIn: “This tech really helps them in their care journey – while they’re in the hospital and it will even help them as they go home.”
Smart Home Training
Using Aiva “is good practice for when I go home to get [an Alexa device] of my own,” said Ms Taylor, the Magee patient. “So it just makes life a little more easy and convenient.”
Of course, Smart Room technologies got their start in residences, where people add voice-controlled smart devices like lights, thermostats, blinds, TVs, doors and even appliances. That kind of control is a nice convenience for most people – but it can be absolutely critical for rehab patients.
“A lot of our patients are able to get these devices or already have these devices in their home because they’re consumer-friend products,” said Natalie Pondok, MSOT, OTR/L, Ms Taylor’s therapist at Magee. “We work with patients on being able to use their voice … in order to control things in their environment.” 6
In this respect, smart hospital rooms provide important training so that patients can transition smoothly to whatever smart technology they have at home. As Memorial Innovation Executive Jesus Diaz, MBA, MSN, RN, LSSGB, postedon LinkedIn: “This tech really helps them in their care journey – while they’re in the hospital and it will even help them as they go home.”
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More Staff Time for Direct Care
When rehab patients do more routine tasks for themselves with Smart Room assistance, it not only improves their autonomy, it can also improve their care. That’s because many of those tasks would’ve required a nurse to come into the patient’s room.
As noted earlier, Magee Rehab estimated that nurses saved more than 350 room entries per day – more than 10,000 hours per year – thanks to patients using Aiva Smart Room commands to help themselves.
“Alexa helps me so much because it frees up so much time with little things,” said Erin Strandberg, RN, at Magee. “Before, I would have to go in the room and the patient wanted the lights out. Now the patient can do it independently and without any assistance. It’s phenomenal.” 7
With that additional “free time”, nurses can focus on activities that improve patient outcomes, like managing their pain, educating them about their care plan, coordinating with family members and just plain talking with them.
More Staff Time for Direct Care
When rehab patients do more routine tasks for themselves with Smart Room assistance, it not only improves their autonomy, it can also improve their care. That’s because many of those tasks would’ve required a nurse to come into the patient’s room.
As noted earlier, Magee Rehab estimated that nurses saved more than 350 room entries per day – more than 10,000 hours per year – thanks to patients using Aiva Smart Room commands to help themselves.
“Alexa helps me so much because it frees up so much time with little things,” said Erin Strandberg, RN, at Magee. “Before, I would have to go in the room and the patient wanted the lights out. Now the patient can do it independently and without any assistance. It’s phenomenal.” 7
With that additional “free time”, nurses can focus on activities that improve patient outcomes, like managing their pain, educating them about their care plan, coordinating with family members and just plain talking with them.
More Staff Time for Direct Care
When rehab patients do more routine tasks for themselves with Smart Room assistance, it not only improves their autonomy, it can also improve their care. That’s because many of those tasks would’ve required a nurse to come into the patient’s room.
As noted earlier, Magee Rehab estimated that nurses saved more than 350 room entries per day – more than 10,000 hours per year – thanks to patients using Aiva Smart Room commands to help themselves.
“Alexa helps me so much because it frees up so much time with little things,” said Erin Strandberg, RN, at Magee. “Before, I would have to go in the room and the patient wanted the lights out. Now the patient can do it independently and without any assistance. It’s phenomenal.” 7
With that additional “free time”, nurses can focus on activities that improve patient outcomes, like managing their pain, educating them about their care plan, coordinating with family members and just plain talking with them.
More Staff Time for Direct Care
When rehab patients do more routine tasks for themselves with Smart Room assistance, it not only improves their autonomy, it can also improve their care. That’s because many of those tasks would’ve required a nurse to come into the patient’s room.
As noted earlier, Magee Rehab estimated that nurses saved more than 350 room entries per day – more than 10,000 hours per year – thanks to patients using Aiva Smart Room commands to help themselves.
“Alexa helps me so much because it frees up so much time with little things,” said Erin Strandberg, RN, at Magee. “Before, I would have to go in the room and the patient wanted the lights out. Now the patient can do it independently and without any assistance. It’s phenomenal.” 7
With that additional “free time”, nurses can focus on activities that improve patient outcomes, like managing their pain, educating them about their care plan, coordinating with family members and just plain talking with them.
About Aiva
Aiva is the leading voice platform for care, with more than 10,000 acute and post-acute rooms across the U.S. and Canada. Clients include Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, BayCare Health, Houston Methodist Hospital, Jefferson Health, Moffitt Cancer Center, Boston Children’s Hospital and Memorial Health. We were recognized in AVIA Health’s Top Smart Room Companies Report.
Our Smart Room solution works whether your patient rooms are new and modern or old and dated.
For newer facilities, we typically integrate with Building Management Systems like Johnson Controls, Siemens Desigo and Trane, allowing voice control of all the devices connected to those BMSs.
In older facilities, Aiva’s partnership with HatchMed enables voice control of all of the devices connected to Rauland pillow-speakers.
Our mission is to bring Smart Rooms to every hospital, improving autonomy and outcomes for patients around the world.
About Aiva
Aiva is the leading voice platform for care, with more than 10,000 acute and post-acute rooms across the U.S. and Canada. Clients include Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, BayCare Health, Houston Methodist Hospital, Jefferson Health, Moffitt Cancer Center, Boston Children’s Hospital and Memorial Health. We were recognized in AVIA Health’s Top Smart Room Companies Report.
Our Smart Room solution works whether your patient rooms are new and modern or old and dated.
For newer facilities, we typically integrate with Building Management Systems like Johnson Controls, Siemens Desigo and Trane, allowing voice control of all the devices connected to those BMSs.
In older facilities, Aiva’s partnership with HatchMed enables voice control of all of the devices connected to Rauland pillow-speakers.
Our mission is to bring Smart Rooms to every hospital, improving autonomy and outcomes for patients around the world.
About Aiva
Aiva is the leading voice platform for care, with more than 10,000 acute and post-acute rooms across the U.S. and Canada. Clients include Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, BayCare Health, Houston Methodist Hospital, Jefferson Health, Moffitt Cancer Center, Boston Children’s Hospital and Memorial Health. We were recognized in AVIA Health’s Top Smart Room Companies Report.
Our Smart Room solution works whether your patient rooms are new and modern or old and dated.
For newer facilities, we typically integrate with Building Management Systems like Johnson Controls, Siemens Desigo and Trane, allowing voice control of all the devices connected to those BMSs.
In older facilities, Aiva’s partnership with HatchMed enables voice control of all of the devices connected to Rauland pillow-speakers.
Our mission is to bring Smart Rooms to every hospital, improving autonomy and outcomes for patients around the world.
About Aiva
Aiva is the leading voice platform for care, with more than 10,000 acute and post-acute rooms across the U.S. and Canada. Clients include Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, BayCare Health, Houston Methodist Hospital, Jefferson Health, Moffitt Cancer Center, Boston Children’s Hospital and Memorial Health. We were recognized in AVIA Health’s Top Smart Room Companies Report.
Our Smart Room solution works whether your patient rooms are new and modern or old and dated.
For newer facilities, we typically integrate with Building Management Systems like Johnson Controls, Siemens Desigo and Trane, allowing voice control of all the devices connected to those BMSs.
In older facilities, Aiva’s partnership with HatchMed enables voice control of all of the devices connected to Rauland pillow-speakers.
Our mission is to bring Smart Rooms to every hospital, improving autonomy and outcomes for patients around the world.
If you’re new to Aiva and want to learn more, please provide your contact info.
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