West Virginia University (WVU) Health System has partnered with HelloCare AI to deploy AI-assisted smart hospital rooms across its network. The collaboration introduces intelligent room features that use ambient sensors, voice interaction, predictive analytics, and real-time monitoring to enhance patient safety, improve staff efficiency, reduce falls, prevent pressure injuries, and personalize the care experience while maintaining privacy and regulatory compliance.
Glimpse:
The AI-powered smart rooms integrate non-intrusive sensors, voice-activated controls, fall risk detection, vital sign trend analysis, and automated alerts to nurses for early intervention in high-risk situations. HelloCare AI’s platform processes anonymized room data to predict adverse events (falls, deterioration, delirium), optimize nurse call prioritization, and provide patients with voice-guided assistance for comfort adjustments, reminders, and entertainment. Initial deployment begins at WVU’s flagship hospitals, with plans to scale across the system to improve outcomes, reduce length of stay, and enhance HCAHPS scores.
West Virginia University (WVU) Health System has entered into a strategic partnership with HelloCare AI to implement AI-assisted smart hospital rooms, marking one of the most comprehensive deployments of intelligent inpatient environments in a U.S. academic health system. The collaboration, announced on February 27, 2026, aims to leverage HelloCare’s advanced AI platform to create safer, more responsive, and patient-centered hospital rooms that proactively support clinical teams while enhancing the overall patient experience.
The smart room technology uses a network of discreet, privacy-preserving sensors (motion, sound, vibration, and environmental) combined with voice interaction capabilities and integration with existing hospital systems (EHR, nurse call, bed alarms, infusion pumps). HelloCare AI’s algorithms analyze real-time data streams to detect early signs of risk such as unassisted bed exits that could lead to falls, prolonged immobility increasing pressure injury likelihood, or subtle changes in breathing patterns indicating respiratory distress. When risks are identified, the system automatically escalates alerts to the appropriate care team member via mobile devices or nurse stations, prioritizing based on severity and proximity.
Patients interact with the room through voice commands (e.g., “Raise my head,” “Dim the lights,” “Call my nurse”) using natural language processing that understands accents and contextual requests, reducing the need for manual controls or frequent button presses. The AI also delivers personalized reminders for medication, repositioning, hydration, and mobility exercises, while offering entertainment options, family video calls, and calming ambient sounds to reduce anxiety and improve sleep quality. All interactions are logged securely in the EHR for continuity and compliance.
The deployment begins with pilot rooms at WVU’s flagship J.W. Ruby Memorial Hospital in Morgantown, with phased rollout planned across other WVU Health hospitals. Initial focus areas include high-risk units such as orthopaedics, neurology, cardiology, and medical-surgical floors. WVU Health System leadership highlighted that the technology addresses key challenges in rural and academic settings including staffing constraints, high fall rates among elderly patients, and the need to maintain quality care amid rising patient acuity. Early pilot data from similar HelloCare implementations have shown reductions in fall rates by up to 40%, decreased pressure injury incidence, and improved patient satisfaction scores.
The partnership includes rigorous privacy protections: no audio or video is recorded without explicit consent, all data is anonymized for AI processing, and the system complies fully with HIPAA, HITECH, and West Virginia state regulations. HelloCare AI will provide ongoing model updates, clinician training, and performance analytics to ensure continuous improvement. Both organizations plan to publish real-world outcomes from the WVU deployment to contribute to the growing evidence base for smart hospital technologies.
“Smart rooms powered by HelloCare AI don’t just monitor patients they anticipate needs, prevent harm, and let our care teams focus on human connection rather than constant vigilance. This is the future of inpatient care, and we’re proud to bring it to West Virginia first.”
By
HB Team
