Basic Digital Skills: Your Gateway to AI

Before diving into AI tools, having some basic digital skills is essential. Many of you already use these skills daily! These include:

If you feel you need to improve these skills, don't worry! There are often local resources, community learning centres, or even colleagues who can help. Practice is key. Every little bit of digital comfort you gain will make using AI tools easier.

Understanding Digital Workflows in Healthcare

A "workflow" is just the series of steps you take to complete a task. In healthcare, many workflows are becoming digital. For example:

AI tools can fit into these digital workflows. For instance, an AI tool could help you summarise information from an online medical journal (which you found using your digital search skills) to include in a digital patient education leaflet (which you might draft in a word processing app).

Introduction to Promising Free/Affordable AI Tools

Several powerful AI tools are available, often with free versions that are excellent for getting started. These tools are primarily "Large Language Models" (LLMs), meaning they are very good at understanding and generating text. For mobile use, many of these have dedicated apps or can be accessed via a web browser on your smartphone.

1. OpenAI ChatGPT

2. Microsoft Copilot

3. Google Gemini (formerly Bard)

Important Note: The "free" versions of these tools are excellent for many tasks. They might have limits on usage or not have all the features of paid versions, but they are more than enough to start exploring and benefiting from AI. Always check the terms of service.

Setting Up and Navigating These Tools

Setting up these tools is usually straightforward:

Navigating the Interface (General Description):

Most of these tools have a simple interface:

Using AI for Routine Healthcare Tasks

Here are some basic ways AI can help with everyday tasks. Remember to always verify critical information!

Information Retrieval and Summarization

How it helps: Need a quick overview of a condition, drug, or procedure? AI can search and summarise information much faster than manually reading through long documents.

Example Prompt: "Summarise the key points about managing dehydration in children for a healthcare worker."

Keep in Mind: Always cross-check with trusted medical sources (e.g., WHO guidelines, national protocols). AI summaries are a starting point.

Drafting Communications (Emails, Patient Handouts)

How it helps: Struggling to find the right words for an email to a colleague or a simple handout for a patient? AI can help you draft these.

Example Prompt: "Draft a simple patient handout explaining the importance of completing a full course of antibiotics. Use simple language."

Keep in Mind: You MUST review and edit the draft to ensure it's accurate, appropriate for your patient, culturally sensitive, and aligns with your professional advice. Never copy-paste without review.

Basic Data Entry and Organization Ideas

How it helps: While AI chatbots don't directly manage databases for you, they can help you think about how to organise information or even generate templates for simple tracking sheets.

Example Prompt: "Suggest column headings for a spreadsheet to track monthly clinic supplies for a small rural clinic." OR "Create a simple checklist template for daily opening procedures in a small lab."

Keep in Mind: For actual data entry into systems like Impilo, follow official procedures. AI can help with planning or designing *your own* simple, non-official tracking tools (like a personal spreadsheet).

Scheduling and Time Management Assistance

How it helps: AI can help you draft to-do lists, prioritise tasks, or suggest ways to organise your schedule.

Example Prompt: "I have the following tasks today: [list tasks]. Help me prioritise them for a busy clinic day." OR "Give me some time management tips for an allied health professional."

Keep in Mind: This is for personal organization. Official clinic scheduling should use approved systems.

Language Translation for Basic Instructions

How it helps: Need to communicate a simple instruction to a patient who speaks a different language? AI can provide quick translations. This is particularly useful for common phrases in Shona or Ndebele.

Example Prompt: "Translate 'Please wait here' into Shona and Ndebele." OR "Translate 'Take this medicine two times a day' into simple Shona."

Keep in Mind: AI translations are not perfect, especially for medical nuances or complex sentences. Use for very simple, common phrases. Always try to have a human interpreter for important clinical communication. Verify AI translations with a fluent speaker if possible, especially if using them for written materials.


Module 2: Practical Task

Your Task: Use an AI Tool to Summarise a Short Health Article.

This exercise will give you a feel for how AI can help with information processing. Remember, this is for practice; for clinical information, rely on full articles from trusted sources.