
Inside the million-pound machine that will soon be performing keyhole surgery on Brits
6
6
Her hysterectomy, a major surgery, only took 40 minutes thanks to the million-pound robot used by Mr Ahmed and his team at the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in London.
Done by hand, the same procedure would have taken two hours or more, involved an overnight stay on the ward and could have cost an extra £2,000.
Health Secretary Wes Streeting has told Sun Health that robot- assisted surgery is the 'future of the health service' as our figures show its use is skyrocketing.
Robotic assistance was used in 70,000 procedures on the NHS in England last year.
That was double the 35,000 two years earlier in 2022, and a ten-fold increase on the 6,600 performed in 2014.
The machines, which are operated by surgeons, are capable of increasingly complex and major operations.
They benefit doctors, patients and the health service.
An NHS report last week said the adoption of robots is now 'in the exponential phase', meaning it is rapidly increasing.
Officials say it will soon take over the majority of keyhole surgeries — such as gallbladder or appendix removal — and an increasing number of orthopaedic operations.
Mr Ahmed conducts the hysterectomy — the removal of the womb — from a console in the corner of the operating room, where he sits with his shoes off and dance music playing in the background.
He uses hand controls as if he is playing on a Nintendo Wii to manoeuvre the Da Vinci Xi Robotic Surgical System.
Tiny mechanical forceps and scissors slice the womb free from the bladder a millimetre at a time, cauterising the flesh as they go to prevent internal bleeding.
The robot's instruments are more compact than a surgeon's, so incisions are smaller, reducing infection risk, scarring and bleeding.
'Blood loss is way less now,' Mr Ahmed tells Sun Health. 'It's about 25ml, so the patients lose more from the blood tests beforehand than the operation itself.'
A thin camera shows the inside of the body, and Mr Ahmed, the anaesthetist and nurses who are standing close to the patient to keep her safe watch the procedure on TV screens.
Mr Ahmed, 40, says: 'This is the future and I don't think there's any way of going back. The benefits have been so profound that we can't not do it.
'We're doing about 1.5 times the amount of cases we were able to do with traditional keyhole surgery, and the patient outcomes are better, so our patients are staying in hospital for a shorter time.'
Not only does this mean people can recover at home and resume their daily life quicker — it also frees up vital beds in hospitals.
And patients need less anaesthetic because the operation is shorter — another risk reduction.
Mr Ahmen said: 'Previously, their average length of stay was 1.8 days, but our patient will go home today after a cup of tea and a sandwich in the recovery room. We've finished that case at 10 o'clock in the morning and, across the UK, there are a lot of surgeons who still don't have their first patient on the table.'
The first robot-assisted operation in the NHS was carried out in the year 2000. Now, there are more than 140 machines in use across the country.
Health spending watchdog the National Institute For Health And Care Excellence last month gave the green light for hospitals to choose from 11 robotic systems.
This signals top-ranking officials believe they are worth the money.
Robo ops first took off in men's urology, operating on prostates and the pelvis, and are now increasingly used in gynaecology.
6
6
6
It is particularly beneficial here because unwanted damage or mistakes can have devastating effects on patients' lives, leaving them with sexual dysfunction, fertility issues or incontinence.
Urological surgeon Ben Challacombe is the head of robotic surgery at Guy's and St Thomas' NHS trust in London.
He operated on TV legend Stephen Fry's prostate cancer using a robot and has also treated film director Steve McQueen.
He says: 'In some hospitals, you'll get an experienced surgeon doing operations with a robot but in other hospitals, they won't even have the robot yet.
'We need to democratise it because it's a postcode lottery. The NHS should negotiate to buy them at a national level to level up.'
New departments are getting the help of robots all the time. They are now capable of heart surgery, mouth and throat operations, cancer treatment, hernia repair and even hip and knee replacements.
'Postcode lottery'
Mr Challacombe says: 'The next generation will be single port robots where everything can go through one incision and cause even fewer side effects.
'In the future I think we will be able to train robots to do parts of the tasks automatically.
'They're a long way off being able to do an entire operation but we expect that sort of step up.'
