# Hospital Copilot — Demo Video Script ## "The Last Patient" **Hackathon:** Gemma 4 for Good **Video target runtime:** 3 minutes 30 seconds **Tone:** Emotional, human, hopeful --- ## Logline > *"In Ghana, one doctor serves an average of 10,000 patients. > After seeing 40 patients, the last one should not get less care than the first."* --- ## Characters | Role | Description | |---|---| | **Dr. Kwame Mensah** | Young district hospital doctor, mid-30s, visibly exhausted at end of shift | | **Maame Akosua** | Elderly woman, 68, from a rural village, brought in by her grandson | | **Kofi** | Grandson, 20s, worried, occasionally translates for his grandmother | --- ## Setting **Location:** Small district hospital consultation room **Time of day:** Late afternoon — warm golden light, end of a long day **Props needed:** - Desk with laptop showing Hospital Copilot - Stethoscope, BP cuff - Stack of paper files (the visual symbol of burnout) - Small fan, pen holder, basic clinic decor - Waiting room shot (even 5 people reads as "busy" on camera) --- ## Scene-by-Scene Breakdown --- ### SCENE 1 — The Weight **Duration:** 30 seconds | **No dialogue** > Camera opens on a wall clock: **4:47 PM** > > Dr. Mensah is hunched over his desk, hand-writing notes from a thick stack of paper files. > His eyes are tired. His hand moves slowly. > > A nurse opens the door: > **Nurse:** *"Doctor, one more patient."* > > He pauses. Looks at the unfinished stack. Then nods. > **Dr. Mensah:** *"Send them in."* **Director note:** Linger on the paper stack. That stack = the problem Hospital Copilot solves. --- ### SCENE 2 — The Patient Arrives **Duration:** 20 seconds > Maame Akosua shuffles in slowly, supported by Kofi. > She looks unwell. A little frightened. Out of place. > > Dr. Mensah stands to greet her warmly — despite his exhaustion. > He quietly opens Hospital Copilot on his laptop. > He clicks **▶ Start Consultation.** > > The mic activates. He turns his full attention to her. > The laptop screen is visible in the background — words beginning to appear. **Director note:** The app should be visible but not the focus. The focus is the human connection. --- ### SCENE 3 — The Consultation **Duration:** 90 seconds > Dr. Mensah and Maame Akosua speak. Kofi occasionally translates. > The conversation flows naturally — unhurried, warm. **CONSULTATION SCRIPT:** > **Doctor:** Good afternoon Maame. How have you been since your last visit? > > **Patient (Kofi translating):** She says not too well. She has been having headaches every morning for two weeks. Especially at the back of her head. > > **Doctor:** Has she been taking her blood pressure medication? > > **Kofi:** She finished her Amlodipine two weeks ago. She could not afford to buy more. > > **Doctor:** I understand. Let me check her pressure now. > *(places BP cuff, reads monitor)* > It is 162 over 98 — that is quite high. The headaches are from the blood pressure. > Any dizziness? Blurred vision? > > **Kofi:** Sometimes dizzy when she stands up. No problem with vision. > > **Doctor:** Any chest pain or shortness of breath? > > **Kofi:** No. > > **Doctor:** Good. She needs to restart her Amlodipine — five milligrams every morning. > I am also adding Lisinopril, ten milligrams once a day. > She must reduce salt, avoid alcohol, walk thirty minutes daily. > Come back in two weeks. If she gets severe headache or chest pain — come immediately. > > **Kofi (to grandmother in Twi):** *...translates...* > > **Maame Akosua (nodding slowly):** *"Yoo, medaase."* (Okay, thank you.) **Camera cuts during this scene:** - Close-up on Maame Akosua's face — worried but trusting - Laptop screen in background: words streaming into transcript in real time - Dr. Mensah's hands on the BP cuff — competent, caring - The paper stack on the desk — untouched, waiting --- ### SCENE 4 — The Wow Moment **Duration:** 60 seconds > Consultation ends. Dr. Mensah clicks **⏹ End Consultation.** > > He looks at Maame Akosua kindly while the screen processes. > Then clicks **⚡ Generate Notes.** > > **Camera slowly pushes in on the laptop screen:** > > — Transcript appears with speaker labels: > *"Doctor: Her pressure is 162 over 98..."