E-Healthcare and Chatbots in Preliminary Diagnosis: A Survey
Gokul Dudani, Tanu Shree, Kajal Singh, Anushka Singh Chauhan
Department of Computer Science & Engineering,
Galgotias College of Engineering & Technology, Greater Noida, India
Keywords: E-Health, Health Chatbot, Preliminary Diagnosis, Smart Communication, Conversational Agents (CA)
Abstract: E-healthcare, also known as Mobile Health is a healthcare practice that incorporates electronics & other
technologies in public health domain and is proposed to overcome geographical, temporal and organizational
barriers of the traditional healthcare architecture. A Health Chatbot is essentially an integral part of E-
Health. It is an Artificial Intelligence (AI) program capable of establishing a smart communication with the
user via auditory or textural methods regarding healthcare issues. These chatbots can be utilized for
providing preliminary diagnosis, as a consequence of which the current human workforce crisis in the
medical field may also be significantly reduced. This paper presents a survey of various characteristics of
chatbots and their existing applications in healthcare. It also includes a systematic review of existing
research on related domains and attempts to outline the essential research findings that are crucial to be
addressed. It provides insight into the desirable features of a chatbot for acceptance by both the doctor and
the patient. A sincere attempt has also been made to study the existing challenges and E-Health and
Chatbots future scope in providing a preliminary diagnosis.
1 INTRODUCTION
According to the World Health Organization
(1948) Health is defined as "A state of complete
physical, mental and social well-being and not
merely the presence of disease or infirmity".
Since the dawn of human civilization,
accessibility to healthcare facilities has been a
fundamental right of a human being. In a world of
almost 7.5 billion people comprising vast diversity,
it poses an enormous challenge to the healthcare
delivery system. Moreover, due to the workforce's
uneven distribution globally, many people residing
in remote locations have minimal or no accessibility
to the healthcare infrastructure. The traditional
healthcare facilities are expensive and are usually
high-priced by the socially and economically
underprivileged and marginalized families.
E-Healthcare is a relatively recent healthcare
practice that incorporates electronics & other public
health technologies to overcome geographical,
temporal and organizational barriers of the
traditional healthcare architecture. Mobile Health
(m-Health) also aims to introduce smartphones and
other technological gadgets in the healthcare system.
It supports two-way communication; it engages user
interactively through a mechanism of proper
feedback and assists the doctors in suggesting
medical advice to the patients.
Health Chatbot is essentially the pillar on which E-
Healthcare system depends. Formally, a health
chatbot can be defined as- "An artificial intelligent
(AI) program that is capable of establishing a
smart communication with the user via auditory or
textural methods regarding healthcare issues".
There are a variety of chatbots used in the
healthcare domain. For example, Ada (Ada Health
GmbH 2018) enables its users to respond to
several diagnostic suggestions and identify over
1500 clinical pictures and 200 rare diseases (Flick
2018). Ever since the concept of health chatbots
has come into the limelight, its capabilities and
applications have increased. Its applications
include: -
Reducing healthcare spending (increasing
affordability).
Allow early detection of disease (preliminary
disease diagnosis).
Improve clinical outcomes validated in a real
clinical-context.
Shortly, health chatbots will become the primary
contact for disease diagnosis and clinical treatment.
Dudani, G., Shree, T., Singh, K. and Chauhan, A.
E-Healthcare and Chatbots in Preliminary Diagnosis: A Survey.
DOI: 10.5220/0010562200003161
In Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Advanced Computing and Software Engineering (ICACSE 2021), pages 39-44
ISBN: 978-989-758-544-9
Copyright
c
2022 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
39
Table 1.
S.No. Reference Keywords Research Outcomes
1
Chin-Yan-Huang,
Ming-Chan Yang,
Chin-Yu Huang,
Yu- Jui Chen,
Meng-Lin Wu,
Kai-Wen Chen
Overweight,obese, smartphone,
mobile app, public health, artificial
intelligence, chatbot
The paper proposes a chatbot supported Smart
Wireless Interactive Health Care System (SWITCH-
es) with an objective of weight control and
spreading health awareness. The system can
establish smart communication and has a wide-
reaching approach for users who require medical
consultation.
2
Keng Siau, Weiyu
Wang, 2018
Health Chatbots, healthcare, trust,
artificial intelligence
The paper discusses the factors that affect the trust-
building process and develops a trust model that
depicts the building process between the user and
the health chatbots.
