Computer Science, asked by harshnagrani009, 9 months ago

medical trainers and doctors can practice surgery via before actual surgery

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Answered by dhiranriyank
1

Answer:

As recently as five to 10 years ago, we bought chicken feet from grocers in Chinatown markets and had our residents practice techniques of tendon repair by suturing chicken flexor tendons,” says Dr. Donald Bae, an orthopedic surgeon at Boston Children’s Hospital.

As recently as five to 10 years ago, we bought chicken feet from grocers in Chinatown markets and had our residents practice techniques of tendon repair by suturing chicken flexor tendons,” says Dr. Donald Bae, an orthopedic surgeon at Boston Children’s Hospital.He said the tendons in chicken feet aren’t easy to get to, but once you find them, they feel a lot like human tendons. Plus, they’re super cheap.

As recently as five to 10 years ago, we bought chicken feet from grocers in Chinatown markets and had our residents practice techniques of tendon repair by suturing chicken flexor tendons,” says Dr. Donald Bae, an orthopedic surgeon at Boston Children’s Hospital.He said the tendons in chicken feet aren’t easy to get to, but once you find them, they feel a lot like human tendons. Plus, they’re super cheap.But today, 3D printing, realistic mannequins, and virtual reality are transforming how surgeons learn. Last summer, the University of Tennessee College of Medicine in Chattanooga became the final medical school in the U.S. and Canada to stop using live animals to teach surgical skills to students.

As recently as five to 10 years ago, we bought chicken feet from grocers in Chinatown markets and had our residents practice techniques of tendon repair by suturing chicken flexor tendons,” says Dr. Donald Bae, an orthopedic surgeon at Boston Children’s Hospital.He said the tendons in chicken feet aren’t easy to get to, but once you find them, they feel a lot like human tendons. Plus, they’re super cheap.But today, 3D printing, realistic mannequins, and virtual reality are transforming how surgeons learn. Last summer, the University of Tennessee College of Medicine in Chattanooga became the final medical school in the U.S. and Canada to stop using live animals to teach surgical skills to students.Instead of live pigs, UTC surgery students will practice on surgery simulators that mimic the organs and skin of human bodies, complete with bleeding, breathing, and blinking.

As recently as five to 10 years ago, we bought chicken feet from grocers in Chinatown markets and had our residents practice techniques of tendon repair by suturing chicken flexor tendons,” says Dr. Donald Bae, an orthopedic surgeon at Boston Children’s Hospital.He said the tendons in chicken feet aren’t easy to get to, but once you find them, they feel a lot like human tendons. Plus, they’re super cheap.But today, 3D printing, realistic mannequins, and virtual reality are transforming how surgeons learn. Last summer, the University of Tennessee College of Medicine in Chattanooga became the final medical school in the U.S. and Canada to stop using live animals to teach surgical skills to students.Instead of live pigs, UTC surgery students will practice on surgery simulators that mimic the organs and skin of human bodies, complete with bleeding, breathing, and blinking.Below we’ll discuss the benefits of surgery simulators and give you four options for free surgery simulators to get you started

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