Medical students in Cambridge are the first in the world to learn with holographic patients, the university has said.
The students at Addenbrooke’s Hospital are using a new mix-reality training system called HoloScenarios, which enables teaching and learning with life-like holograms, which are accessible from anywhere in the world.
The technology is being developed by Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (CUH), the University of Cambridge and Los Angeles-based tech company GigXR.
The developers say it could provide more flexible, cost-effective training than traditional simulation, which requires more resources and expense for maintaining labs and hiring patient actors.
Wearing mixed reality headsets, the students are able to see each other but are also interacting with a multi-layered, medically accurate holographic patient, the developers say.
Students will take several modules using the technology, the first of which focuses on respiratory conditions and emergencies.
This involves a holographic patient with asthma, followed by anaphylaxis, pulmonary embolism and pneumonia.
Other modules in cardiology and neurology are in development.
With HoloScenarios, we’re helping to evolve education from a mentorship-based model to one where students around the world can have equal access to top-flight expertise for mastering invention-based clinical skills— Dr Arun Gupta, CUH
Dr Arun Gupta, consultant anaesthetist at CUH, who is leading the project, said: “Mixed reality is increasingly recognised as a useful method of simulator training.
“As institutions scale procurement, the demand for platforms that offer utility and ease of mixed reality learning management is rapidly expanding.
“GigXR has already enabled instructors to better prepare learners with medically accurate simulation for observation and assessment.
“With HoloScenarios, we’re helping to evolve education from a mentorship-based model to one where students around the world can have equal access to top-flight expertise for mastering invention-based clinical skills.”
Empowering instructors with 360-degree preparation for clinical practice represents a milestone for GigXR— David King Lassman, GigXR
David King Lassman, founder of GigXR, said: “Empowering instructors with 360-degree preparation for clinical practice represents a milestone for GigXR that allows us to provide our customers with a library of applications that offers solutions for students from their first courses to continuing education.
“Our first HoloScenarios module represents a new and incredibly powerful way to use mixed reality for healthcare training, to be followed up by many more modules and new applications delivered soon.”