* > *"Patient: Sometimes dizzy when she stands up..."* > > — ICD-10 panel populates: > *"I10 — Essential (primary) hypertension *(confidence: 0.94)*"* > > — Drug reference appears: > *"Amlodipine (Calcium Channel Blocker) — 5mg once daily..."* > *"Lisinopril (ACE Inhibitor) — 10mg once daily..."* > > — SOAP note renders, fully formatted with bold section headers > > — Patient Summary appears in plain English > > **Dr. Mensah reads the patient summary aloud, slowly, to Kofi:** > *"Your grandmother has high blood pressure. She needs to take one tablet every morning. > Reduce salt in her food. Walk a little every day. > Come back in two weeks. If she gets a very bad headache or chest pain, come immediately."* > > Kofi translates quietly into Twi. > > Maame Akosua looks up. For the first time — she understands her own diagnosis. > She nods. A small, relieved smile. > > **Kofi (softly, to Dr. Mensah):** *"She says... thank you for explaining. The other doctors never explained."* > > Dr. Mensah nods quietly. No words needed. **Director note:** Hold on Maame Akosua's face when she smiles. This is the emotional peak of the video. --- ### SCENE 5 — The Contrast **Duration:** 20 seconds | **No dialogue** > Dr. Mensah closes the consultation on his laptop. The notes are saved. > He looks at the paper stack. Picks up one file — and closes it. > The work is done. > > He looks at the clock: **5:03 PM.** > > He stands. Puts on his jacket. Turns off the desk lamp. > He walks out — on time, for once. > > Final shot: the empty chair where Maame Akosua sat. > The laptop screen still glowing softly. --- ### SCENE 6 — Title Card **Duration:** 10 seconds | **Music swells** ``` Hospital Copilot Built for doctors who see 40 patients a day. So the last patient gets the same care as the first. ───────────────────────────────────────── Powered by Gemma 4 · Built for Ghana Gemma 4 for Good Hackathon 2026 ``` --- ## Why This Lands With Judges | Story element | What it communicates | |---|---| | Clock at 4:47 PM + paper stack | The problem is real, visible, universal | | Doctor still standing up to greet her | He is a good doctor being let down by a broken system | | AI invisible while doctor talks | Correct human-AI relationship — AI serves, human cares | | ICD codes + dosages appearing | Clinical credibility — this is not a chatbot, it's a medical tool | | Patient finally understanding her diagnosis | The mission of the whole project in one moment | | "The other doctors never explained" | Indicts the old system without saying a word about AI | | Doctor going home on time | The promise: better system = better life for everyone | --- ## Filming Checklist - [ ] Clinic room location secured - [ ] Laptop positioned so screen is visible in background shots - [ ] Hospital Copilot running and tested before filming - [ ] BP cuff and stethoscope as props - [ ] Paper file stack prepared - [ ] Scene 4 filmed with real app — let notes generate live, do not fake it - [ ] Maame Akosua's smile — hold for 3 seconds minimum - [ ] Background music: soft, warm, instrumental — swell on Scene 6 --- ## Consultation Script (Standalone — for practising) > Doctor: Good afternoon Maame. How have you been since your last visit? > Patient: Not too well. I have been having headaches every morning. At the back of my head. > Doctor: Have you been taking your blood pressure medication? > Patient: I finished my Amlodipine two weeks ago. I could not afford to buy more. > Doctor: I see. Let me check your pressure. It is 162 over 98 — quite high. Any dizziness or blurred vision? > Patient: Sometimes dizzy when I stand up quickly. No problem with vision. > Doctor: Any chest pain or shortness of breath? > Patient: No, nothing like that. > Doctor: Good. You need to restart your Amlodipine — five milligrams every morning. I am also adding Lisinopril, ten milligrams once a day. Reduce salt in your food, avoid alcohol, and walk thirty minutes daily. Come back in two weeks. If you get a severe headache or chest pain — come in immediately. > Patient: Okay doctor. I will take the medication every day this time. > Doctor: Good. And please do not stop without telling me first.