Orthopaedic surgeon Al-Amin Kassam is trialling robotic hip replacements at the Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital.
He uses a machine to create 3D scans before a robotic arm implants the new hip socket.
The physical bone work is done manually by surgeons. Mr Kassam said: 'The robot essentially works like a spirit level.
'During a manual implant, we put the replacement cup where our eyesight tells us to, but human eyes have a margin of error. It also means you have to open up the area more, cutting through more muscle and tendon so you can see.
'With the robot, you don't need the full view, so where most surgeons would cut three tendons at the back of the hip, we only need to cut one. It should improve patient recovery and get them back to activity and to work earlier.'
The NHS also needs patients' co-operation before robotic surgery becomes standard. Many may still have visions of rogue Terminator-style cyborgs at the operating table.
But this could not be further from the truth, and the machines are not yet automatic. They can make only tiny movements controlled by qualified expert surgeons.
Mr Kassam says: 'Some patients are scared to begin with because they think the surgeon is going to be in the coffee room while it's happening.'
One patient who has been under the robotic knife is Ella Lacson, a 27-year-old from London. She has had the same endometriosis operation twice — once with a robot and once without.
Endometriosis is a painful condition and causes the abnormal growth of womb tissue in other parts of the pelvis area. In severe cases, surgery is needed.
Client accountant Ella says: 'It felt like barbed wire in my pelvis and got so bad I couldn't go out with my friends or into the office.
Smash waiting lists
'I first had the surgery in 2012 which was really uncomfortable for a few weeks and I was off school for months. But after my second surgery with the robot in December 2024, the recovery was so quick.
'I went home the same day, managed the pain by myself for about two weeks and then I was back to normal. I've started doing dance classes again, which I couldn't do before.
'I didn't feel like there were any downsides. I'd 100 per cent recommend it to someone in the same position as me.'
There are still some drawbacks, however, as machines typically cost upwards of £1million to buy and may initially disrupt efficiency.
Mr Challacombe says: 'I'm very pro-robot but the downsides are the cost, and people get less efficient before they get more efficient.
'If the consultants are learning, the trainee surgeons can't learn from them. There is also some danger to operating a machine that is away from you, extending the time it takes to spot potential problems.'
I'm very pro-robot but the downsides are the cost, and people get less efficient before they get more efficient
Ben Challacombe
He says reaction times with a camera view may not be as instant as up-close manual surgery.
But most procedures go smoothly and, once theatres are fully up and running, the benefits are clear.
The ops are less physically taxing for surgeons, which could let them extend their careers, as many suffer back or shoulder problems.
Their speed and ease of use mean the machines can be used for high-intensity sessions when surgeons ramp up procedures at the weekend to help slash waiting lists. England has millions of patients waiting for 7.4million procedures.
Mr Ahmed's team in Fulham last year took part in a 'super surgery weekend', when two departments at the hospital operated on 59 patients in two days.
Professor Naeem Soomro, from the Royal College of Surgeons, said: 'Robot-assisted surgery is here to stay.
'Used well and for the right patients, it has the potential to bring benefits including greater precision, fewer blood transfusions, increased patient satisfaction and a faster return to work and family.
'To get the most out of these tools, it is essential to make sure that staff receive consistent, high-quality training to use them.'
David Marante, vice president of Intuitive UK & Ireland, makers of Da Vinci robots, said: 'Innovative initiatives are bringing down waiting lists and improving productivity, helping save bed days, optimise staffing and improve efficiency.'
HEALTH Secretary Wes Streeting is keen on robotic surgery after it saved his life.
He said: 'I know from first-hand experience how technological advances in the health service can benefit patients.
'After I was diagnosed with kidney cancer, the NHS saved my life with an operation led by a world-class surgeon being helped by a robot.
'Innovation like robot-assisted surgery isn't science fiction, it's the future of the health service.
