"Mxsmanic" wrote in message
...
Eeyore writes:
Eh ?
Exactly.
Doctors can't perform surgery on simulated human beings,
at least not yet.
Wrong again. That's been around for years.
http://www.golimbs.com/offer_index.p...FSBhgQodyC2pRA
http://www.haptica.com/
They're sophisticated enough to provide force feedback:
http://www.ercim.org/publication/Erc...elingette.html
They even have their own expositions:
http://www.surgery.arizona.edu/expo/...ulatorExpo.htm
which specifically compares them to flight simulators.
And to anticipate one of your dodges, medical sims don't
replace the basic training and experience. They just allow
a mid-level practitioner who has reached sufficient state of
competence to progress toward the higher level of expertise
that is required for a given procedure.
In other words, even you might make hundreds of runs through
a procedure simulator and finally get it right, but that
doesn't make you a qualified surgeon nor does it qualify you
to say that "surgery is easy". There's a lot more to being
a surgeon than just being able to complete some sim runs.
Therefore the first surgery is a "revenue flight": a real
surgical procedure
on a real person, not a practice run. This is quite
unlike many forms of
aviation, which can be practiced in simulation, or even in
real aircraft on
practice flights (with no passengers, and thus
"non-revenue").
Wrong again. Demonstrably so. QED.