3
Arvind Kasthuri,
2018
Awareness,Accessibility,
Workforce Crisis, Affordability,
Accountability
The paper presents an overview of the existing
challenges to the healthcare system in India. The
limitations are expressed in five A's: Awareness,
Accessibility, Absence of Workforce or Human
Power Crisis, Affordability and Accountability.
4
Sven Laumer,
Christian Maier,
Fabian Tobias
Gubler, 2019
Conversational agents, disease
diagnosis, adoption, chatbot,
mHealth, UTAUT
The research focuses on developing a research
model that can be used as a basis for the acceptance
of health chatbots or conversational agents (CA) for
disease diagnosis in the medical domain. The model
comprises the UTAUT2 (Unified Theory of
Acceptance and Use of Technology) factors, newly
identified factors, and re-defining other factors to
b
etter fit a consumer context.
5
Ahmed Fadhil,
Gianluca Schiavo
Design Patterns, Bots,
Conversational UIs, Dialogue
Systems, Health and Wellbeing
The paper introduces CA-CUI (Conversational User
Interface) for healthcare. It also describes several
design principles and other complex elements for
building emotionally intelligent health chatbots for
interaction with humans. The design principles are
presented after a careful literature review of relevant
research works.
6
Flora Amato,
Stefano Marrone,
Vincenzo Moscato,
Gabriele Piantadosi,
Antonio Picariello,
and Carlo Sansone
eHealth, Big Data, Deep
Learning,Watson Decision Support
System, Prevention Pathways
The objective of the research was to study the
effectiveness of the classic human-machine
interaction for eHealth applications. Proposes an
approach of a chatbot that can interact with patients
as a medical professional validated in a real clinical
context to overcome the cons of restricted and
biased interaction between the human and the
computer software. It also proposes HOLMes
(Health Online Medical Suggestion), which is an
eHealth recommendation system.
7
Nivedita Bhirud,
Subhash Tatalle,
Sayali Randive,
Shubham Nayar,
2019
Chatbot, Healthcare Domain, ML
(Machine Learning), NLG (Natural
Language Generation), NLU
(Natural Language Understanding),
Smart Communication, Virtual
Communicatin
g
Frien
d
The paper presents a discussion about the various
NLU, NLG and ML techniques which must be
incorporated in health chatbots to overcome the
monotonous interaction between the user and the
chatbot and make the m-Health system more smart
and communicative.
8
Krishnendu Rarhi,
Abhishek
Bhattacharya,
Abhishek Mishra,
Krishna Mandal,
2017
Chatbot, Health
The research objective is to provide a design for
health chatbot that can provide disease diagnosis and
treatment through the user's symptoms to the
system. It replaces many existing chatbots and gives
a realistic experience to the user during the
interaction with the chatbot.
9
Divya S, Indumathi
V, Ishwarya S,
Priyasankari M,
kalpana Devi S, 2018
ArtificialIntelligence,
Prediction,Pattern matching,
Disease, Query processing
The paper emphasizes developing a chatbot with
improved symptom recognition and disease
diagnosis features with AI's help (Artificial
Intelligence).
ICACSE 2021 - International Conference on Advanced Computing and Software Engineering
40
Table 1 (Cont.).
S.No. Reference Keywords Research Outcomes
10
Rashmi Dharwadkar,
Neeta A. Deshpande,
2018
Medical Chatbot Natural
LanguageProcessing,
PorterStemmer Algorithm, Word
Order SimilarityBetween
Sentences
The paper proposes a system through which users
can consult about the dosage of drugs through voice.
The system can effectively process the query and
can generate and display all medicine names. The
paper recommends incorporating various data
anal
y
tic techni
q
ues for buildin
g
the s
y
stem.
11
Rohan Jagtap, Kshitij
Phulare , Mrunal
Kurhade, Kiran
Shrikant Gawande
Teacher Forcing,DL(Deep
Learning), Inference Model,
Tensor Flow,Feed-Forward
NeuralNetwork,
SoftMax, Word-Embedding,
Conversation Context, GRU,
Diagnosis, Categorical Cross-
Entro
py
The idea presented in the study is to develop an AI-
powered chatbot which can extract the keywords
from the symptoms provided by the user and try to
diagnose the disease accordingly. It takes into
consideration the user's conversational and replies
accordingly to better fit the consumer context.
2 LITERATURE SURVEY
This section presents a literature survey of existing
researches. For each paper, a sincere attempt has
been made to summarize its main characteristics,
salient features and contributions. An effort has also
been made to prepare a draft of common jargons and
recurrent patterns. Moreover, it includes crucial
research observations and inferences that should be
addressed.
