i want to talk to you about two things tonight
number one teaching
surgery and doing
surgery is really hard
and second that language is one of the most
profound things that separate us all over the world and in my little corner of the world these two things are
actuallyrelated and i want to tell you how tonight
now nobody wants an operation who here has had surgery
did you want it keep your hands up if you wanted an operation nobody wants an operation in particular nobody wants an operation with tools like these through large incisions
that cause a lot of pain that cause a lot of time out of work or out of school that leave a big scar
but if you have to have an operation what you really want is a minimally invasive operation that 's what i want to talk to you about tonight how doing and teaching this type of
surgery led us on a search for a better
universal translator
now this type of
surgery is hard and it starts by putting people to sleep
putting
carbondioxide in their
abdomen blowing them up like a
balloon sticking one of these sharp pointy things into their
abdomen it 's dangerous stuff
and
taking instruments and watching it on a tv
screen so let 's see what it looks like
so this is gallbladder
surgery we perform a million of these a year in the united states alone this is the real thing there 's no blood and you can see how focused the surgeons are how much
concentration it takes you can see it in their faces it 's hard to teach and it 's not all that easy to learn
we do about five million of these in the united states and maybe twenty million of these worldwide
all right you 've all heard the term he 's a born
surgeon let me tell you surgeons are not born surgeons are not made either
one step at a time it starts with a
foundation basic skills we build on that and we take people
hopefully to the operating room where they learn to be an
assistant then we teach them to be a
surgeon in training
and when they do all of that for about five years they get the coveted board certification if you need
surgery you want to be operated on by a board certified
surgeon you get your board
certificate and you can go out into practice and
eventually if you 're lucky you
achieve mastery
now that
foundation is so important that
a number of us from the largest general
surgery society in the united states sages started in the late one thousand nine hundred and ninety s a training
program that would assure that every
surgeon who practices minimally invasive
surgery would have a strong
foundation of knowledge and skills necessary to go on and do procedures
so we have a problem and one of the problems is distance we can 't travel everywhere we need to make the world a smaller place
so i was inspired by a friend this is allan okrainec from toronto and he proved
that you could
actually teach people to do
surgery using video conferencing so here 's allan teaching an english
speakingsurgeon in africa these basic
fundamental skills necessary to do minimally invasive
surgery very inspiring
but for this
examination which is really hard
we have a problem even people who say they speak english only fourteen percent pass because for them it 's not a
surgery test it 's an english test
and we spend millions of dollars just in our little hospital it 's a big labor
intensive effort if you think about the worldwide burden
of
trying to talk to your patients not just teaching surgeons just
trying to talk to your patients there aren 't enough translators in the world
we need to employ technology to
assist us in this quest at our hospital we see everybody from
harvard professors to people who just got here last week and you have no idea how hard it is to talk to somebody or take care of somebody you can 't talk to and there isn 't always a translator available
so we need tools we need a
universal translator
one of the things that i want to leave you with as you think about this talk is that this talk is not just about us
preaching to the world
it 's really about
setting up a dialogue we have a lot to learn here in the united states we spend more money per person for outcomes that are not better than many countries in the world maybe we have something to learn as well
so i 'm
passionate about teaching these fls skills all over the world this past year i 've been in latin america i 've been in china talking about the fundamentals of laparoscopic
surgery and everywhere i go the
barrier is we want this
but we need it in our language
so here 's what we think we want to do imagine giving a lecture and being able to talk to people in their own native language
simultaneously i want to talk to the people in asia latin america africa europe seamlessly
accurately and in a cost
effective fashion using technology and it has to be bi directional they have to be able to teach us something as well it 's a big task
so we looked for a
universal translator i thought there would be one out there your webpage has
translation your cellphone has
translation but nothing that 's good enough
to teach
surgery because we need a lexicon what is a lexicon a lexicon is a body of words that describes a
domain i need to have a health care lexicon and in that i need a surgery
the
translation we get the words up in a window and then apply the magic we work with a fourth technology
and we currently have
access to eleven language pairs more to come as we think about
trying to make the world a smaller place and i 'd like to show you our prototype of stringing all of these technologies that don 't
necessarily always talk to each other to become something useful
and out it comes in real time in spanish but if you happen to be sitting in beijing at the same time by using technology in a
constructive fashion you could get it in mandarin or you could get it in russian on and on and on
simultaneously without the use of human translators
but that 's the lectures if you remember what i told you about fls at the
beginning it 's knowledge and skills the difference in an operation between doing something successfully
and not may be moving your hand this much so we 're going to take it one step further we 've brought my friend allan back
it 's important to be accurate
aim for the black dots
orient your loop this way
as we think about intersecting technologies everybody has a cell phone with a camera we could use this everywhere whether it be health care patient care
engineering law conferencing translating videos this is a ubiquitous tool
in order to break down our barriers we have to learn to talk to people to demand that people work on translation
we need it for our
everyday life in order to make the world a smaller place thank you very much
生词表: