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Opinion: Young doctors struggle to learn robotic surgery and often practice in the shadows

Robots make it difficult for surgery residents to get the hands-on training they need.
A video monitor shows the work of a robotic surgeon.

Artificial intelligence and robotics spell massive changes to the world of work. These technologies can automate new tasks, and we are making more of them, faster, better, and cheaper than ever before.

Surgery came early to the robotics party: Over a third of U.S. hospitals have at least one surgical robot. Such robots have been in widespread use by a growing variety of surgical disciplines, including urology and gynecology, for over a decade. That means the technology has been around for least two generations of surgeons and surgical staff.

I studied robotic surgery for over two years to understand

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