
Virtual Reality
Powers Surgical Training
VR training offers a powerful new way to learn at every stage of your career:
Engaging
Learn by doing-build muscle memory with VR training runs of procedures. It's the next best thing to actual surgery.
Effective
In a study, even the lowest-performing VR-trained surgeon performed better than the best of the non-VR group.1
Efficient
Practice procedures over and over without cadavers, saw bones or travel.
Virtual Reality is a leap forward: In a study conducted by Imperial College London, 83% of residents in a VR-trained group were able to perform the procedure with little or no guidance. None of the conventionally trained group (non-VR) were able to do the same.
Johnson & Johnson Institute is leading the way in virtual reality training for health care professionals. You can now meet up with other HCPS in a virtual operating room, no matter where they are physically located. Interested in bringing VR into your facility? We’d love to hear from you! To connect with someone about VR training, please submit a request here.
Virtual Reality is a leap forward: In a study conducted by Imperial College London, 83% of residents in a VR-trained group were able to perform the procedure with little or no guidance. None of the conventionally trained group (non-VR) were able to do the same.
Johnson & Johnson Institute is leading the way in virtual reality training for health care professionals. You can now meet up with other HCPS in a virtual operating room, no matter where they are physically located. Interested in bringing VR into your facility? We’d love to hear from you! To connect with someone about VR training, please submit a request here.
Virtual Reality is a leap forward: In a study conducted by Imperial College London, 83% of residents in a VR-trained group were able to perform the procedure with little or no guidance. None of the conventionally trained group (non-VR) were able to do the same.
“Our goal at the Johnson & Johnson Institute is to have VR available to every surgeon all around the world. We want to ensure those surgeons are able to learn our procedures and really make a difference on the front line of care and help improve patient outcomes globally.”
–Sandra Humbles
Johnson & Johnson MedTech
1. Logishetty et al. Virtual reality training improves trainee performance in total hip arthroplasty; a randomized controlled trial. The Bone & Joint Journal, 2019.