Virtual Reality helps healthcare workers to save lives at birth

https://www.youtube.com/embed/wsoHaUyx1j0

Maybe 1 million healthcare workers in Africa do not receive essential training to manage medical emergencies and reduce infant mortality. The vision of Professor Mike English from the Department of Tropical Medicine and crowdfunding via the
OxReach platform has led to the development of Life-saving Instruction For Emergencies (LIFE), based on existing programmes of face-to-face teaching. This life-saving technology improves training, and so should help to address the
620,000 new-born lives that the World Health Organisation (WHO) say could be saved by delivering essential interventions including emergency care effectively.

 

https://videopress.com/embed/0z6hUySN

 

LIFE is a scenario-based mobile serious game and Virtual Reality (VR) gaming platform that teaches healthcare workers to identify and manage medical emergencies. A basic version is downloadable for a smartphone. Healthcare workers explore
a scenario to learn or revise essential knowledge regularly. Interactive, instructional emergency care training is delivered using a 3D virtual hospital.

 

The LIFE project is both innovative and transformative. It shows the way we should think about and take advantage of the changing technological landscape in Africa.

– Dr Wilson Were, WHO's Department of Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health

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Find out more about the Life-Saving Instruction for Emergencies (LIFE) project.

GO TO THE LIFE PROJECT WEBSITE

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CONTACT@CTL.OX.AC.UK

 

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