logo
Doctor uses robot to remotely perform surgery on patient thousands of miles away

Doctor uses robot to remotely perform surgery on patient thousands of miles away

Independent18-06-2025
A doctor in Florida has used a robot to remotely perform surgery on a cancer patient thousands of miles away in Africa.
Vipul Patel, the medical director of the Global Robotic Institute at Orlando's Advent Health, recently performed a prostatectomy, which removes part or all of the prostate, on Fernando da Silva of Angola, ABC News reported in an exclusive story from medical correspondent Dr. Darien Sutton on Tuesday.
Da Silva, 67, was diagnosed with prostate cancer in March, and in June, Patel cut out the cancer using transcontinental robotic telesurgery. The surgery was a success, according to ABC News.
Prostate cancer is very prevalent in Africa, Patel told the network, adding, 'In the past, they really haven't monitored it well or they haven't had treatments.'
The doctor said this surgery was a long time coming.
'We've been working on this really for two years,' Patel said. "We traveled the globe, looking at the right technologies."
Da Silva was the first patient in a human clinical trial approved by the Food and Drug Administration to test this technology.
Surgeons have used a multimillion-dollar robot to operate on patients using 'enhanced visuals and nimble controls' before, ABC News reported, but they are often near their patients when operating the machine.
Patel used fiber optic cables to test the technology at a long distance from his patient. 'There was no perceptible delay in my brain,' the doctor said.
His surgical team was in the operating room with Da Silva just in case they had to jump in.
"We made sure we had plan A, B, C, and D. I always have my team where the patient is," the doctor said.
In case something went awry with the telecommunications, "the team would just take over and finish the case and do it safely,' he said.
Reflecting on the surgery, Patel called it 'a small step for a surgeon, but it was huge leap for health care.'
He said the 'humanitarian implications are enormous.'
"Internationally, obviously, there's so many underserved areas of the world,' the doctor said, adding that rural communities in the U.S. could also benefit from the technology.
He continued: "Emergency room physicians will have technology that can be remotely accessible to surgeons, maybe even in the ambulance, where people can get remote interventions if they can't make it to the hospital.'
Patel said he will submit the data he collected from the surgery to the FDA with the hopes that he can do more telesurgeries in the future.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Doctor issues serious warning about putting viral product on your 'lady bits'
Doctor issues serious warning about putting viral product on your 'lady bits'

Daily Mail​

timea day ago

  • Daily Mail​

Doctor issues serious warning about putting viral product on your 'lady bits'

A pediatric emergency doctor has issued a serious warning about a turmeric soap that's going viral on TikTok right now - and why you should avoid using it on certain areas. The video was posted this week by Florida-based doctor Meghan Martin, who goes by the username @beachgem10 on social media. Dr. Martin often takes to TikTok to share her children's safety tips, provide guidance for the flu and cold season, and break down medical news. This time, however, she was taking serious issue with a product that has been gaining momentum online. 'If you would like to avoid a potentially embarrassing emergency department visit, even more so, if you would like to avoid your lady bits being absolutely on fire, we need to have a quick talk,' Martin began the video. 'In a corner of TikTok that my algorithm is not privy to, there is a viral turmeric soap that people are using on their face and bodies to help remove acne, even skin tone, improve glow,' she said. 'I'm not sure about any of those claims, but there's a group of people that are using it in their nether regions.' According to Verywell Health, turmeric soap can indeed have many benefits to it, including brightening the skin tone - but only if used in certain areas. The doctor explained that recently, she's seen many patients come in whose private parts were 'on fire' and 'inflamed' due to using the soap down there. Dr. Martin shared that she's also seen some people use the soap on their 'back door' to remove discoloration, but she doesn't recommend that, as it can have the same inflammatory effect. 'Everyone has different skin types and responds differently to different products,' the doctor explained. So, what should you use instead? 'But in general, in the lady bits, the inner portions, just warm water and a washcloth is appropriate, even on the outer portions of the front and the back,' she advised. 'If you're going to use a soap, a hypoallergenic, non-fragranced, mild soap is appropriate,' the doctor continued. 'Something stronger can cause dryness, itchiness, and potentially inflammation, which can be very uncomfortable.' She also stressed the importance of going to the doctor if you feel like something is wrong - no matter how embarrassing it may seem. 'If you wait two days, things are only gonna get worse, and it's gonna be harder for the both of us,' Martin shared. 'There's no need to be embarrassed or ashamed.' In the comments section of the video, many people shared their own advice. 'And don't use peppermint soap either. I know they advertise it's supposed to cool but let's stick to good old fashioned soap,' one person advised. Another agreed, 'Dove sensitive bar soap is the only way to go!!' 'Probably going to have to make the same PSA about all these glycolic acid products I've started seeing,' someone else typed.

