AI voice assistants are computer programs that talk like humans using natural language processing. In healthcare, these AI systems can call patients to gather important health information. They collect blood pressure readings from people managing hypertension at home.
A recent study presented at the American Heart Association’s Hypertension Scientific Sessions 2025 showed how AI voice agents helped manage blood pressure for 2,000 adults. Most were 65 years or older and had high blood pressure. The AI system made automated calls in English and Spanish to ask patients for their blood pressure readings.
The study found that AI voice agents reached 85% of patients they contacted and completed 67% of calls. Sixty percent of these patients gave blood pressure readings that met compliance during the calls. Also, 68% of these readings met the standards for controlling blood pressure (CBP) quality measures. These results show good patient participation and accurate home monitoring through AI calls.
The AI approach helped medical teams close 1,939 gaps in controlling blood pressure. It also improved Medicare Advantage and HEDIS CBP ratings, going from a 1-Star to a 4-Star level—a 17% increase. This higher rating can lead to better reimbursement and indicates improved care quality.
Good hypertension care needs smooth sharing of blood pressure data between patients and doctors. AI voice assistants help by automatically gathering data and sending it straight into electronic health records (EHR).
When a patient gives their blood pressure reading during an AI call, the system uploads the information to the EHR. This makes it easy for doctors to see the data without extra work. Automation removes the need for manual data entry and lowers the chance of mistakes from handwritten or spoken reports.
The AI system can also detect unusual blood pressure numbers or symptoms like dizziness, chest pain, or blurred vision. If it finds such issues, the AI can quickly connect the patient to a licensed nurse or medical helper. Urgent cases get immediate attention, and less urgent ones are handled within 24 hours. This keeps care timely while avoiding too much pressure on clinicians.
Doctors can make better decisions using current, exact data stored in the health record. The automatic record-keeping also helps meet reporting rules set by Medicare and HEDIS. This helps medical groups follow regulations and earn rewards based on their care quality.
A big challenge for U.S. healthcare is how busy clinical staff get from doing repeated tasks. These tasks include reminder phone calls, recording patient vital signs, and following up on missed visits. AI voice assistants reduce this burden by automating these routine outreach tasks.
The 2025 AI study showed an 88.7% cut in cost per blood pressure reading when AI calls replaced manual calls by nurses. Savings come from needing fewer human hours for tasks that require lots of repeated talking. That lets nurses spend more time on patient care and harder clinical work.
Less workload also improves how work flows and helps reduce burnout among healthcare workers. Using AI voice calls to manage routine communication keeps patients involved without extra staff or interruptions.
Patients taking part is very important for managing hypertension well. This is especially true for home blood pressure checks where patient cooperation is key. The study with adults over 65 showed patients were happy with AI calls. They gave their experience a score over 9 out of 10 on average.
This shows AI can reach older patients well. It helps overcome problems like no rides, restricted access to healthcare locations, and language barriers. The AI voice system spoke in different languages like English and Spanish. This helped more patients take part, reflecting the diversity often seen in the U.S.
Healthcare leaders should note this shows technology does not have to reduce human connection. Instead, it gives a stable way to keep patients involved. This leads to better health checks and helps patients follow treatment plans more closely.
Health informatics combines nursing knowledge, data analysis, and IT. It forms the base for using AI voice assistants at clinics. It makes sure data from AI calls is saved, managed, and shared properly among healthcare workers.
Research by authors like Mohd Javaid, Abid Haleem, and Ravi Pratap Singh shows health informatics helps doctors get patient records quickly. It also allows hospital managers to watch how well care is done and keep up with rules.
Using health informatics tools helps teams work together. Data experts and IT staff help doctors by giving information about patient health trends and risks. When AI voice assistants are part of this system, patient call data goes into analytics. This helps find care gaps, send alerts, and create reports needed for rules.
Medical groups that build up their health informatics can use AI tools for not only hypertension but also for tracking other long-term illnesses, preventing diseases, and managing community health.
AI voice assistants do more than just collect blood pressure numbers. They also automate many tasks in preventive care and managing long-term conditions. AI automation helps clinic leaders and IT managers improve daily work in hypertension care.
For owners and leaders of medical practices in the U.S., using AI voice assistants in workflows means simpler tasks and more time for direct patient care. IT managers support these tools by keeping them well connected to existing EHR systems and following security rules like HIPAA.
Medical practices across the country face growing pressure to improve care quality while keeping costs down and handling fewer clinicians. AI voice assistants that work with health informatics address many problems. They help reach more patients, automate data entry, support clinical decisions in real time, and cut costs per action.
For administrators and owners, these systems boost patient follow-through, close gaps in hypertension care, and improve how well organizations perform on key quality targets. Tools that handle bilingual communication also help serve diverse patient groups in the U.S., supporting fairer health access.
IT managers play a key role in picking AI platforms that meet privacy and security rules, work smoothly with current EHRs, and can grow with the practice. They also manage data flow and work with clinical teams so AI results turn into useful actions.
Integrating AI voice assistants with electronic health records is a useful way for U.S. medical practices to improve hypertension management. These technologies automate patient contact, collect accurate blood pressure data, and help clinicians work better. They reduce costs, lower clinician workload, and support higher quality care. As healthcare changes, using AI within strong health informatics systems will be an important strategy for practices aiming to serve patients well and efficiently.
AI voice agents prompt and engage older adults to self-report accurate blood pressure readings during calls. These conversational agents use natural language processing to facilitate live or recent readings, improving the accuracy and completion rates of home blood pressure monitoring compared to traditional phone calls with healthcare professionals.
The study involved 2,000 adults, predominantly aged 65 or older (average age 72), with 61% women. All participants were receiving care for high blood pressure and were identified through electronic health records as having gaps in blood pressure data or uncontrolled readings.
The AI voice agent escalates calls to a licensed nurse or medical assistant if readings fall outside individualized threshold ranges or if symptoms like dizziness, blurred vision, or chest pain are reported. Escalations occur immediately in urgent cases or within 24 hours for non-urgent concerns.
The AI voice agent communicated with patients in multiple languages, including English and Spanish, ensuring accessibility and engagement across diverse patient populations.
Readings collected via AI calls were entered into the electronic health record (EHR), reviewed by clinicians, and triggered referrals for care management if blood pressure was poorly controlled. This integration reduced manual clinician workload and improved data-driven patient management.
The AI voice agent deployment resulted in an 88.7% reduction in cost per blood pressure reading obtained compared to calls made by human nurses, making the AI solution significantly more cost-effective while maintaining quality outcomes.
Among completed calls, patients reported a high satisfaction rate exceeding 9 out of 10, indicating excellent acceptance of the AI voice agent experience in managing their blood pressure remotely.
The AI intervention closed 1,939 controlling blood pressure (CBP) gaps, improving performance from a 1-Star to a 4-Star rating on Medicare Advantage and HEDIS quality metrics, reflecting a 17% improvement and eligibility for bonus payments.
Limitations included an observational design without a control group, lack of comparison to human-only calls due to feasibility constraints, and retrospective evaluation of existing data, making findings preliminary prior to peer-reviewed publication.
AI voice agents enable remote, scalable outreach to patients with limited access to care, facilitating timely self-monitoring, symptom reporting, and clinical escalation. This helps overcome challenges in patient support, improves blood pressure control, and enhances quality outcomes in preventive care.