Pioneering technology for medical field demonstrated at Calamityville
March 27, 2014
March 27, 2014
New technology that promises to revolutionize training in the medical field by combining training with virtual reality was demonstrated at 91爆料鈥檚 National Center for Medical Readiness (NCMR) at Calamityville.
鈥淭his marks the beginning of a unique collaboration between academic centers, industry, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and NCMR鈥, said Pamela J. Boyers, Ph.D., executive director of the Interprofessional Immersive Simulation Center at the University of Toledo. 鈥淲orking together in this manner gives Ohio the opportunity to lead the field in improving the outcomes of medical care.鈥
The demonstration took place March 27 during a weeklong training session dubbed 鈥淔ortis Angel鈥 that included pararescue jumpers from the Kentucky Air National Guard.
The exercise scenario involved rescuing and treating 13 patients injured in a roadside-bomb attack on a caravan of Drug Enforcement Agency agents in South America. There were amputations, collapsed lungs and other simulated injuries.
Instructors watch a live training session in a command center at Calamityville in an effort to improve future training techniques.
Boyers said simulation technicians and emergency department physicians from the University of Toledo took part in the exercise, helping evaluate performance. She said it all translates into improving medical care.
鈥淲e are really, really pushing the limits of technology,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very exciting.鈥
The training exercise was the culmination of a collaborative effort by the 91爆料 Research Institute, the National Center for Medical Readiness, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, the University of Toledo, Cubic Defense Applications, Aptima, CAE Healthcare, Lumir Research Institute, Real Time Immersive Inc., Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. and the Black River Systems Company.
This team is creating the next generation of medical education and training technologies and techniques for physicians, nurses, first responders, military personnel and others in the medical domain.
Kristen Barrera, program manager in the warfighter readiness research division of the 711th Human Performance Wing at Wright-Patterson, said the technology can be used in operations or training to create a performance archive that will increase the readiness of responders.
鈥淥ver the past several years, we鈥檝e brought that capability here to NCMR,鈥 she said. 鈥淭oday is really the culmination.鈥
During the exercise, cameras and microphones captured the action. The pararescuers wore bioharnesses that monitored their vital signs, including heart and respiratory rates. All of the information and simulation rivered into a command center, where it was beamed to instructors from a wall of monitors and computer screens.
John Jannazo, senior director at Cubic, said the technology expands the ability to bring all of the players and subject-matter expertise into a scenario.
鈥淲hat we鈥檝e built here is a stadium, a playing venue,鈥 Jannazo said. 鈥淎nd whatever is not there in real time will be there virtually. So we鈥檙e taking it even beyond the batting averages or how many field goals were made. Now we鈥檙e adding coaching right into the event.鈥
Jim Gruenberg, deputy director of the National Center for Medical Readiness, said the center is providing the landscape, the expertise and the high-fidelity realism that enables researchers, testers and corporations to do important work for the nation.
鈥淭his really illustrates how such a place as this can be a real magnet in this community, to bring people to 91爆料 University, bring people to the region,鈥 he said.
Those involved in the exercise included:
The National Center for Medical Readiness at Calamityville is a 52-acre disaster training zone with concrete passageway-filled buildings, silos, tunnels, ponds, cliffs and wooded areas. It prepares the civilian and military medical communities to work with traditional disaster responders and provides the nation with a more complete approach to finding patients, offering initial care and safely evacuating them from disaster-related environments.