Stone Age humans were picky about which rocks they used for making tools, study finds
Stone Age humans were picky about which rocks they used for making tools, study finds

The Independent

timea day ago

  • The Independent

Stone Age humans were picky about which rocks they used for making tools, study finds

Early human ancestors during the Old Stone Age were more picky about the rocks they used for making tools than previously known, according to research published Friday. Not only did these early people make tools, they had a mental picture of where suitable raw materials were located and planned ahead to use them, traveling long distances. By around 2.6 million years ago, early humans had developed a method of pounding rocks together to chip off sharp flakes that could be used as blades for butchering meat. This allowed them to feast on large animals like hippos that gathered near a freshwater spring at the Nyayanga archaeological site in Kenya. 'But hippo skin is really tough" — and not all rocks were suitable for creating blades sharp enough to pierce hippo skin, said co-author Thomas Plummer, a paleoanthropologist at Queens College of the City University of New York. Co-author Emma Finestone of the Cleveland Museum of Natural History added: 'When we think about stone tools, not every rock is equal in terms of the quality of tools.' At the Nyayanga site, researchers found durable blades made of quartzite, a rock material that they traced to streambeds and other locations around 8 miles (13 kilometers) away. The new research appears in the journal Science Advances. 'This suggests they've got a mental map of where different resources are distributed across the landscape,' said co-author Rick Potts of the Smithsonian 's Human Origins Program. Previously, researchers had assumed the stones may have been found within just a mile or so of the freshwater spring site. The new study shows that 'these early humans were thinking ahead. This is probably the earliest time we have in the archaeological record an indication of that behavior,' said Eric Delson, a paleoanthropologist at the American Museum of Natural History, who was not involved in the research. The oldest previously known example of early human ancestors transporting raw materials for tool-making was about 600,000 years later than the Nyayanga site. Researchers said it's unclear who these early toolmakers were — whether members of the Homo genus or a related but extinct branch of the family tree, such as Paranthropus. Homo sapiens did not arise until much later, around 300,000 years ago. But the knack for seeking out the best raw materials to make simple technology dates back nearly 3 million years. 'We today are a species that's still technology-dependent — using tools to spread around the world and adapt to different environments,' said Finestone. ___ The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

Dr Anne Merriman obituary
Dr Anne Merriman obituary

The Guardian

timea day ago

  • The Guardian

Dr Anne Merriman obituary

My friend Anne Merriman, who has died aged 90, was a pioneering doctor and founder of the Hospice Africa charity, which aims to offer 'palliative care for all those in need' across the continent. While working in Singapore in the 1980s, Anne devised an affordable morphine-based painkiller, and took it to Africa in the 90s. In 1993 in Kampala, Uganda, she founded Hospice Africa, establishing a hospice model that could be adapted for other countries. By 2023, Hospice Africa had cared for more than 37,000 patients in Uganda, and today it helps provide home-based palliative care in more than 35 countries across Africa. Born in Liverpool, Anne was the third of four children of Josie (nee Dunne), a typist, and Thomas Merriman, a primary school headteacher. Aged four, Anne had opened a magazine about missionaries in Africa and told her mother she was 'going to help these children'. That conviction deepened when, at 14, she watched The Visitation, a film about medical nuns in Africa. After her secondary education at Broughton Hall Convent grammar school, Anne crossed the Irish Sea in 1954 to join the Medical Missionaries of Mary. As a young sister she studied medicine at University College Dublin, and on gaining her degree in 1963, she departed for Nigeria for the first of two postings there. In 1973 Anne left the order and returned to Liverpool to work as a consultant and senior lecturer in geriatric medicine at the David Lewis Northern hospital for four years. The hospital closed in 1978, and Anne continued to develop her compassion-driven approach to palliative care while revamping the geriatric medicine units at hospitals in Whiston and St Helens. Anne's mother was good friends with my grandmother, and our families had in common a favourite holiday cottage in the Lake District. Despite her love of that area, and her ties to Liverpool, after Josie's death in 1981 Anne moved abroad again, first to Malaysia in 1983, to take up an associate professor role in the department of public health at the Universiti Sains Malaysia in Penang, then to the National University of Singapore the following year as a senior teaching fellow. From her flat she started the volunteer-led Hospice Care Group, which became the country's Hospice Care Association. With help from the university hospital, she developed a groundbreaking formula of affordable pure oral morphine – comprising morphine powder, water and a preservative. On becoming medical director of the newly opened Nairobi hospice in 1990, Anne took that formula to Kenya. It was Kampala, though, that became home for the last chapter of her life, and where she decided to set up Hospice Africa. There, Anne also helped to establish the African Palliative Care Association (2003) and the Institute of Hospice and Palliative Care in Africa (2009). Anne was made MBE in 2003, and was posthumously conferred with Uganda's National Independence Diamond Jubilee medal. She is survived by two nieces, Paula and Jane.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store