Women wearing face masks checking their phones
Mohamed Hassan | Pixabay

Biotechnology

A new CDC bot will tell you what to do if you have coronavirus symptoms

Health authorities around the world are using chatbots to keep people informed.

Mar 24, 2020
Women wearing face masks checking their phones
Mohamed Hassan | Pixabay

The news: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has launched an online bot that people can use to decide what to do if they have potential coronavirus symptoms like a fever, cough, or shortness of breath. The hope is the self-checker bot will act as a form of triage for increasingly strained health-care services. The number of recorded cases in the US has surged past 46,000, the most after China and Italy.

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How it works: The bot asks users questions like their age, gender, and location, any symptoms they’re experiencing, and whether they may have encountered someone diagnosed with Covid-19. On the basis of their replies, it recommends the best next step. There are a variety of responses, from “Call 911” to “Stay home and take care of yourself.” The bot is not supposed to replace assessment by a doctor and isn’t intended to be used for diagnosis or treatment purposes, but it could help figure out who most urgently needs medical attention and relieve some of the pressure on hospitals. It was created using Microsoft Azure’s Healthcare Bot software.

Rise of the bots: Health authorities around the world are using chatbots to answer people’s pressing questions about coronavirus. The World Health Organization has partnered with WhatsApp to give people reliable information. If you text +41 79 893 1892 over WhatsApp, the WHO will reply with a menu of options offering infection statistics, debunked myths, travel advice, and so on. India has built a similar bot using WhatsApp too, and the UK’s National Health Service is planning to do the same.