Key Points

AIIMS Delhi has installed a da Vinci Surgical Robot to create India's first government medical college training facility for robotic-assisted surgery. This initiative comes from a collaboration with US-based Intuitive through a memorandum of understanding signed last year. The facility will train surgeons across various specialities including urology, gynaecology, and general surgery. It aims to improve surgical precision, reduce patient recovery times, and elevate healthcare standards nationwide.

Key Points: AIIMS Delhi Installs da Vinci Surgical Robot for Training

  • First da Vinci RAS training facility in a government Indian medical college
  • Trains surgeons across urology, gynaecology and general surgery specialities
  • Provides step-by-step learning from assisting to hands-on experience
  • Bridges training gap for resident surgeons with advanced technology
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AIIMS Delhi installs da Vinci Surgical robot to boost training in robotic surgery

AIIMS Delhi launches India's first government medical college da Vinci RAS training facility in collaboration with Intuitive to advance robotic surgery skills nationwide.

"This centre will help improve surgical precision, reduce recovery times, and elevate patient care across the country - Dr. M. Srinivas, AIIMS Delhi Director"

New Delhi, Sep 12

AIIMS New Delhi has installed the da Vinci Surgical robot by US-based Intuitive to equip surgeons and care teams with the skills and technology training in robotic-assisted surgery.

This is the first da Vinci RAS training facility in a government medical college in India.

It comes as AIIMS, last year, signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Intuitive to establish an innovative new training centre for robotic-assisted surgery at AIIMS, New Delhi.

The installation of the da Vinci RAS at the SET facility in AIIMS Delhi will equip surgeons with the skills and technology training necessary to perform robotic-assisted surgery across core specialities, including urology, gynaecology, general surgery, and more.

The collaboration is expected to play a key role in advancing the adoption of robotic-assisted surgery in India by offering high-quality training in a government medical setup.

“With this training centre, AIIMS Delhi is reinforcing its leadership in advancing surgical education and innovation. The demand for precision-driven technologies like robotic-assisted surgery is growing in India. By equipping surgeons for performing surgeries on advanced robotic technologies, this centre will help improve surgical precision, reduce recovery times, and elevate patient care across the country,” said Dr. M. Srinivas, Director of AIIMS Delhi.

For resident surgeons, access to advanced surgical training can often be limited compared to practicing surgeons.

Robotic-assisted surgery, supported by Intuitive’s education ecosystem, helps bridge this gap by equipping academic institutions with structured training and digital platforms.

“The training facility at AIIMS Delhi represents a significant milestone in strengthening India’s surgical robotics ecosystem. By collaborating with a premier academic institute like AIIMS Delhi, we are enabling access for surgeons and residents to train on the da Vinci platform and ecosystem,” said Rohitt Mahajan, Vice President and General Manager, Intuitive India.

The new facility is designed to provide surgeons with a step-by-step learning pathway. Trainees will progress from assisting during procedures to gaining supervised, hands-on experience in the operating room. Their learning will be further supported by structured training protocols and a systematic process developed by AIIMS, ensuring consistency, quality, and safety in skill development.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
As a medical student, this gives me so much hope! Access to da Vinci training in a government setup means more surgeons from diverse backgrounds can learn advanced techniques without going abroad.
D
David E
Excellent initiative! Robotic surgery reduces patient trauma and recovery time significantly. Hope the training protocols ensure proper skill development before surgeons operate on actual patients.
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Ananya R
While this is great progress, I hope the focus remains on making healthcare accessible to all. Advanced tech should not become another reason for medical costs to skyrocket in government hospitals too.
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Siddharth J
AIIMS leading the way as always! 👏 This will help bridge the gap between private and government healthcare infrastructure. More such collaborations needed!
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Kavya N
My father underwent robotic surgery last year and recovered much faster than traditional surgery. Glad more Indian doctors will now have proper training in this technology!

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