Quro, an AI-based risk assessment tool, is like an anonymous consultation where people do not need to sign up or give personal details.

The coronavirus is confusing for the common man, since its similar to any common flu. And this creates confusion about who can, or should, get tested. To tackle this problem, Sydney-based Medius Health has created Quro, a risk assessment tool to determine whether you should be tested for Covid-19 or not. The AI digital health startup run by Indian Abhi Bhatia has so far done more than 75,000 consultations since rolling out the tool on March 4 in India and Australia.

“When Covid-19 hit, we had enough understanding of how we can utilise our medical knowledge graph at the backend and developed an AI-powered risk assessment tool which presents the users with questions related to symptoms and risk factors in accordance with the World Health Organisation protocols and guidelines,” the founder of Medius Health told indianexpress.com over phone from Sydney.

Quro, an AI-based risk assessment tool, is like an anonymous consultation where people do not need to sign up or give personal details. The tool, which acts as a virtual health guide, asks a number of questions such as your travel history, past medical history, your symptoms, what sort of problems you are having right now from a symptomatic point of view and so on. The tool is free to use and can be accessed on the web.

But collecting the data is one part of the story, says Bhatia. His team, which consists of data scientists and clinical scientists, has created an artificial intelligence (AI) system called disease frequency and evoking strength that extracts the data and using different combinations, it understands the relation between symptoms and disease. And based on that, its AI system predicts whether a person is at higher risk for getting sick from Covid-19 or not.

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Quro is free to use and can be accessed on the web.

The system gets updated frequently, based on the data and the trend provided by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). “We keep on updating the prevalence rate value of those relationships between coronavirus and a particular symptom. So for instance, when coronavirus started picking up, the doctors realised that nasal congestion is the one thing that actually differentiates between a flu as well as coronavirus, but then a lot of things have changed,” he said.

Bhatia said the aim was to “quell the panic” and at the same time offer “the right set of information” so that people should know that this could be a mere cold and flu and not Covid-19. He further added that the tool will help identify those people who have a high risk of Coronavirus and need to get the testing done.

The tool [Quro] will help people understand how to differentiate between symptoms that are more relevant to coronavirus versus influenza. That is the biggest problem right now because everyone who’s coughing and has some sort of nasal congestion, they feel that it’s a coronavirus and it’s creating a lot of panic among people,” he explains.

Citing the example of India, Bhatia said the risk assessment tool could be useful for a country with a population of 1 billion, where unnecessary fear among people about Covid-19 can put a lot of burden on hospitals and healthcare institutions.

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