3 CHARACTERISTICS OF A
DESIRABLE HEATH
CHATBOT
This section focuses on the desirable characteristics
of health chatbots for eHealth applications. This
investigation aims to develop a human-machine
interaction mechanism with an approach that
leverages a human being validated in a real clinical
context.
There are certain factors which affect the adoption
of health chatbots in a real environment:
Performance Expectations: the degree to
which chatbot can benefit the customer in providing
intended health and other related services.
Effort Expectations: the extent of simplicity
associated while interacting with a chatbot.
Social Influences: the willingness of an
individual to seek medical assistance from a health
chatbot.
Facilitating Conditions: the availability of
resources or support mechanisms to effectively
interact with a conversational agent (CA) for health-
related FAQs.
Hedonic Motivations: refers to the degree of
customer satisfaction after interaction with health
chatbot.
Price Values: the cognitive trade-off between
the applications' perceived benefits and the
monetary cost of using them.
There are several other characteristics which should
be present in a desirable health chatbot. An ideal
health chatbot should be user compatible; it should
be practical and accurate in giving health
suggestions and providing disease diagnosis.
Interactivity with the user must be high. It should
also maintain integrity, privacy and ensure the
security of user's data. The trust-building process
with the user is also one of the critical features of a
desirable health chatbot. Health chatbots must also
be reliable, transparent, and accountable for any
recommendations and diagnosis provided by it.
Few other traits must be kept in mind while
designing a chatbot for medical applications. A
health chatbot designed for specific applications that
suit the needs of the customer should consider:
User Demographics
Chatbot Application Domain
Data Interaction
Dialogue Structure and so forth
Unfortunately, there has not been much discussion of
the critical design elements related to health
chatbots. Moreover, recent studies lack highlighting
crucial issues and challenges faced during the
development of realistic conversational agents.
When taken into consideration, these characteristics
can make the system more capable of establishing
smart communication with the user and can prove
fruitful for counselling and providing other health
E-Healthcare and Chatbots in Preliminary Diagnosis: A Survey
41
recommendations. These chatbots can be carefully
deployed in the medical industry to predict diseases
and provide a preliminary diagnosis to the patients
who can play a crucial role in saving human lives.
4 CHALLENGES TO
HEALTHCARE SYSTEM
There has been a glorious tradition of public
healthcare since the beginning of human civilization.
It can be seen in references to the study of the Indus
Valley Civilisation (5500-1300 BC) where the
concept of "Arogya" or holistic well-being has been
illustrated.
In the current scenario, the population of the world
has been multiplying. The population spectrum
presents enormous diversity and poses an enormous
challenge to the existing healthcare system.
Moreover, since the population distribution is
uneven, it becomes challenging for people living in
remote locations to have accessibility to the
healthcare facilities. There have also been
challenges in delivering healthcare to the so-called
"everyone" which includes the socially
marginalized, disadvantaged and the economically
deprived people of the society.
While there are many challenges, this section briefly
presents some (five A's) for the consideration: -
Awareness: can be described as a general
understanding of an individual regarding health
issues. Lack of awareness is one of the critical
reasons for challenges in the healthcare domain.
Low educational status, poor literacy rate and low
priority for health in the people are the key reasons
for lack of awareness.
Accessibility: can be defined as the
opportunity for availing any facility or service.
Physical access is one of the determining factors of
accessibility is defined as "the ability to enter a
healthcare facility within 5km from the place of
residence or work". Periodic surveys have revealed
that people living in remote locations have minimal
or no healthcare infrastructure access due to
temporal & geographical limitations.
Absence or Workforce Crisis: a 2011 study
estimated that approximately 20 healthcare workers
are over a population of 10,000 people in India.
Moreover, there is a non-uniform distribution of
healthcare workers over the region. It has been
observed that the concentration of healthcare
resources in bare areas is dense as compared to
mountainous or other remote regions.
Affordability or Cost of Healthcare: can be
thought of as the ability to avail healthcare
resources. The public sector usually offers
healthcare services at very cheap or no cost but is
often unreliable and inefficient. On the other hand,
the private sector offers services at a very high cost
and is generally the seeker's first choice unless
he/she cannot afford it. Thus, the economically
deprived section of the society is forced to make
unreliable and inefficient public healthcare services.
Thus, customer choice and satisfaction are often
neglected, which is a big challenge to the healthcare
system.
