The Human Side Of Healthcare Technology At Stanford Health Care
Release Date: 03/28/2026
Tech Talks Daily
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info_outlineWhat does a great patient experience really look like when people are at their most vulnerable?
In this episode, I sat down with Stanford Health Care’s SVP and Chief Patient Experience and Operational Performance Officer, Alpa Vyas, to explore how one of the world’s leading healthcare organizations is rethinking the human side of care.
From the outside, healthcare is often seen as a system of processes, technology, and clinical outcomes. But as Alpa explains, every interaction sits within a deeply emotional moment in someone’s life, where fear, uncertainty, and complexity collide. That reality shapes everything.
Our conversation goes back to the early days of Stanford’s transformation, where Alpa recognized a gap that many organizations still struggle with today. Improvement efforts were underway, systems were being optimized, yet the patient voice was largely absent. Inspired by design thinking principles from Stanford’s own d.school, her team began with empathy as the foundation. That shift changed the direction of everything that followed, from how feedback was gathered to how decisions were made across the organization.
We also explored the role of technology, and where it truly fits. There is often a temptation to lead with AI or automation, but Alpa brings the focus back to culture, behavior, and trust. Technology, including platforms like Qualtrics, became powerful once the right questions were being asked and the right mindset was in place.
Moving from delayed paper surveys to real-time feedback transformed not only how quickly issues could be addressed, but how patients felt heard. One story stood out where a patient received a follow-up call before even leaving the parking lot, a simple moment that redefined their perception of care.
We also touched on “Operation Blue Sky,” an initiative that looks beyond traditional surveys to capture insight from call recordings, messages, and other unstructured data sources. It opens the door to a future where healthcare providers can anticipate problems before they happen and intervene at the right moment. That raises important questions around pace, trust, and readiness, especially in an industry that has good reason to move carefully.
This episode is ultimately a conversation about balance. Between innovation and responsibility, between efficiency and empathy, and between data and human connection. So how do we ensure that as healthcare becomes more advanced, it also becomes more human? And what lessons from this journey could apply far beyond healthcare?