Digital Health Today 360 with Dan Kendall artwork

S5: #045: Justin Barad on Virtual Reality Training in Orthopaedics and Beyond

Digital Health Today 360 with Dan Kendall

English - October 31, 2017 22:30 - 48 minutes - ★★★★★ - 67 ratings
Medicine Health & Fitness Mental Health Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed


In this episode, we speak with another game developer turned healthcare professional. You may remember back on episode 8 we spoke with nurse and master gamer Anna Sort. She’s now running a company based in Barcelona that is helping healthcare companies develop fun and effective tools to engage users. If you haven’t done it yet, I encourage you to go back and listen to that episode, she gives some insights and techniques to achieve what she calls epic wins. You can grab that on digitalhealthtoday.com/8
Today, we’re speaking with a surgeon, an orthopaedic surgeon in fact. You may have heard me mention him on the episode 43 with Professor Stefano Bini, a professor of Clinical Orthopaedics at UCSF who runs the DOCSF meeting. In that episode we were talking about digital health tools being developed for orthopaedics, and our guest today is the founder of one of the companies that is doing exactly that.
Our guest is Dr. Justin Barad, he’s the founder and CEO of OssoVR. He’s taken his skill at gaming and game development and applied it to solve a real problem in medical education. In fact, it’s not just for medical education; it has applications from the military, to continuing education, to product training, and more.

Today's Topics:

The strain and pressure on medical education, and in particular surgical education

The impact of the training gap and the course to case gap on skills and patient outcomes

The three ‘A's of how patients should choose surgeons (Hint: Availabilty, Affability and Ability)

The use of Google and Wikipedia in surgery. (Yes, really.)

Results of a study that measured the impact of VR on improving surgical skills

Why medical device companies should be care about better ways of training users

How better data can improve surgical skills and, ultimately, surgical outcomes

Links and Resources Mentioned:

Osso VR Website

“Operative experience of residents in US general surgery programs: a gap between expectation and experience“

Justin Barad on Twitter @JBHungry

Justin Barad on LinkedIn

Video: Revolutionizing Surgical Training

AO Foundation

Join Digital Health Today

Videos:
OssoVR
Revoultionizing Surgical Training and Success with OSSO VR
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

In this episode, we speak with another game developer turned healthcare professional. You may remember back on episode 8 we spoke with nurse and master gamer Anna Sort. She’s now running a company based in Barcelona that is helping healthcare companies develop fun and effective tools to engage users. If you haven’t done it yet, I encourage you to go back and listen to that episode, she gives some insights and techniques to achieve what she calls epic wins. You can grab that on digitalhealthtoday.com/8

Today, we’re speaking with a surgeon, an orthopaedic surgeon in fact. You may have heard me mention him on the episode 43 with Professor Stefano Bini, a professor of Clinical Orthopaedics at UCSF who runs the DOCSF meeting. In that episode we were talking about digital health tools being developed for orthopaedics, and our guest today is the founder of one of the companies that is doing exactly that.

Our guest is Dr. Justin Barad, he’s the founder and CEO of OssoVR. He’s taken his skill at gaming and game development and applied it to solve a real problem in medical education. In fact, it’s not just for medical education; it has applications from the military, to continuing education, to product training, and more.


Today's Topics:


The strain and pressure on medical education, and in particular surgical education
The impact of the training gap and the course to case gap on skills and patient outcomes
The three ‘A's of how patients should choose surgeons (Hint: Availabilty, Affability and Ability)
The use of Google and Wikipedia in surgery. (Yes, really.)
Results of a study that measured the impact of VR on improving surgical skills
Why medical device companies should be care about better ways of training users
How better data can improve surgical skills and, ultimately, surgical outcomes


Links and Resources Mentioned:


Osso VR Website
Operative experience of residents in US general surgery programs: a gap between expectation and experience
Justin Barad on Twitter @JBHungry

Justin Barad on LinkedIn

Video: Revolutionizing Surgical Training

AO Foundation
Join Digital Health Today


Videos:

OssoVR

Revoultionizing Surgical Training and Success with OSSO VR

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Twitter Mentions