30th March 2005 06:41 AM
MENLO PARK, California: the U.S. Army has awarded an international multi-organisation team US$12 million over a two year contract to develop an unmanned battlefield medical treatment system. The Trauma Pod will replace the army’s current Da Vinci Surgical system. Designed to be completely unmanned, with remote operation over a hardened wireless communication channel by medical staff in a fixed facility, the system will be compact enough to fit inside a medical ground or air vehicle.
The team is led by SRI International, a non-profit research institute and developer of pioneering telesurgery systems. The other members of the team consist of leading robotics companies and several major U.S. universities. The Trauma Pod program is funded by DARPA through the Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center (TATRC), part of the U.S. Army Research and Materiel Command.
"SRI is excited about working with the team to innovate and apply its interdisciplinary technical skills, rigorous approach to system integration, and comprehensive testing and demonstration abilities to tackle the challenge of developing a functional system," said Scott Seaton, the executive director of SRI’s Engineering and Systems Division. "The result will be a major step forward in saving lives on the battlefield. SRI has a long history of meeting our nation’s defense needs, and this program continues in that tradition."
In a computer generated video prepared for Pentagon officials, SRI/XVIVO demonstrated what the Trauma Pod would look like and how it would operate: XVIVO Medical Animation (requires Quicktime).
SRI International was founded in 1946 as the Stanford Research Institute. It has contributed many key innovations to the development of the personal computer, robotics, the Internet, imaging, bioscience and other technologies.