NHS Using Virti’s XR Training Solution to Help Train COVID-19 Staff

Virti

When the UK Government put the country into lockdown due to the coronavirus (COVID)-19) pandemic it also requested volunteers to help with the influx of patients the National Heath Service (NHS) was expecting. Thousands of people did volunteer but that created another issue, how to suitably train so many people with critical COVID-specific skills. One method the NHS used was Virti’s immersive training solution.

Virti

The Bristol-based company’s technology was used to deliver remote educational programmes to NHS employees at scale, rolling out COVID-19 modules to staff via a virtual reality (VR) headsets, desktop or smart devices.

Virti’s software covered key areas such as how to safely apply and remove personal protective equipment (PPE), how to engage with patients and their families as well as navigating an unfamiliar intensive care ward. And because of the influx of staff tens of thousands of training sessions were recorded.

Previously selected to join the NHS Innovation Accelerator (NIA) programme, Virti’s system uses AI to assess users and improve their performance after they’ve interacted with hospital environments and real patient cases in either VR or AR.

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“We’ve been using Virti’s technology in our intensive care unit to help train staff who have been drafted in to deal with COVID-19 demand,” said Tom Woollard, West Suffolk Hospital Clinical Skills and Simulation Tutor in a statement. “The videos which we have created and uploaded are being accessed on the Virti platform by nursing staff, physiotherapists and Operational Department Practitioners (ODPs) to orient them in the new environment and reduce their anxiety. The tech has helped us to reach a large audience and deliver formerly labour-intensive training and teaching which is now impossible with social distancing. In the future, West Suffolk will consider applying Virti tech to other areas of hospital practice.”

Virti was founded in 2018 by NHS Trauma and Orthopedic surgeon Dr Alexander Young who was looking to improve healthcare training. The company is one of a number VRFocus has covered recently from the sector including Osso VR and Precision OS, two apps which specialise in surgical training.

As Virti continues to expand its immersive training solution, VRFocus will keep you updated.

VR Training Company Virti Joins NHS Innovation Accelerator Programme

Among the winners of the VR Awards 2018 was Virti, a healthcare training company which specialised in the use of both augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR) technology. Today, Virti has announced that it’s been selected to join the UK’s NHS Innovation Accelerator (NIA) programme. 

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Founded by trauma and orthopaedic surgeon Dr Alexander Young, Virti uses immersive technology combined with AI to transport users into realistic, hard-to-access environments to safely assess them under pressure. This helps to reduce anxiety and improve human performance and outcomes regardless of geographical boundaries.

Since launching 12 months ago Virti has gained a large number of enterprise customers in the UK and US, and in the process won a number of high profile awards including the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh Triennial Innovation Prize and, most recently, winning the VR Healthcare Category at the VR Awards.

Since it launched in July 2015, the NHS’ National Innovation Accelerator programme has supported the implementation of 37 evidence-based healthcare innovations across more than 1,700 NHS sites.

“It is a huge honour to be selected onto the NHS’ NIA programme and a testament to our ongoing work with the UK’s National Health Service,” said Dr Young, CEO/Founder Virti in a statement. “We are delighted to be the first Virtual and Augmented Reality company selected onto the NIA and proud that our evidence-based VR/AR training platform will now be scaled to further hospitals, physicians and patients through the NIA. We are particularly excited to help deliver the NHS’ recently published ‘Staff and Learner Wellness Strategy to 2027’ and further demonstrate the positive impacts that immersive technology can have on corporates, employees and for healthcare.”

“The NHS Long Term Plan puts the latest technology and innovation at the heart of people’s care and the future of our health service. Right across the NHS patients are benefitting from world-beating innovations, spread as part of this programme,” adds Professor Stephen Powis, NHS Medical Director.

Virti offers a range of training scenarios to suit not only medical professionals but also enterprise, military, school and charity based needs, all at different pricing structures. For further updates as Virti continues to expand, keep reading VRFocus.