Health

Virtual Patient: Bridging the Communication Gap

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Do you ever find it challenging to understand what your doctor or surgeon is trying to explain to you? If so, a visual can be extremely helpful—especially if it’s your body in 3D.

Complex conditions and procedures described in multi-syllabic medical terminology can be difficult to decode, creating stress and confusion about your healthcare options.

“Our biggest challenge as surgeons is getting people to understand exactly what we are doing and not only what we are doing, but how difficult it can be,” Mayo Clinic, Urologist

Doctor David Thiel, MD, told Ivanhoe.

Virtual dissection tables like this one at Mayo Clinic could help bridge the communication gap between doctor and patient.

“We can take a thin slice CT of any patient we want and we can virtualize them in six to twelve minutes and we can have them on the table,” Mayo Clinic, Tech Specialist Conrad Dove, told Ivanhoe.

In life-size 3D! Doctors can show you—not just tell you—about a trouble spot on any layer of your body, down to the bone

“Three dimension is so much more real to people. If I show someone a picture of something on a sheet of paper or I show them a pop-up book, which one makes more sense? Even a child gets more out of a pop-up book,” Dove explained.

Mayo Clinic surgeon Doctor David Thiel agrees. “This type of model would allow you to see where the tumor is, here is where we need to cut, here is where we need to reconstruct and it kind of gives you an idea of what we are trying to do,” Doctor Thiel said.

Doctor Thiel also expects to use this technology to help his surgical team—including nurses and medical technicians—prepare for a complex procedure. The technology is part of Mayo Clinic’s New Simulation Center.