Accountability or Risk of it: it is the set of
procedures by which one takes responsibility for
actions and its consequences. Generally, the private
sector is often held more accountable as compared to
the public health domain. The lack of trust and
communication gap between the seeker and the
public health sector poses a challenge to the existing
system.
There are numerous other factors than the five
mentioned above that present a challenge to
traditional healthcare architecture. As we move into
the future, there is an urgent need of looking out for
healthcare alternatives that should rule out the
present limitations and ensure universal health and
well-being.
An emphasis has to be made on the significance
of "Preliminary Diagnosis" in the medical field that
can be crucial in saving patients' lives and accurate
health delivery, which is currently missing from the
existing framework. E-heath and health chatbots can
be utilized to fulfil the purpose and provide medical
professionals with accurate results.
5 FUTURE SCOPE OF E-HEALTH
AND CHATBOTS
E-Health is a term used to describe the introduction
of electronics & other technologies in the traditional
healthcare infrastructure. Also, known as Mobile
Health (mHealth), it aims at overcoming the
geographical, temporal and organizational barriers
of the existing healthcare system. Health chatbots are
an integral part of mHealth. They are an Artificial
Intelligence (AI) program that provides users with
accurate disease diagnosis and their cure based on
the system's symptoms. It supports two-way
communication; it engages user interactively
through a mechanism of proper feedback and assists
the doctors in suggesting medical advice to the
patients.
ICACSE 2021 - International Conference on Advanced Computing and Software Engineering
42
Figure 1: The Operational Concept of Health Chatbots
There are many chatbots which are currently
providing their services in the healthcare domain.
For example, Endurance is a chatbot which helps
users suffering from a disease known as Dementia.
The current limitations in the existing healthcare
delivery system can be overcome by deploying
health chatbots in the medical industry and
transitioning from health to e-health. The future
scope of e-health and health chatbots is discussed
below:
E-health and related conversational agents
(CA) can provide general healthcare FAQs that can
spread awareness among the public. For example,
MedWhat is a question-answer chatbot that answers
basic healthcare FAQs and provides information
related to various diseases and their symptoms.
Specific mobile applications can be used in
public health to keep track of nutrition, diet
planning, physical, mental & social activities
deemed more accurate than relying on one's analysis.
Recent advancements in technology have led
health chatbots to overcome the disadvantages of
classic interaction between doctors and patients, thus
removing bias and allowing the patient to a freer and
comfortable interaction paradigm.
Moreover, there are plans to create advanced
versions of chatbots that will emulate medical
professionals on one side of the communication in a
real clinical context and focus on improving the
health chatbots' human-like behavior.
Various data processing and analytics algorithms are
being used to transform healthcare, aiming to
provide modern digital healthcare solutions to the
patients. The whole e-healthcare delivery process is
more accurate and efficient, less expensive and of
high quality.
Health chatbots are highly reliable and are
also capable of establishing smart communication
with the user. Moreover, the recommendation
building procedure is entirely transparent and
explainable, contributing to the mHealth
infrastructure's accountability. It also helps in the
development of the trust-building process between
the health chatbots and the users.
Medical consultation involves user's data and
thus data protection, privacy and security become a
matter of prime importance which is effectively
maintained by e-health and health chatbots.
With the ever-growing advancements in technology,
health chatbots' capabilities have been growing
significantly and are likely to become the primary
point of contact for medical consultation and
diagnosis. Medical professionals would be using
health chatbots as a supporting tool for preliminary
disease diagnosis and medical consultation. On the
other hand, patients would use chatbots and mHealth
facilities for healthcare- related FAQs and other
recommendations.
6 SCOPE OF HEALTH
CHATBOTS IN PRELIMINARY
DIAGNOSIS
Diagnosis is the process of identifying a disease,
condition or injury from its sign and symptoms.
Preliminary diagnosis is an initial stage of medical
diagnosis that occurs before any or little symptoms.
Preliminary diagnosis is essential as it allows timely
detection of diseases and can play a crucial role in
saving the patient's life. Health chatbots can play an
essential role in providing a preliminary diagnosis to
the patients. It would enable accurate diagnosis as
well as treatment of diseases which will eventually
improve clinical outcomes.
According to research, approximately 60% of the
visits made to a medical practitioner are for small-
scale and straightforward diseases. These include
common cold, infections, headache, abdominal pains
and allergies etc. These diseases can be easily cured
at home using traditional home remedies. If ignored,
these diseases can act as base for several deadly
diseases like tuberculosis, cardiac arrest, brain
strokes, etc. Here preliminary diagnosis comes into
practical application.
