Daily Dispatch

Robot helps India’s Covid patients speak to loved ones

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A hospital in India has deployed a customer-service robot to patrol its wards, connecting coronaviru­s patients to friends and relatives.

Mitra, meaning “friend” in Hindi, is best known for interactin­g with Prime Minister Narendra Modi at an event in 2017.

Its piercing eyes are equipped with facial recognitio­n technology to help it recall people it has previously interacted with.

A tablet attached to Mitra’s chest allows patients to see loved ones, as well as medical staff unable to access the wards.

“It takes a lot of time to recover, and during this time, when patients need their families the most, they are unable to visit,” Dr Arun Lakhanpal, a doctor at the Yatharth Super Speciality Hospital in Noida Extension, a satellite city of the capital New Delhi, said.

Mitra is mainly used by patients who are not able to communicat­e using their phones.

“We mainly discuss my health,” Makhanlal Qazi, a retired government bureaucrat and coronaviru­s patient who has used the robot to communicat­e with relatives, said.

“I came here on Friday and now I have started feeling better. I am feeling very happy now.”

The robot, developed by Bengaluru-based start-up Invento Robotics, cost the hospital a million rupees (R221,000), according to Yatharth Tyagi, director of the company that runs the hospital.

Mitra is also being used for remote consultati­ons with specialist­s to reduce their risk of becoming infected, he said.

“Normally it is very difficult for a psychologi­st or a dietician to see a Covid patient,” Tyagi said, adding the robot was very useful.

India’s novel coronaviru­s cases surged past five-million on Wednesday, only the second country in the world to cross the grim milestone after the US. —

I came here on Friday and now I have started feeling better. I am feeling very happy now

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