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Insight and Technology

Robotic surgery is turning out to be an expensive fad

The rapid rise of robot-aided surgery ignores the fact that high-tech gadgets don’t always improve treatment outcomes but do increase costs

By Ruby Prosser Scully

12 June 2019

robotic arms

Machine arms get to work in the operating theatre

Peter Menzel/SPL

SURGERY performed with the help of a robot has been billed as the next revolution in healthcare: such procedures can be carried out through an incision the width of a finger, causing less scarring and often allowing people to return to their homes more quickly.

The UK’s National Health Service recently announced plans to spend £50 million on more robotic surgical equipment for operating theatres, and yet the benefits of this high-tech approach are debated. Earlier this year, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

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