Meridian Health

Reimagining Patient Access

A multi-platform solution to simplify a fragmented healthcare experience, reducing appointment booking time by 60% and increasing patient satisfaction scores across all touchpoints.

Hero Image

Objective

An exercise in UX research, product design, and prototyping | To understand and redesign the primary pain points of a fragmented healthcare platform with a focus on reducing friction and building patient trust.

My Role

  • Research
  • UX Design
  • Prototyping
  • UI Design

Tools

  • Figma
  • FigJam
  • Maze
  • Notion

Duration

  • Research — 4 weeks
  • Prototyping — 6 weeks

Context

Meridian Health serves over 2 million patients across a network of clinics and hospitals. Their digital platform had grown organically over years, resulting in a fragmented experience that left patients confused and frustrated.

Patients were bouncing between multiple portals to book appointments, view records, and manage prescriptions — each with different interfaces and login systems.

Challenge

How might we unify a fragmented healthcare platform into a single, intuitive experience that patients trust and actually want to use?

  • Appointment booking required 8+ steps across 3 different systems.
  • 47% of patients called the clinic instead of using digital tools.
  • Patient satisfaction scores for digital experience sat at 2.1/5.
  • No clear information hierarchy — critical actions were buried.

Research

I conducted 12 in-depth interviews with patients across different demographics and comfort levels with technology. I also shadowed front-desk staff to understand the questions patients asked most.

Finding 1

Patients didn't want more features — they wanted fewer steps and clearer language.

Finding 2

Trust was broken by inconsistent experiences across portals. People felt lost.

Finding 3

Older patients relied on phone calls because the digital path felt risky and unclear.

Research Synthesis

Approach

I based the process on a simple rhythm: understand emotional friction, simplify the path, and validate with users in quick loops.

Listen

Mapped the full patient journey and identified the highest-friction moments.

Shape

Reframed information architecture around patient intent, not internal systems.

Test

Ran 3 rounds of usability testing to refine hierarchy, copy, and interactions.

Solution

The redesigned platform consolidates all patient actions into a single, unified dashboard. The interface prioritises the three things patients do most: book, check, and manage.

  • One-tap appointment booking with intelligent provider matching.
  • Unified patient dashboard showing upcoming visits, results, and prescriptions.
  • Contextual guidance at every step — plain language, no jargon.
  • Accessible design meeting WCAG AA across all touchpoints.
Final UI — Dashboard

Key Flows

1. Book an Appointment

Reduced from 8 steps to 3. Patients select a reason, pick a time, and confirm — all on one screen with smart defaults.

2. View Results

Lab results surfaced with plain-language summaries alongside clinical data. Patients understand what's normal without Googling.

3. Manage Prescriptions

One-tap refills with delivery tracking. Clear status indicators replace confusing pharmacy codes.

Booking Flow
Results View

Impact

After a 4-week pilot with 800 patients, the redesigned platform showed significant improvement across every key metric.

-60%Booking time
+42%Digital adoption
4.3/5Satisfaction score

Reflection

Healthcare is deeply personal. The biggest lesson was that simplifying the interface was only half the job — the other half was earning trust through tone, transparency, and pacing.

If I were to continue this work, I'd explore how the experience adapts over time as patients build familiarity, and how we might support caregivers managing access for family members.