Wednesday, April 1, 2026
ADVT 
Tech

Virtual Reality, 3D Printing Among Innovations Changing Medical Treatment

The Canadian Press, 20 Jan, 2016 12:37 PM
    VANCOUVER — Virtual reality could be the next instrument in a hospital's arsenal of cost-fighting tools as nurse teams demo a surgery simulator that makes training feel like a video game.
     
    Surrey Memorial Hospital and several U.S. medical centres are testing software invented by a British Columbia tech company that provides an immersive 3D environment, which it says can replace traditional practice spaces.
     
    "You no longer have to spend the cost of operating room time to get the operating room experience," said Aaron Hilton, executive chairman of Conquer Mobile, of its tool PeriopSim.
     
    "We're trying to save B.C. from its nursing shortage by saving the province millions in nursing training."
     
    The invention, which Hilton displayed at a tech conference in Vancouver on Tuesday, is at the forefront of advancements in medical technology. It's just one example of how B.C. high-tech companies say innovations could help make health care more affordable.
     
    At the University of Victoria, biomedical engineers have founded a non-profit that's striving to bring 3D technologies to developing countries to manufacture prosthetics for impoverished amputees.
     
     
    The Victoria Hand Project equips doctors to 3D scan of a plaster mold of a patient's residual limb. The doctor can then use that image to create a custom-fitted 3D-printed socket.
     
    The invention has been trialed with victims of drug-related violence in Guatemala and people injured by traffic accidents in Nepal.
     
    Traditional prosthetic costs can be as high as $10,000, but the new prosthetic can be printed, assembled and delivered for $320, says project director Joshua Coutts.
     
    "Compared to what's out there now, this is a substantial savings," he said.
     
    Technological advancements have hit a point where many costs are dropping based on increased competition among innovators, said Prof. Siamak Arzanpour of Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, B.C.
     
    His team had to find cost-effective solutions while designing a robotic exoskeleton that assists people with lower-body disabilities, which he likened to the film character "Iron Man."
     
     
    "By attacking real problems, we are reducing the burden for government and for the health-care system," added Arzanpour, who's in the school of mechatronic systems engineering.
     
    Automation is another potential cost-saver. One case is a company that makes equipment for the pharmaceutical industry, which uses robotics to fill vast quantities of containers with injectable medicines.
     
    Christopher Procyshyn, CEO of Vanrx Pharmasystems Inc., said cutting out humans is not only more precise but cheaper. He compared decreased costs to deploying a drone instead of a fighter plane.
     
    Procyshyn added that when drug therapies tend to be more costly themselves, they may produce savings by being more effective.
     
    "The story is becoming more common — people living with cancer, people overcoming cardiac issues, people spending longer term having better therapies and better lifespans," he said.
     
    "From a health-economics standpoint, what does it cost now? The pharmaceutical is more expensive but (patients are) not in the hospital, they're not in surgery."
     
    In other instances, costs have dropped dramatically.
     
    Startup firm Perked! has developed a mobile app that functions as a mental-fitness coach, called Ava.
     
    The company worked with a neuroscientist at the University of British Columbia to create activities based on research that are designed to enhance a person's mental health and happiness.
     
     
    The product is an example of something that is cost-effective to develop and that could save money for the health-care system, said CEO Jane Chung.
     
    "Technology can provide accessible and personalized medicine to enhance well-being, which affects costs that might otherwise be borne by the community."

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Technology to lower risk of midair collisions

    Technology to lower risk of midair collisions
    Here is a new technology that has successfully lowered the risk of midair collisions in small aircraft.

    Technology to lower risk of midair collisions

    Apple rejects app to facilitate female masturbation

    Apple rejects app to facilitate female masturbation
     An app that teaches women how to masturbate has been removed by Apple from its iTunes stores worldwide.

    Apple rejects app to facilitate female masturbation

    Bizarre! One in six Britons prefer sex with robots

    Bizarre! One in six Britons prefer sex with robots
    Roughly one in six respondents would “have sex with an android” and another one in three (29 percent) were 'OK' with others getting down with robots, the survey revealed.

    Bizarre! One in six Britons prefer sex with robots

    Want to know how to get a good raise? Read this!

    Want to know how to get a good raise? Read this!
    Have you received a less favourable appraisal from your boss this year? You are likely coming to office late. A study has found bosses to be favouring employees who, even though on flexible timings, arrived early.

    Want to know how to get a good raise? Read this!

    New technology may improve light-based cancer treatment

    New technology may improve light-based cancer treatment
    Researchers have developed a new technology that could bring photodynamic therapy (PDT), which uses lasers to activate special drugs to treat easily accessible tumours such as oral and skin cancer, into areas of the body which were previously inaccessible.

    New technology may improve light-based cancer treatment

    Handle this! Teenagers don't trust information via tweets

    Handle this! Teenagers don't trust information via tweets
    Are you among those who love tweeting but somewhat wary of information via tweets from others? Join the 'Millennial Generation' that has a “healthy mistrust” of the information they read on Twitter.

    Handle this! Teenagers don't trust information via tweets