Oracle

UX Design

I designed a virtual healthcare tool for emergency response situations, conducted research on emergency response and telehealth in disaster zones, and collaborated with the Redwood Design team to ensure pattern alignment.

Team:

Oscar Murillo & Catherine Lim (Managers)

Role:

UX Design Intern

Year:

2025

Calendar

On the calendar page, users can find past recorded sessions and events as well as a brief summary of each event they attended. For example, on 6/12, this user connected with 32 people and had 4 conversations.

Summary

Sync will summarize conversations for you so you never miss an important detail. With highlights and full transcripts, users can do a deep dive into their conversations or briefly review what they talked about.

Follow ups

Using information from saved recordings, Sync utilizes AI to create engaging conversation starters to get users the best chance of connecting.

  • Explore the full story ⋅

  • Explore the full story ⋅

Challenge

In disaster zones, front-line healthcare providers face critical challenges in triage, communication, and care coordination. During these disasters, people are faced with long wait times at hospitals and nurses are overwhelmed by the surge of patients that arrive.

Objective

This project explores virtual care solutions to support rapid response and decision-making in emergencies. My objective was to design a solution for use in crisis settings, contributing research, E2E flows, and prototypes that may inform Oracle Health’s virtual care platform.

Results

So utilizing this kit would be helpful in terms of when there are power outages as the kit is connected through satellite. This will help mitigate any challenges due to connection challenges. It also allows for specialized medical devices to be used by patients, making the vital intake process more efficient and easing the workload on nurses. Lastly, it provides patients with an alternative option to receive care so they can quickly get help.