There are a variety of chatbots which provide
services in the medical domain. But the majority of
these chatbots provide answers to general healthcare
FAQs only.
The future scope of these chatbots would be to
accurately predict the disease from the patient’s
early symptoms so that timely treatment could be
E-Healthcare and Chatbots in Preliminary Diagnosis: A Survey
43
provided, which would be crucial in saving lives.
Moreover, treatment of many small-scale diseases
could be directly provided by the chatbots, which
would reduce the current crisis of medical
professionals in the health sector.
7 CONCLUSION
The paper attempts to present a discussion on
eHealth and Health Chatbots in providing a
preliminary diagnosis to the patients. It also
describes various flaws existing in the current
architecture of the healthcare system and provides an
insight into the future scope of eHealth and utilizing
health chatbots to ensure universal health. The
research study then discusses the characteristics
present in an ideal health chatbot for acceptance by
both the doctor and the patient. The paper then
concludes with a systematic literature review of the
existing researches related to the field and sincere
efforts were put to outline the vital research findings
which were considered essential to be addressed.
REFERENCES
Ahmed Fadhil, Gianluca Schiavo, "Designing for Health
Chatbots", University of Trento, Italy
Arvind Kasthuri, "Challenges to Healthcare in India - The
Five A's", Indian J Community Med. 2018 Jul-Sep;
43(3): 141–143.
Chin-Yan-Huang, Ming-Chan Yang, Chin-Yu Huang, Yu-
Jui Chen, Meng-Lin Wu, Kai-Wen Chen "A Chatbot-
supported Smart Wireless Interactive Healthcare
System for Weight Control & Health Promotion",
Taiwan
Divya S, Indumathi V, Ishwarya S, Priyasankari M,
Kalpana Devi S, 2018, "A Self-Diagnosis Medical
Chatbot Using Artificial Intelligence", 2018
Flora Amato, Stefano Marrone, Vincenzo Moscato,
Gabriele Piantadosi, Antonio Picariello, and Carlo
Sansone, "Chatbots meets eHealth: automatizing
healthcare", DIETI - University of Naples Federico II,
via Claudio 21, 80125 Napoli (Italy)
Keng Siau, Weiyu Wang, "Trust in Health Chatbots",
December 2018
Krishnendu Rarhi, Abhishek Bhattacharya, Abhishek
Mishra, Krishna Mandal, "Automated Medical
Chatbots in Healthcare Industry”, January 2017
Montana SP, Magure T, Kandawasvika G. Geographical
access, transport and referral systems. In: Hussein J,
McCaw- Binns A, Webber R, editors. I Maternal and
Perinatal Health in Developing Countries. CAB
International e-books; 2012. pp. 139–54.
NationalCancerInstitute,https://cancer.gov.in/publications/
dictionaries/cancer/terms/def/diagnosis
Nivedita Bhirud, Subhash Tatalle, Sayali Randive,
Shubham Nayar, "A Literature Review on Chatbots in
Healthcare Domain", August 2019
Rao M, Rao KD, Shiva Kumar AK, Chatterjee M,
Sundararaman T., "Human resources for health in
India", The Lancet. 2011; 377:587–98.
Rashmi Dharwadkar, Neeta A. Deshpande, "A Medical
ChatBot", June 2018
Rohan Jagtap, Kshitij Phulare, Mrunal Kurhade, Kiran
Shrikant Gawande, "Health Conversational Chatbot for
Medical Diagnosis"
Roy S., "Primary health care in India", Health Popul
Perspect Issues. 1985; 8:135–67.
Sven Laumer, Christian Maier, Fabian Tobias Gubler,
"Chatbot Acceptance in Healthcare: Explaining User
Adoption of Conversational Agents for Disease
Diagnosis", May 2019
Valentine, D.B. and Powers, TL (2013), "Generation y
values and lifestyle segments", Journal of Consumer
Marketing, Vol. 30 No. 7, pp. 597-606.
Venkatesh, V., Thong, J. Y. L., and Xu, X. 2012.
"Consumer acceptance and use of information
technology: extending the unified theory of acceptance
and use of technology," MIS Quarterly (36:1), pp.
157–178.
World Health Organization (WHO), no.2, p. 100, 1948
ICACSE 2021 - International Conference on Advanced Computing and Software Engineering
44