Three steps to Physical AI
Configure for your department
Upload wayfinding info, procedure FAQs, medication guides, or discharge instructions. AI answers general education — never personal health data.
Place QPR Codes in-facility
Stickers on equipment, signage at intersections, cards in discharge packets. Each QR is scoped to its context.
Patients scan & understand
"What is an MRI?" "Where is the pharmacy?" "What should I not eat before surgery?" — answered instantly, no staff interruption needed.
Every surface, a new touchpoint
See how teams like yours deploy Physical AI across their locations.
Hospital Wayfinding
Complex campuses become navigable. AI guides patients and visitors to any department, floor, or service.
- Natural language directions
- Multi-building campus support
- Parking & transport guidance
Procedure Education
Equipment QR codes explain what a device does, what a procedure involves, and what to expect — reducing patient anxiety.
- Procedure explainer in plain language
- "What to expect" guides
- Post-procedure care reminders
Discharge Instructions
Discharge packet QR code answers follow-up care, medication, and appointment scheduling questions at home.
- Medication reminders & info
- Follow-up care Q&A
- Emergency escalation guidance
Waiting Room Education
Turn waiting time into informed-patient time. Scan a QR on the chair to learn about your upcoming procedure.
- Condition & procedure education
- Pre-visit checklist reminders
- Insurance & billing FAQs
Compliance-Friendly Design
All QPortal agents are scoped to general education only — no personal health data, no HIPAA surface area.
- No PHI collected or stored
- General education scope only
- Audit-ready conversation logs
Multilingual Patient Support
Serve diverse patient populations in their preferred language — auto-detected from browser settings.
- 20+ languages auto-detected
- Cultural context-aware responses
- Family-friendly explanations
reduction in basic-info calls to nursing staff
“Our nurses were spending 8 minutes per patient call answering basic questions about procedures. We put QPR codes on the waiting room chairs — patients arrive better informed, and our staff time freed up significantly.”