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Waiting-room computers offer Web, info

Handheld devices aim to make doctor’s office visits more productive

Image: Kyle Piechucki
Kyle Piechucki, CEO and President of InfoSlate, demonstrates one of his company's touch-screen tablets, which are marketed to doctors for use in their offices by patients waiting for appointments.
Mark Lennihan / AP
By Tim Paradis
updated 4:11 p.m. ET Feb. 26, 2008

NEW YORK - For many parents-to-be the excitement and nervousness is often difficult to contain. For Kyle Piechucki, the wait was decidedly boring.

Piechucki, now a father of two who lives in Oyster Bay, N.Y., is no deadbeat — he was ecstatic over the births of each of his children but simply grew tired of interminable waits at doctors' offices. The boredom led Piechucki, 35, to develop a computer for those trapped in the purgatory of the waiting room.

His thin, handheld devices join a parade of efforts aimed at turning once-fallow minutes in the waiting room into productive time for patients and, of course, advertisers. The touch-screen tablets rely on wireless Internet connections to deliver basic information about medical conditions and treatments as well as Internet access.

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Advertising in doctors' offices isn't new, of course, but thanks to technology, it's becoming increasingly targeted at individual patients. The thinking goes that bored or curious patients will be eager for fresh alternatives to the waiting room doldrums.

"People are frustrated with waiting. They're bored. They don't want to pick up a stale magazine," said Piechucki, who started distributing the computers through his company, InfoSlate, last year. InfoSlate has placed more than 250 devices in doctors' offices in several states. By year-end he expects to have about 800 tablets in operation and he expects to break even by early 2009.

Companies that have had a presence in waiting rooms for years are also homing in on individual patients. Healthy Advice Networks, a Cincinnati company, places digital screens on waiting room walls and plans to soon introduce digital technology to connect one-on-one with a patient. The company says its existing screens, which air a mix of health information and advertising, reach 100 million patients annually.

Smaller and cheaper computers are making it easier for companies to reach individual patients. Piechucki contends patients are drawn to InfoSlate not just because they can use the computers to complete medical histories and questionnaires, but also to check e-mail and surf the Internet. Doctors also can customize the devices to offer information such as physician biographies and office policies.

While doctors might be weary of the idea of turning a waiting room into a scaled-down Kinko's, InfoSlate, like Healthy Advice Networks, doesn't charge for the services and instead draws revenue from advertising.

"As a doctor one of the most common complaints you get is 'My time is valuable too,'" said Scott Zimmer, director of hand and upper extremity surgery for University Hospitals medical practices in Cleveland. He said patients appreciate having a tool that can make them feel productive while they wait.


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