Aug 8
2024
Hyro: Patients Want Automated Prescription Refills and Appointment Setting
A comprehensive new survey that includes responses from more than 1,500 US patients conducted by Hyro, a leading healthcare AI-powered communications company, reveals that patients throughout the US health system are not only frustrated by poor provider support but are also experiencing tangible health setbacks as a result of these friction points.
Hyro’s “Voice of the Patient” survey and accompanying report highlight significant gaps between patient needs and the current support available through healthcare delivery channels. These care challenges are particularly glaring during appointment settings and when patients attempt to refill prescriptions.
While the survey’s findings provide a plethora of information that may impact patient engagement and patient well-being, the following points suggest providers have some important ground to cover in their service delivery outside of the exam room.
Key findings include:
- 21% of patients delay or forgo refilling prescriptions due to lengthy hold times and cumbersome provider-created processes
- 32% of patients report experiencing health complications due to postponing prescription refills
- 81% of patients believe there should be more self-service options for scheduling appointments with their medical provider
- 84% would prefer to speak with an AI assistant rather than wait on hold for a live human agent
- 66% of patients expect their healthcare provider to employ generative AI technologies to enable better online and phone support – this year
“Our Voice of the Patient report clearly shows that patients are ready for more advanced, AI-powered healthcare experiences to reduce their pain points and improve their experience with their providers,” said Israel Krush, CEO and Co-Founder at Hyro. “They’re demanding the same level of convenience in healthcare that they experience in other industries, and providers who fail to meet these expectations risk patient disengagement and potentially exacerbating negative health outcomes of their patients.”