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Professor Justin Beilby (email)
Executive Dean, Faculty of Health Sciences University of Adelaide Business: +61 8 8303 5193 Mobile: 0403 017 457 Professor Robert Vink (email) NRF Chair of Neurosurgical Research Head, School of Medical Sciences The University of Adelaide Business: +61 8 8303 4533 Ms Olivia Jones (email) Account Director FULLER Business: +61 8 8363 6811 Mobile: 0400 116 668 Ms Robyn Mills (email) Media and Corporate Communications Officer University of Adelaide Business: +61 8 8303 6341 Mobile: +61 410 689 084
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Thursday, 17 July 2008 The University of Adelaide is set to unveil the most high-tech medical teaching facility South Australia has ever seen - Bio Skills SA - complete with human simulator robots and a fully integrated audiovisual system for remote videoconferencing. Vice-Chancellor and President of the University Professor James McWha will officially open the $4.6 million facility this Friday 18 July at the University's Medical School on Frome Road. The Bio Skills SA facility, together with a refurbished Surgical Skills Laboratory and an upgraded dissection room, provides students with access to clinical skills simulation and interaction with live patients, modern anatomy and pathology resources and surgical scenarios. "Bio Skills SA sets a new standard of medical teaching in South Australia," Professor McWha says. "It is the first medical teaching facility of its kind in Australia to have areas that are interchangeable to meet the different and evolving needs of staff, students and professionals. "This is an exciting step in the University's extensive development program, which will see state-of-the-art research and teaching facilities evolve on our North Terrace, Waite and Roseworthy campuses over the next four years." Bio Skills SA can accommodate undergraduate and postgraduate students from health science disciplines including medicine, nursing and physiotherapy. New technology in the facility will enable students to experience clinical situations more realistically, enhancing their skill development. Key features of the facility include:
"The IT and AV is truly state-of-the-art," says Professor Justin Beilby, Executive Dean of Health Sciences at the University of Adelaide. "We are also introducing Bio Skills robots to our teaching practices. These sophisticated human simulators reproduce clinical settings in great detail and are increasingly important educational tools. They produce lung, heart, and bowel sounds, have anatomically correct pulses and respond to medical and pharmacological interventions appropriately. "The Medical School is always teaching at capacity and health sciences courses are rapidly increasing in popularity and student numbers. This new space responds to this demand and will provide a work and study environment that is second to none," he says. |
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