'Through our Plan for Change, we are taking the NHS into the digital age and arming it with the high-tech kit it needs to slash waiting lists and get patients treated on time again.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
My sister choked to death on tumours after conspiracy mum told her to refuse treatment – she must be banned
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) WHEN devastated Gabriel Shemirani heard his twin sister Paloma had died, he could not believe it. He had been told months ago that the 23-year-old Cambridge graduate's cancer was curable — but she had refused life-saving chemotherapy after going to live with their anti-vaxxer mum. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 7 Paloma Shemirani refused to have chemotherapy after going to live with her anti-vaxxer mum Credit: Facebook 7 Paloma's grieving brother Gabriel is campaigning to ensure there is proper regulation for alternative medicine - like that dispensed by his mother Credit: Louis Wood 7 Paloma's mum Kate fed her daughter a bogus coffee-based treatment promoted by the Australian cancer faker Belle Gibson Credit: Camera Press In a doomed attempt to cure her non-Hodgkin lymphoma, Paloma, from Uckfield, East Sussex, had followed a bogus coffee-based treatment promoted by the Australian cancer faker Belle Gibson. Recalling the heartbreaking moment a friend told him his sister had died after choking on her tumours, Gabriel tells The Sun: 'That's the most difficult part, because you're trying to do everything in your brain to think it's not real, it's not true. 'And every time you utter the words to someone else, that 'Paloma is dead' it feels like you're being burned alive.' At an inquest in Maidstone, Kent, last week, Gabriel blamed his mother Kate Shemirani — a former NHS nurse — for the death of his sister. 'People are dying. This needs to stop' Kate, 59, was struck off by the Nursing and Midwifery Council in May 2021 after claiming that the Covid virus was a hoax. She wrote that 'the NHS is the new Auschwitz' and regularly posted messages on social media opposing chemotherapy. Now she is advertising herself as a 'natural nurse' on her website. Gabriel, 24, wants a change in the law to protect patients from medical misinformation. The economics and maths student says: 'I couldn't save my sister, but there's still time to save others. 'People are dying. This needs to stop. Mum sacrificed my sister for anti-vax views, says twin of woman who died after refusing chemo for 'treatable' cancer 'The law is so out-of-date that we can have a woman that's killed her daughter still claiming to be a nurse. 'I believe my sister was being coerced. It's conspiratorial coercion when you convince her the elites are going to kill them, big pharma's going to kill them, even the doctors at the hospital are going to kill them.' Gabriel's mother has been banned from Facebook, Instagram and TikTok but was reinstated on X after billionaire Elon Musk took over. She denies responsibility — and blames the paramedics who tried to save her daughter's life. A year after Paloma's death, Gabriel is still feeling the loss of his sister. He says: 'With a twin they've always been there by your side. 'There's so much that doesn't need to be said because you already understand it, — it's almost like you have your own language. We were incredibly close — at no point did we ever fall out.' Growing up together with two other siblings in a troubled household also strengthened their bond. I wasn't able to have any meaningful conversation with my sister because she was out of it. That was the last time I saw Paloma. Gabriel on sister Paloma Their Iranian father Faramarz believed in conspiracy theories, such as the idea that the US government blew up the Twin Towers in New York on 9/11. From the age of nine, his mother told him to stop using suncream, and a couple of years later banned the kids from drinking tap water. At the inquest, Gabriel also claimed that she had been 'emotionally distant' and physically abusive during his childhood. In 2012, Kate was diagnosed with cancer, which she survived after having a double mastectomy. But she credits her survival to alternative treatments, including the controversial Gerson therapy which involves taking coffee enemas. Belle Gibson, who was the subject of the Netflix drama Apple Cider Vinegar, promoted the fake Gerson 'cure' before it was revealed she did not have terminal brain cancer. Like Gibson, Kate became a wellness guru — and Gabriel says: 'I think she saw her way to get that attention she'd always craved.' When the pandemic began in 2020, Gabriel was the last sibling living at the family home, with his father having moved back to Iran after separating from Kate six years earlier. But he moved out, preferring