AI-Driven Rapid Training of Health Emergency Response Workers
Using AI-driven patient simulations and learning analytics, Team Alelo’s solution rapidly trains workers for surge responses to public health emergencies. Data from trainees and practitioners are used to train, evaluate, and improve the simulation models, and to adapt training to keep pace with rapidly evolving health emergency conditions.
Dr. Lewis Johnson, President and CEO, Alelo Inc.
- Respond (Decrease transmission & spread), such as: Optimal preventive interventions & uptake maximization, Cutting through “infodemic” & enabling better response, Data-driven learnings for increased efficacy of interventions
Public health emergencies such as COVID-19 require a surge capacity of trained public health workers. During the COVID-19 pandemic, it was suddenly necessary to hire 100,000 contact tracers in the US alone. Public health workers are now needed to administer vaccines, overcome vaccine hesitancy, and control new outbreaks of infection. The WHO projects a shortage of 12.9 million healthcare workers by 2035, making it difficult to combat emerging public health threats. Distrust of health workers has contributed to health crises such as Ebola. The key to effective healthcare emergency response is rapid training of sufficient numbers of public health workers who are trusted in the communities that they serve, e.g., community health workers (CHWs). Such training could build local capacity and reduce the strain on public health departments and international public health organizations. CHWs have communication skills that are critical for effective emergency response. Unfortunately, conventional training methods are not designed to train people quickly in critical public health competencies. Academic programs focus on academic knowledge and do not provide enough training in practical skills that can be applied immediately in a health emergency. Moreover, health emergency conditions can evolve rapidly, and so training must quickly adapt to keep pace.
We target workers who wish to be retrained as community health workers (CHWs), and CHWs who require updated training for new health emergencies. CHWs play an important role in the healthcare team due to their understanding of the local community, and the WHO has highlighted their role in augmenting health systems around the world. Local-community CHWs can gain trust in ways that government and foreign aid workers often cannot. Our solution provides rapid training so that trainees can quickly qualify to participate in health emergency response. This is particularly important in the post-pandemic economy, in which many jobs have been eliminated and workers have been dislocated. To refine our solution, we are interviewing both practicing community health professionals and displaced workers seeking employment in public health, to understand the barriers to employment that they face and their potential for transitioning into public health. Our pilot project addresses communities in Hampton Roads, Virginia that are underemployed and are especially at risk due to COVID-19. This includes minority populations as well as military veterans. We then plan to expand globally, in partnership with healthcare organizations operating in various countries.
- Pilot: A project, initiative, venture, or organisation deploying its research, product, service, or business/policy model in at least one context or community

President and CEO