SPRINGFIELD — The John Adams Innovation Institute announced a $150,000 grant to Baystate Medical Center and the Chamberlain Group to support development of a new surgical training system, bolstering the hospital’s position as a leader in medical-simulation training.
Combining proven simulation training techniques with the use of non-biological replicas of human organs, the project aims to establish a new standard in surgical simulation training, equipping young surgeons with a level and sophistication of skill previously unattainable.
The project, the Tactility Learning System, is a collaboration comprising medical leaders and surgical experts from Baystate Medical Center and the Chamberlain Group, a Western Mass.-based company that produces anatomically correct, tissue-responsive medical models. The effort will leverage state-of-the-art simulation technology to open up new market opportunities in the biotech field, while at the same time helping to keep rising health care costs in check by helping surgeons operate at a higher skill level, and thus reducing the rate of costly medical errors.
“For a very long time, the standard model of surgical training has been ‘watch one, do one, teach one.’ This system is so realistic that that model is going to change,” said Dr. Richard Wait, chairman of Surgery at Baystate Health. “Now it’s going to be ‘watch one, then practice a dozen, then do one and teach one.’ We’re going to have young surgeons coming to their first procedure better-trained and more capable than ever before.”
“In addition to improving health outcomes for the citizens of Massachusetts, Baystate Medical Center is once again demonstrating that robust innovation activity and top medical science and expertise is thriving across the Commonwealth,” said state Sen. Stephen Buoniconti, D-Springfield, a longtime supporter of the hospital in its role as an academic and economic center for Western Mass.
“To think the first time I visited the Chamberlain Group in Great Barrington, I thought I was in a Hollywood special-effects studio, but I soon learned that they are on the cutting edge of the most innovative medical technology training, not only in the state but in the country,” added State Rep. William Pignatelli, D-Lenox, a member of the Committee on Higher Education. “Collaborations like these with our fine institutions of higher learning and leaders in the health care industry help reinforce our interest in the life sciences.”
The new system will promote the expansion of Baystate’s role as a national center for simulation training in graduate and continuing medical education, attracting top-tier faculty to the hospital — the western campus of Tufts University School of Medicine — and increasing employment opportunities for specialists in the medical device, plastics, and precision-machining sectors. Investments like this one are also helping the Pioneer Valley become a center of life-sciences activity.
“The engine that drives our Commonwealth’s knowledge economy is fueled by innovation and the institutional collaborations that come from it. This surgical training enterprise can catalyze the partnerships necessary for important downstream economic benefits to the region and beyond,” said Pat Larkin, director of the John Adams Innovation Institute, a division of the Mass. Technology Collaborative, the state’s economic development agency for the innovation economy.
The project’s immediate work is the development, production, and validation of a surgical training kit for open bowel surgery, advancing the simulation training curriculum of area academic institutes, and establishing competitive advantages for Baystate’s Simulation Center and Goldberg Surgical Skills Lab and the businesses associated with the training system.
The kit will include ultra-realistic artificial bowel tissue, surgical tools, and multimedia instructional materials. Eventually, simulated tissue and training materials for other types of surgeries will be available.
“We see the Open Bowel Trainer as the first in what we expect will be an expanding line of products designed for resident training, combining our mimetic tissue with curriculum developed by Baystate faculty,” said Eric Chamberlain, president of the Chamberlain Group. “This potent combination of didactics and hands-on anatomy will address a multitude of surgical education needs, making it possible for centers across the U.S. and worldwide to benefit from the advances we are making collectively.”
“The most important outcome of Baystate Medical Center’s notable leadership in simulation training is improving patient outcomes and the overall quality of our care through innovation in education,” said Dr. Neal Seymour, chief of General Surgery at Baystate Medical Center and medical director of the Baystate Simulation Center and Goldberg Surgical Skills Lab. “But collaborations like ours with the Chamberlain Group and the John Adams Innovation Institute are leading to new economic opportunity in Western Mass., and are truly expanding the definition of caring for a community.” |