to 'sofa surf' over being locked down with his mother — and he says he 'wasn't surprised' when her extreme views made headlines. During a protest in London's Trafalgar Square in 2021, Kate asked for the names of doctors and nurses to be sent to her, before warning: 'At the Nuremberg Trials, the doctors and nurses stood trial and they hung.' 7 Neither Gabriel nor his brother Sebastian were told about Paloma's funeral which took place in August last year Credit: Supplied 7 When Gabriel heard his twin sister Paloma had died, he could not believe it Credit: Supplied Gabriel thought his sister was free of his mum's influence — but that all changed when Paloma was told she had cancer in late December 2023 and went to live back at home. Fearing that his sister wasn't going to accept the cancer treatment recommended by the NHS, Gabriel went to visit her on Christmas Day. He says he argued with his mum, adding: 'I wasn't able to have any meaningful conversation with my sister because she was out of it. That was the last time I saw Paloma.' Blocked from visiting, Gabriel sent messages begging Paloma to try chemotherapy. He received no response, so he took the extraordinary measure of trying to take his mum to the High Court, arguing that his sister was being 'coerced' by her. 'I don't talk to her, I have no feelings for her' Gabriel also asked social services to investigate, but claims they only spoke to Paloma on the phone while her mum was in the room. He says: 'For four or five months, I was living in constant fear that I was gonna get that phone call from someone saying my sister had died.' Unknown to him, his sister's condition was deteriorating rapidly. After collapsing at her mother's home on July 19 last year, Paloma was flown by air ambulance to the Royal Sussex County Hospital. Osteopath Nick Gosset, who assessed Paloma that day, told the inquest she was 'a young lady who was in the last stages of a very difficult disease, and she had declined to engage with conventional treatment.' The doctor 'had never seen anything like' the amount of growths going from her right shoulder to her neck during his 43 years in medicine. Five days later Paloma's life support machine was shut off, she had a heart attack as a result of the cancer. It would be another six days before Gabriel learned his sister had died. I think people like my mum should be regulated like a doctor should be regulated. If you are making medical claims, health claims, you should be held to account. Gabriel on his mother Kate Neither he nor his brother Sebastian were told about the funeral which took place in August last year. Gabriel says: 'She was cremated without our knowledge.' Now he no longer wants to have anything to do with 'that woman.' Gabriel, who calls his mum by her real name Kay, says: 'We're complete strangers. I don't talk to her — I have no feelings for her.' Kate's version of events is very different to the medical practitioners who treated Paloma. She claims on her blog that her daughter 'did not die of cancer' and was instead the victim of medical negligence. Kate says that paramedics should not have given Paloma adrenaline. On her website, she accuses the coroner of attempting to 'harass' her and 'acting unlawfully.' The former nurse also says that 'viruses and their transmission was invented' and that 5G masts were responsible for Covid. She offers one-hour consultations and branded vitamins for £75 a bottle through her website. The inquest is set to resume next week and take three days to conclude. Whatever verdict the coroner gives, this battle is not over for Gabriel. He is on a mission to properly regulate the ever-growing alternative medicine industry. Gabriel wants to prevent others relying on unproven treatments and has spoken out on the BBC's Panorama documentary Cancer Conspiracy Theories. He says: 'I think people like my mum should be regulated like a doctor should be regulated. 'If you are making medical claims, health claims, you should be held to account.' The global wellness industry is valued at over £5trillion and the authorities are struggling to challenge the countless over-inflated claims being made for natural remedies. Vitamins and a healthier diet can help cancer patients, but there is no scientific basis for claims that they are alternatives to proven treatments such as chemotherapy. Gabriel wants the Online Safety Act — designed to prevent children accessing harmful material and adults seeing illegal content — to also be used to stop medical misinformation. He says: 'Harmful but legal is still allowed for adults. These laws around promotion of treatments for cancer need to be changed.' Until then, 'natural nurse' Kate will continue to try to influence vulnerable patients hoping for a miracle cure. 7 Anti-vaxxer Kate protesting outside Parliament during the pandemic Credit: Alamy


Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
BBC presenter taken to hospital in ambulance after ‘real wake up call' working at Wimbledon and putting off medical care
Scroll down to read about Qasa's award-winning career in journalism 'Respect your body' BBC presenter taken to hospital in ambulance after 'real wake up call' working at Wimbledon and putting off medical care BBC presenter Qasa Alom has opened up on his recent health battle after being taken to hospital in an ambulance in the middle of Wimbledon. The journalist took to Instagram to lift the lid on a difficult few weeks for him following an admission to hospital in the middle of the SW19 tournament. Advertisement 5 Qasa Alom has revealed he went to hospital during his coverage of Wimbledon Credit: INSTAGRAM @qasaalom 5 He opened up on a difficult few weeks after being rushed to hospital in an ambulance Credit: INSTAGRAM @qasaalom 5 He thanked the NHS for their care of him Credit: INSTAGRAM @qasaalom 5 Qasa is now on the road to recovery Credit: INSTAGRAM @qasaalom 5 He urged followers to not put off seeking medical help Credit: INSTAGRAM @qasaalom He did not provide details on what exactly the issue was, but said it had escalated after he had put off going to see a medical professional. Qasa said: "I can't say the last few weeks have been easy… "Ever since the middle of Wimbledon I've been battling my body with a health issue. "I put off getting proper medical care because I just did not want to miss The Championships (error). Eventually it became too much & escalated. Advertisement READ MORE IN SPORT RAD MOVE Emma Raducanu, 22, hires ex-Nadal mentor as EIGHTH coach of her career "Thankfully the NHS have been brilliant in giving me the care I needed." He described the incident as a "real wake up call" and warned his followers to not put off seeking help if needed as it "will completely knock you for six". Qasa added: "Respect your body and its limitations. We only have one. "Grateful to my family for helping me through a difficult period & now the road to recovery." Advertisement Qasa shared pictures of his time at the hospital and during his journey to hospital on his post. Originally from Birmingham, Qasa joined the BBC in 2010 working for local radio before going on to win a Frank Gillard Award for his coverage for Radio 4 about Stoke-on-Trent's illegal sex trade. Former England star Joe Hart reveals how close he came to a career in cricket He made his BBC1 debut in 2016 before directing a film for the broadcaster in 2017. Qasa was named Radio Presenter of the Year in 2020 in the Asian Media Awards for his work on BBC Asian Network. Advertisement He covered The Boat Race and 2022 Commonwealth Games in his hometown of Birmingham before taking on the role as BBC's flagship daily tennis highlights presenter for Wimbledon in 2023.


Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
Fat jab users will go to dodgy online sellers if Mounjaro rollout is botched by NHS, drug bosses warn
'This could pose a serious risk to a patients' health', warn experts FAT JAB LOTTERY Fat jab users will go to dodgy online sellers if Mounjaro rollout is botched by NHS, drug bosses warn FAT jab users will go to dangerous sellers if the Mounjaro rollout is botched by the NHS, drugs bosses warn. Just eight of 42 health service boards offer the weight-loss injection after a launch in June, stats show. Advertisement Under current plans it will take 12 years for all the 3.4 million eligible people to get it. Dr Emily Pegg of Lilly, which makes Mounjaro, told The Sun: 'We worry more people will be forced to seek it from potentially illegitimate and dangerous sources.' Dr Pegg warned social media sellers and dodgy online pharmacies posed a threat. She said: 'This is a prescription-only medication that comes with many rules and regulations. Advertisement "A lot of people who are buying illicit medicines may not realise the potential danger.' Mounjaro is available on the NHS only to the most obese patients. More than 1.5 million Britons are thought to be taking weight-loss drugs, mostly on private prescription. Henry Gregg, from the National Pharmacy Association, said the NHS rollout was proceeding very slowly. Advertisement He added: 'There are concerning reports of clinically ineligible patients trying to source medication from unregulated sources. 'This could pose a serious risk to a patients' health.' I've lost nearly 6 stone in 9 months on fat jabs - trolls call me 'lazy' & say it's the 'easy way out' but I don't care A Department of Health spokesman said: 'We expect NHS boards to be making these drugs available. "We are determined to bring revolutionary modern treatments to everyone who needs them.' Advertisement