home Customer Experience How AI is reshaping the patient experience in Australia?

How AI is reshaping the patient experience in Australia?

The future of healthcare in Australia promises a patient journey and experience defined by seamless integration, proactive care, and intelligent support, powered by technologies like Artificial Intelligence (AI). This transformation moves away from fragmented, reactive care to a highly coordinated, predictive, and patient-centric model.

Dr Amith Shetty, Emergency Physician and Clinical Director in the System Sustainability and Performance division at NSW Ministry of Health, comments, “In the future, a patient’s journey from a GP visit to a hospital stay will be defined by seamless integration, proactive care, and intelligent support, all powered by AI. It starts at the GP clinic, where AI-enabled decision support tools analyse real-time patient data, flag early warning signs, and suggest evidence-based interventions”. 

The future patient journey  From GP to hospital stay

The patient experience is set to  be fundamentally reshaped by AI-driven continuity and precision across multiple touchpoints.The journey begins at the general practitioner (GP) clinic, where AI-enabled decision support tools will be standard. These tools will analyse the patient’s real-time and longitudinal data, flagging early warning signs and suggesting evidence-based interventions. 

Dr Amith Shetty

According to Dr Shetty, the GP’s clinical judgement will be enhanced, not replaced, allowing them to initiate timely referrals or even virtual consults with hospital specialists, often within the same day. “When a hospital admission becomes necessary, AI-driven triage systems optimise bed allocation and bypass unnecessary ED delays. The hospital team receives a full digital handover, including predictive analytics on likely complications or social determinants of health that may affect recovery. During the stay, AI tools support clinicians with diagnostic imaging interpretation, medication reconciliation, and even personalised discharge planning. Care navigators, supported by conversational AI, guide patients through their options in culturally and linguistically appropriate ways.”

The entire interaction is captured in a shared care record, enriched by AI summarisation and natural language processing, ensuring every provider sees the same story, thus dramatically reducing duplication, testing, and clinical error.

The system remains proactive post-discharge. Remote monitoring devices feed data into AI algorithms that detect deterioration early and immediately alert care teams. “Virtual assistants help patients manage medications, appointments, and lifestyle changes at home. Primary care providers receive AI-curated updates and risk scores, enabling proactive outreach. The result is a highly collaborative ecosystem—hospitals, GPs, community health, and private providers—all connected and collaborating in real time, with AI as the silent orchestrator ensuring continuity, safety, and patient empowerment”.

 Critical factors for patient-centricity

While technology is a key enabler, creating a truly patient-centric healthcare system in Australia requires focusing on fundamental, human, and structural factors. 

“Healthcare is all about touch – touching patients’ lives. There will always be a need for the workforce to deliver care in person. Australia’s geography will require us to have a distributed workforce, so while virtual hospitals and clinicians can remotely review and manage patients, there needs to be a ground force to deliver the interventions. A digitally capable health and technology workforce is critical to be able to build and maintain our digital platforms and build local digital tools and innovations that will drive us further”, says Dr Shetty. 

“Other factors that are critical include funding models, interoperability standards, and steering away from EMR-centric views of the world. We also need to factor in governance, digital-first culture, patient-informed design and the development of digital tools”. 

AI-powered virtual avatars

The use of AI-powered virtual avatars may represents a significant step forward, especially in aged care and chronic disease management.  This avatar acts as a personalised, conversational AI companion embedded in a smart device or robot. 

“Imagine an elderly patient living alone with early-stage dementia. In the past, their care relied heavily on intermittent home visits, phone calls, and paper-based reminders often leading to missed medications, social isolation, and preventable hospitalisations. Today, that same patient can interact daily with a virtual avatar: a personalised, conversational AI companion embedded in a smart device or robot that speaks their language, remembers their preferences, and gently guides them through their day.”

This promises to provide continuous, personalised engagement that was previously impossible without a 24/7 human carer. 

 Empowerment over alarm

To ensure that predictive consultations and biomarkers are empowering and not overwhelming or anxiety-inducing, patient co-design is paramount.

“This is where patient co-design of solutions is key, so the biomarkers and predictive consultations or deterioration donot become another set of alerts that patients and clinicians ignore. Designing tools into virtual avatars that the patients and their families build trust with is key to their companion avatars, almost like a conversational agent – e.g. Hello Richard, I can see you are a bit more breathless than usual and you haven’t seen your GP in a few months. Keeping in mind your heart condition, would you like me to book an appointment with Dr James, your cardiologist, soon?”

The biggest challenges to change in the Australian healthcare sector

The biggest challenge facing the Australian healthcare sector in adopting these innovations, according Dr Shetty, is not funding or workforce training alone, but a lack of cultural and executive intellectual ability to understand the strategy and architecture needed to deliver digital innovations and AI at scale.

“Vendors tend to lead conversations and product innovation, rather than investing in platforms that support an ecosystem of tailored products for services. No single product can or will deliver all solutions for healthcare – everything needs to work in conjunction”. .

Technological advancements, while promising, can significantly widen the healthcare gap for regional, remote, and vulnerable populations if their implementation is not carefully planned and equity-focused. This widening often stems from barriers related to access, affordability, digital literacy, and cultural relevance. Dr Shetty advises, “To ensure that technological advancements like AI, robotics, and virtual care don’t widen the healthcare gap, especially for regional, remote, and vulnerable populations, we need to start with intentional design and inclusive policy. Technology must be deployed as a tool for equity, not just efficiency. That means co-designing solutions with communities, not for them and ensuring that digital infrastructure, literacy, and culturally safe models of care are embedded from the outset. 

Mark Atterby

Mark Atterby has 18 years media, publishing and content marketing experience.