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Jeff Hawks of Nebraska Shows How Surgeons are Using Robotics for More Control

Tuesday, 12 May 2020 02:30 PM

Jeff Hawks of Nebraska Has Identified How Robotics is Providing More Benefits to Patients

LINCOLN, NE / ACCESSWIRE / May 12, 2020 / Each and every year, millions of Americans go under the knife for surgery of one kind or another. There are risks associated with surgeries, and Jeff Hawks of Nebraska has been showing how robotics can be used to help surgeons improve precision and efficacy. Jeff Hawks has done a significant amount of research in robotics to show how it can aid in laparoscopic surgery. Miniature robotics can be placed entirely inside the abdominal cavity through a single incision, reducing the trauma and improving patient recovery.

Web Presence, Tuesday, May 12, 2020, Press release picture

As an expert in robotic technology, Jeff Hawks of Nebraska graduated from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln with a Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering. Dr. Hawks has worked with NASA and the Army's Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center to demonstrate the use of surgical robots.

One of the biggest problems that surgeons have are the risks associated with large incisions. They're prone to bleeding and infection. They also increase patient recovery times and hospital costs. As such, laparoscopic surgeries, otherwise known as keyhole surgeries, are gaining more popularity. Jeff Hawks of Nebraska wrote his Ph.D. dissertation on miniature wireless surgical robots. He has shown how robotics can be applied in the future.

Dr. Hawks has been heavily involved in grant consultation work, too, specifically within biomechanics. This allows others in the medical field to explore how robotics can be developed and used in order to give surgeons more dexterity in the operating room. While robots won't replace surgeons, it can reduce the size and number of incisions that surgeons do, providing more benefits to patients. It can also reduce surgical fatigue with big surgeries where surgeons may currently be forced to stand over an open patient for eight or more hours prior to closing.

Jeff Hawks has written a number of medical articles to explain to doctors how wheeled robotics, biomedical devices, and more are the future of the operating room. He has managed a variety of research projects that focus on mechatronics and biomechanics. Further, he is committed to talking to doctors around the globe for how they can embrace robotics in order to adapt with the latest technology.

A number of medical science journals have been reporting the use of robotics in more and more surgeries. While the cost to implement robotic surgery tools into facilities can be high, many medical facilities around the country are beginning to embrace the technology. Additionally, Jeff Hawks of Nebraska regularly encourages surgeons to learn how to use the various robotic tools within skills labs whenever they have the opportunity.

Find out more about what Dr. Jeff Hawks of Nebraska is doing with his research by following what his current employers are doing, including Metal-Tech Partners and LawnShark.

CONTACT:

Caroline Hunter
Web Presence, LLC
+1 7865519491

SOURCE: Web Presence, LLC

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