“robotic surgery to enter the future”
Robotic surgery between present and future. The Aula magna of the University yesterday hosted the round table to examine the potential and economic advantages of the new frontier of surgery. The director of the Surgery Unit of the Institute for Social Security, Dr. Giovanni Landolfo, coordinated the reflections of the leading experts in the sector.
“We are not talking about an innovation, but a novelty, which will already allow the Republic of San Marino and its ISS to be able to attract new professionals, to then increase the skills of the excellent professionals at its disposal and to be able to network with health facilities surrounding its territory “. With these words, the general manager of ISS, Francesco Bevere, opened the meeting. The same frequency for the Secretary of Health, Roberto Ciavatta: “Investments in innovation, from operational and therapeutic tools, will be increasingly decisive in guaranteeing strategic growth of our system, networking with the surrounding hospitals and increasing the professionalism of our operators .
We cannot escape from what is happening all over the world, where investments in Healthcare are increasingly consistent, especially after the two years of the pandemic ».
Numerous advantages illustrated: expansion of the operator’s capabilities, greater speed in procedures, usefulness of invasiveness of interventions and increased precision, but also better user interface and increased accuracy, but also better user interface, less preparation in setting up the operating room and above all a better quality of the intervention in favor of the patient who will have a reduced hospital stay and often a reduction of post-operative pain.
All the interventions explained to the large audience the clinical experience gained in the operating room with the use of the surgical robot, each for its own field of application and medical specialization of reference. At the end of the intense morning, Bevere announced a new scientific appointment, in September, to broaden the scope of discussion to radiotherapy.