Robotic surgery has grown a lot in the U.S. For example, a study in Michigan showed robotic surgeries went from 1.8% to 15.1% of all surgeries between 2012 and 2018. Some surgeries, like inguinal hernia repairs, had a big increase in robotic use—41 times more. The da Vinci systems made by Intuitive Surgical are the most popular. They have trained over 60,000 surgeons worldwide and helped with more than 12 million robotic surgeries.
Patients benefit from robotic surgeries because these surgeries use smaller cuts, cause less blood loss, help people heal faster, reduce pain, and shorten hospital stays. Surgeons also find it easier to work because they can sit down, use tools that move like wrists, and see in 3D. Hospitals with growing robotic programs have seen better patient results and sometimes lower costs because fewer problems happen after surgery.
Even with all these benefits, many hospitals in the U.S. do not use their robotic systems fully. This is partly because these systems are very expensive to buy and keep. Hospitals often wait to buy more robots until they use their current ones better. Fixing these problems is important to make robotic surgery work well and pay off financially.
These problems lead to wasted operating room time, longer waits for patients, and lower financial returns on the robotic systems.
Hospitals are using computer tools like predictive analytics and machine learning to find out early when robotic operating room time will not be used. Sometimes, they know this a month in advance. They ask the surgeons or departments who have this time to give it back quickly. Then, other surgeons can use it. This helps use the rooms more often.
For example, software like Qventus’ Surgical Growth solution uses AI to predict unused time. It then reminds the owners to release these times for others. This way, resources do not go to waste.
Rush University Medical Center made robot surgery work better by matching surgery times to what surgeons need and focusing on areas that are growing fast, like robotics and spine surgery. They increased the number of surgeries by 5% and made surgeons use their time better by 12%. They also made sure to give more time for difficult cases.
A big problem is when non-robotic surgeries are scheduled in robotic rooms. This means the robot sits unused. AI scheduling systems help by marking the robotic rooms clearly and matching the right surgeries to these rooms. Training schedulers and making clear rules helps stop using robotic rooms for surgeries that do not need robots.
At Allina Health, avoiding non-robotic cases in robotic rooms helped robotic surgery volume grow by over 25%.
Hospitals use ASCs more to do simpler surgeries outside the main hospital ORs. This frees the robotic ORs for complex cases that really need robots. Using the right place for each surgery cuts costs and lets hospitals do more surgeries overall.
Rush University Medical Center used ASCs this way to improve scheduling and increase surgery numbers.
Surgeons who are involved help robotic surgery use better. They make sure their time is used well, release unused times, and work with schedulers to avoid wrong room use.
Ochsner Health increased robotic surgery use by 10% after getting surgeons more involved in scheduling.
Also, surgeons with more robotic surgery experience have fewer problems and cost hospitals less. Surgeons doing many robotic surgeries each year see better patient outcomes and save money. This shows why it is important to train surgeons and have them focus on robotic cases.
These AI tools improve operations by making schedules clearer, lowering bottlenecks, and letting managers plan better. Hospitals like Baptist Health and OHSU saw quick increases in robotic surgery use after adding these tools.
These examples show that using data, AI, surgeon involvement, and smart resource use can greatly improve robotic surgery numbers and financial results.
Operating room time is a major cost for robotic surgeries. Studies show that having teams trained just for robotic surgery cuts the time needed to set up the robot, fix problems, and change rooms between cases.
Hospitals with special robotic teams cut big case delays by half and save about 25 minutes on room turnover times.
Better team work and smart workflow lead to more surgeries done, lower cost per surgery, and better care quality. Also, moving easier robotic cases to ambulatory settings lowers costs and frees OR time for harder surgeries.
By using these steps, healthcare organizations in the U.S. can give patients better access to robotic surgeries, lower wait times, improve results, and make robotic surgery programs financially stable.
Robotic surgery is a growing part of healthcare in America. Solving problems with data, technology, and teamwork can make robotic surgery programs more efficient, patient-focused, and profitable.
AI optimizes OR scheduling by predicting unused time, reducing cancellations, and filling OR slots with strategic cases to enhance utilization and growth.
The Capacity Assistant uses predictive analytics to identify likely unused OR blocks up to a month in advance, encouraging surgeons to release time for better scheduling.
The Market Research Assistant identifies demand in the market, highlighting potential splitter surgeons and referral patterns to enhance surgical volume.
This assistant markets OR time to surgeons best suited for specific cases based on their practice patterns and the health system’s strategic goals.
The Clinic Scheduler Assistant integrates with EMR systems to streamline booking processes, reducing turnaround time for case requests significantly.
The Robotics Assistant ensures optimal usage of robotic facilities, enhancing incremental robotics volume while decreasing non-robotic cases in robotic rooms.
The Strategic Control Panel provides healthcare executives with the tools to operationalize growth objectives, focusing on optimizing robotic use and surgical service lines.
The OR Leader Dashboard offers visibility into block allocation, volume, throughput, and engagement, helping identify optimization opportunities.
Qventus analytics delivers personalized insights on referral networks and market dynamics, facilitating informed decisions to drive strategic growth.
Integrating Qventus with EHR systems reduces the administrative burden on OR schedulers, saving them significant time and enhancing overall efficiency.