The Jerusalem Post

Start-up trains doctors as virus keeps students home

‘While for many students the semester has been lost, our students have been able to continue learning’

- • By ROSSELLA TERCATIN

the coronaviru­s pandemic has forced universiti­es all over the world to switch to remote learning, causing many disruption­s, especially to laboratori­es and practical courses. however, medical students training with the platform created by haifa-based company Virtual patient have been continuing to train and examine computer-generated patients as they always did, as the company’s Ceo adam Baruch told The Jerusalem Post.

“our software is Internet-based and can therefore be accessed from anywhere,” he explained. “the platform simulates patients, offers the students basic descriptio­n of the symptoms and requires them to deal with the different stages of diagnosing and treating.”

to company was establishe­d about 10 years ago by Baruch, an It expert, and arie oliven, professor at the ruth and Bruce rappaport Faculty of medicine at the technion in haifa.

the system has been fully employed for years at the technion, and is used at other schools in Israel as well. the company is also in conversati­on with several faculties of medicine around the world, including in the us, Canada and poland.

the platform can be used for training, allowing students to look back at their mistakes and try again to address a specific patient, but also for examinatio­ns. another advantage is that the results of the examinatio­ns are assessed by the machine, and therefore are provided in a completely objective way and are available immediatel­y.

Baruch highlighte­d that the platform relies on a sophistica­ted level of artificial intelligen­ce so that the situation is as close as possible to an interactio­n between a physician and a real person. For example, students are not presented with multiple choices to understand more about a patient’s symptoms, but instead have to ask real questions.

“We have been started working on remote learning many years ago and we are proud to see that this has proved to be an important direction,” the Ceo said. “While for many students the current semester has been lost, our students have been able to continue learning as before.”

this has included learning how to deal with possible coronaviru­s patients, Baruch added, since the technology can simulate all sorts of medical cases.

“I believe we will see more and more CoVId19 cases in our platform in the near future,” he concluded.

 ?? (Courtesy) ?? THE VIRTUAL PATIENT platform, which enables students to continue learning from afar while social distancing.
(Courtesy) THE VIRTUAL PATIENT platform, which enables students to continue learning from afar while social distancing.

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