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BRUCE ASATO / BASATO@STARADVERTISER.COM
The Queen’s Medical Center celebrated its 10,000th da Vinci procedure on Monday. Chaplain Nori Hamamoto performs a Hawaiian blessing of the new da Vinci XI SP surgical robot. The SP joins Queen’s da Vinci Xi systems for use in urological and gynecologic surgeries, heart-valve repair, thorascopic surgeries, gastrointestinal and esophageal surgeries and gastric bypass.
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BRUCE ASATO / BASATO@STARADVERTISER.COM
Surgeons at The Queen’s Medical Center displayed the movements Monday of the da Vinci XI SP robot, which facilitates surgery through a single incision.
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Robots at the Queen’s Medical Center have completed more than 10,000 surgeries, a milestone for the hospital that has invested millions of dollars in the technology since 2007.
Queen’s on Monday celebrated the 10,765 cases completed with the da Vinci robots, which have four arms (one for the camera, three for the instruments) that are inserted into small incisions in the belly wall to help surgeons remove a variety of cancers and perform hysterectomies, gastric bypass
and other procedures.
The hospital also celebrated the deployment of its newest robotic technology, the da Vinci SP, which has smaller, more flexible arms that are inserted through a single one-inch incision that can get to hard to reach places in the body, including the throat and the base of the tongue.
The robots have improved surgical outcomes with faster recovery times for patients, according
to Queen’s, which leases the machines and is one of 30 facilities worldwide with the technology.
“We’re always striving to get
people out of the hospital quicker and decrease the amount of pain medications they need,” said
Dr. Steven Nishida, chairman of Queen’s robotic surgery committee. “Our techniques to help patients recover faster are always improving. We’ve gone through three generations of robots. Patients are in the hospital for shorter stays, usually have less pain, and we can do a more accurate, precise procedure. On the back end, we make up the difference in costs because we have hopefully better outcomes.”
Depending on the procedure,
patients who were previously
hospitalized for four to five days can now be discharged the same day, he said.