Windsor Star

Midwifery students use AR technology

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Midwifery students in London are learning to bring new life into the world in a radically new way with the help of augmented reality (AR) technology.

Using AR headsets and lifelike models of full-term mothers, trainee midwives at Middlesex University can take part in fully simulated births, which the university’s clinical staff hope will both hone their clinical skills and leave them better prepared to face challenges rarely seen in day-to-day practice.

AR technology offers users an interactiv­e experience in which objects in the real world are enhanced by computer-generated informatio­n.

Midwifery educator Sarah Chitongo said the AR system allowed students to understand better the birthing process by displaying an interactiv­e representa­tion of a patient’s anatomy.

“It allows you to see a visual picture of the actual anatomy itself, which is raised out of the normal body, and you can step in, walk around and have an internal view,” Chitongo told Reuters.

Chitongo cited high-risk problems such as shoulder dystocia (when a baby’s shoulders get stuck in the mother’s body) and breech births (when a baby is born bottom first) as particular rarities for midwives where AR could help prepare students to cope and ultimately to save lives.

Chitongo believes younger trainees will embrace the technology as they are of a generation that has largely grown up with computers and interactiv­e environmen­ts.

However, her overarchin­g aim is for midwives to become better prepared to reduce mortality rates, which are disproport­ionately high among ethnic minority pregnancie­s.

A study by MBBRACE-UK (Mothers and Babies Reducing Risk through Audits and Confidenti­al Enquiries) shows black women are five times more likely and Asian women two times more likely to die as a result of complicati­ons in their pregnancy than white women

“When you get it right, with a population where it’s actually on the worst side (of the statistics), it means you’ve got a better and safer maternity service across the U.K.,” Chitongo said.

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