When tech meets human ingenuity
Enhancing training while conserving limited resources.
The first step was to brainstorm which parts of clinicians’ jobs might be an optimal use case for the new initiative. The team also needed to create a minimalistic virtual environment to keep the user focused on the training task at hand, while also making a hyper-realistic virtual dialysis machine —something that could be used repeatedly by trainees to boost their confidence without consuming limited resources.
The best fit for the needs and real-world constraints was dialysis machine set-up, also called stringing, a procedure involving 47 unique steps. It’s not simple or immediately intuitive, and learning each step is required to safely deliver treatment to each patient.
An Accenture team composed of designers, UX experts and metaverse specialists collaborated with clinical experts from DaVita to meticulously itemize each step, using existing training videos, detailed policies and procedures.
After just 12 weeks, what resulted was a virtual to-scale model of the machine as it appears in the clinic, with all the appropriate wires, saline bags, pH testing kits and other attachments. The model – which users experience via a VR headset – was designed to be as true to life as possible. It allows trainees to build muscle memory of the movements required to string the machine, because they’re reaching and crouching down, or leaning over at other times, in the exact same way they would on the clinic floor.
A valuable difference
The metaverse meets kidney care.
The sense that caregivers need more time to train is enhanced by the virtual learning solution, preparing them as much as possible for the actual experience of setting up a dialysis machine. Employee sentiment and morale in these areas is hugely important, as the healthcare industry (and many others) struggles with retention.
The project also demonstrates the value of an emerging trend of using virtual training solutions to teach hard skills. So far, this technology has been primarily used for soft skills training, so learnings from this endeavor will help inform both future use cases for DaVita as well as applications for companies in other industries. Any industry that places a premium on safety, for example, would be a candidate for introducing this type of training program.
Another potential development for DaVita is that the virtual experience allows DaVita clinicians to analyze its procedures and identify opportunities for process improvements and other efficiency gains. So, it has potential long-term value beyond this new training tool.