Peter Weinstock: Lifelike simulations that make real-life surgery safer
彼得·维恩斯特: 逼真的模拟,使现实生活中的手术更安全
Dr. Peter Weinstock is an Intensive Care Unit physician and Director of the Pediatric Simulator Program at Boston Children's Hospital/Harvard Medical School. Peter and his team fuse medicine with state of the art special effects, puppeteering and 3D printing technologies to create lifelike simulations of complex surgeries. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
there was a new technology
of doctors and nurses,
所有年龄段患者的治疗效果,
and adults, patients of all ages;
where care is delivered.
at Boston Children's Hospital,
加护病房医生,
through medical simulation.
是通过医疗模拟实现的。
the challenge ahead,
不仅会改进医疗,
going to improve health care
经历生命的第一天。
just born into the world.
that she is deteriorating.
her blood pressure is going down,
is displayed in this chest X-ray.
a little infant's body.
are supposed to be.
that's where the abdomen is,
are supposed to be.
there's sort of that translucent area
of this child's chest.
in the wrong place.
for this poor baby to breathe.
to the operating room,
back into the abdomen,
to the operating room,
——我工作的地方。
to the ICU, where I work.
on heart-lung bypass.
little incision in the neck,
vessels of the neck --
are about the size of a pen,
drawn from the body,
it gets oxygenated,
diaphragmatic hernia --
使得肠子能向上移位——
allowed these intestines to sneak up --
to get the volume --
很难达到百分之百。
curve at 100 percent.
接受训练超过20年,
that I trained for over 20 years,
the apprenticeship model.
a surgery maybe once,
that surgery to the next generation.
that we are delivering care to.
high-stakes industry
approach through medical simulation.
to other high-stakes industries
其他高风险行业,
of methodology for decades.
on a regular basis
what they hope will never occur.
the airline industry --
comforted by the idea
在模拟器上进行了训练
on simulators much like these,
that we hope will never occur,
as far as to create fuselages
of the team coming together.
一旦发生这种非常罕见的事故
these rare, rare events,
on the drop of a dime.
in some ways is the sports industry --
baseball players practice.
of progressive training.
is go out to spring training.
但在模拟赛场上,
but they're on a simulated field,
during the season games,
before they start the game?
and do batting practice for hours,
being thrown at them,
as they limber their muscles,
phenomenal part of this,
any sport event,
we're building practice swings like this
如何像他们这样做击球练习的。
for the patients that we care about
这个最近做好的病例。
that we recently built.
who had a progressively enlarging head,
neurologic milestones,
surrounding the brain.
between the brain and cranium,
cerebrospinal fluid or fluid,
just bathing your brains
and flows through,
occurs for all of us.
neurologic milestones.
a bit of the cranium off,
stick a drain in place,
this drain internal to the body.
in neurosurgical care
minimally invasive approaches
a camera can be inserted,
that allows all that fluid to drain,
is no longer under pressure,
through a single-hole incision.
放入正确位置时相当熟练。
this scope to the right place.
甚至我们自己的医生也是。
about this, even our own.
not made in Hollywood;
a scope into the pepper,
用小镊子摘除辣椒籽。
using a little tweezer.
of doing this surgery.
the apprenticeship model,
as they present themselves,
reproductions of children
teams to rehearse
Division of the Simulator Program.
from CT scans and MRIs,
of the child itself,
that have been casted as needed,
and be able to output it
three-dimensional printing devices
完全一样的器官。
the child's anatomy will look like.
we performed this surgery.
in Hollywood, California.
that are incredibly talented
that we are doing cinematography.
获得艾美奖的特效公司,
of our dear friends at Fractured FX
special effects firm.
that these individuals do.
and fused our experience,
to Boston Children's Hospital,
out to Hollywood, California
these type of simulators.
is a reproduction of this child.
每一根头发都被复制了。
on the child's head is reproduced.
that reproduced child --
一侧是真实的患者,
is, on one side, the actual patient,
needs to make its way down,
in this membrane
who thinks which side is which,
training opportunities,
as many times as they want,
until they feel comfortable.
再把孩子送进手术室。
bring the child into the operating room.
is not just the skill itself,
who's going to deliver that care.
of a technician putting on a tire
again on this car.
going to be incorporated
the exchange of tires
is a simulated operation.
I just described to you,
at Boston Children's Hospital,
these native teams, operative teams --
已经在做这个手术了。
你想让头部降低还是升高?
You want the head down or head up?
the whole table down a little bit?
is behaving like a vessel.
8 to 8 1/2, all right? I'll be right in.
which is critical,
听他们汇报。
immediately and debrief them.
使用的技术相同,
and Six Sigma in the military,
讨论哪里做的正确,
and talk about what went right,
再做一次。
and do it again.
做刻意的“击打”练习。
in the moments when it matters most.
how we care for this child
如何护理这个孩子。
at three o'clock in the morning.
out of scans and images,
to the virtual bedside,
做手术的同一个团队——
on this child in the hours ahead --
that I have with families
的重症监护室,
at Boston Children's Hospital
frequently in our ICU,
经常治疗这种疾病,
您孩子要做的这种手术,
to do on your child,
您的孩子的这台手术。
back to the operating room."
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Peter Weinstock - Pediatric ICU doctorDr. Peter Weinstock is an Intensive Care Unit physician and Director of the Pediatric Simulator Program at Boston Children's Hospital/Harvard Medical School. Peter and his team fuse medicine with state of the art special effects, puppeteering and 3D printing technologies to create lifelike simulations of complex surgeries.
Why you should listen
Dr. Peter Weinstock has merged his lifelong interest in human nature, medicine, theater and puppetry to develop one of the most advanced rehearsal spaces in medicine. Weinstock is a practicing pediatric intensive care unit physician at Boston Children's Hospital, where he serves as Senior Associate in Critical Care Medicine, Associate Professor of Anesthesia at Harvard Medical School, Chair of Pediatric Simulation and Director of the Boston Children's Hospital Simulator Program (SIMPeds). Weinstock works with his team of educators, psychologists, engineers, animators, special effects designers and 3D printers to immerse doctors, nurses, patients and their families in Hollywood-style "life-like" experiences -- all to optimize performance, clinical outcomes, as well as the entire healthcare journey for children and their families.
Weinstock received his PhD from Rockefeller University in molecular and cell biology, followed by clinical training in plastic and general surgery at the University of Pittsburgh and general pediatrics and critical care medicine at the Boston Children’s Hospital. His passion is in developing methods that link highly realistic practice and preparedness training directly to the delivery of high quality, safe care to improve the lives of infants, children and their families. Due to its inherent emotionality, Weinstock's approach to simulation is keenly connected to emotionality and behavioral psychology as essential elements of relationships and decision-making to understand and optimize human-human and human-technology interactions. Weinstock has rapidly grown SIMPeds to thousands of simulations per year, and the SIMPeds method has been adopted among pediatric teaching centers around the globe.
Weinstock frequently lectures internationally on state of art simulation and experiential learning, and he has published sentinel articles in innovative application and approaches to simulation -- from human factors to engineering and testing of next generation of ultra-realistic training devices. He has chaired meetings worldwide and is Founding President of the International Pediatric Simulation Society.
Peter Weinstock | Speaker | TED.com