By Steve Ranger, 9 February 2006 10:00
NEWS
It might look like a Dalek with a TV jammed on its head but the robot prowling the wards at St Mary's Hospital in Paddington aims to medicate, rather than exterminate.
The robot - dubbed Sister Mary - is part of a "remote presence" trial being run by the department of biosurgery and surgical technology at Imperial College. The aim? To allow doctors to examine patients remotely, using the robot as their eyes and ears.
The 5'3", 215lb robot being tested out at St Mary's boasts a camera and tilting screen, runs Windows XP Professional and operates over a wireless 802.11b network which provides a 600Kbps data stream up and downstream.
Surgical specialist registrar Parv Sains, who is working on the trial, explained: "What's been used in the past is a static set-up where you would have professionals talking to each other. The problem is that you can't wheel a sick patient into the room where the cameras are set up."
The robot is controlled remotely by a doctor, whose face appears on the monitor which acts as the robot's 'head'.
Sains added: "This is taking telemedicine a step further because you can make the consultation patient-centric."
The doctor's control centre has a double screen, webcam and joystick for controlling the robot. As well as being used for patient consultations, the device can help with mentoring and training medical staff remotely.
It takes about 15 minutes for doctors to learn to drive the robot - and Sains said the mobility is one key aspect of the machine. "A lot of people ask 'why not just have a trolley with a webcam?' but then you need someone to move it about," he said.
Sains said: "In the clinical trials that are going on at the moment we are looking at patient perception - what they feel about a robot coming in and talking to them - and remote examinations."
Depending on where in the hospital it is, the robot runs on one of two wireless networks - the Imperial College network and the hospital network implemented by Scalable Networks.
It doesn't take patients long to get used to dealing with the droid, Sains said: "The first reaction is 'wow' but once you get stuck into a conversation you lose the feeling that you are talking to a machine because you have the physician's face on the screen."
And while the robots won't be floating around your local hospital for a while yet, there are plenty of situations where they could come in handy.
For example, an accident and emergency team at a village hospital could call on an expert at a distant hospital who could investigate an injury first-hand.
Alternatively a specialist at a big hospital could do his rounds quicker by using the robot - so patients could get discharged faster.
Sains said: "The potential for use is big."
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1. Richard
Wrong approach?
Prof. Cathy Sykes's current series on BBC2 suggests that much of the benefit comes from human contact with skilled, caring healers.
Mechanising medicine and making doctors ever more remote seems the wrong approach.