A Program Director’s Guide to Evaluating PrecisionOS

A Program Director’s Guide to Evaluating Virtual Reality

Is Virtual Reality Surgical Training Really Worth It?

As a surgical program director, you’re responsible for ensuring your residents receive world-class education while navigating real-world constraints—tight budgets, packed schedules, and varying faculty preferences. When new technologies like virtual reality surgical training platforms enter the conversation, it’s natural to approach them with both curiosity and skepticism.

At PrecisionOS, we’ve partnered with leading academic medical centers globally, and we’ve heard the same concerns repeatedly. This article directly addresses the most common objections we’ve received from program directors and coordinators—and offers evidence-based, practical responses to help you evaluate whether VR belongs in your curriculum.


1.“We don’t have the budget for VR.”

VR isn’t an extra cost, it’s a cost-efficient alternative. Compared to cadaver labs, travel expenses, and high-maintenance simulators, PrecisionOS is a fraction of the cost. We offer institutional pricing, hardware-inclusive bundles, and even individual licensing options.

But more importantly, what’s the cost of NOT adopting VR? Without a scalable, repeatable training method, residents develop more slowly, spend more time on basic skills in the OR, and require more faculty time for remediation. Programs also lose out on data-driven insights and fall behind on innovation, which can hurt recruiting in today’s digital-native generation.

📚 Lohre et al.,Effectiveness of Immersive Virtual Reality on Orthopedic Surgical Skills and Knowledge Acquisition Among Senior Surgical Residents,” JAMA Network Open, 2020 — showed IVR was 34 times more cost-effective than traditional methods, and equivalent to one hour of OR time per one hour of VR use.


2.“Our faculty prefers traditional methods.”

We do too. PrecisionOS doesn’t replace hands-on training, it amplifies it. Residents enter the OR better prepared after using VR, reducing time spent on foundational teaching. Faculty gain access to performance data to support targeted coaching and accelerated learning.

📚 Feeley et al.,The Specialty Mentor Effect in Enhancing Surgical Experience of Medical Students,” The Surgeon, 2022 — demonstrated that VR plus mentorship improved performance and increased interest in orthopedics.


3.“We already have a simulation center.”

Excellent—virtual reality surgery training isn’t here to compete with it. In fact, PrecisionOS extends the reach of your sim center by eliminating the need for physical space, scheduling, and supervision. Residents can practice at night, on weekends, or while on off-service rotations. It’s simulation without the bottlenecks.

📚 Cate et al.,Current Status of Virtual Reality Simulation Education for Orthopedic Residents,” Global Surgical Education, 2023 — emphasizes that VR fills key access and scalability gaps in current orthopedic curricula.


4.“We’re not tech-savvy. Implementing this will be a hassle.”

We’ve designed PrecisionOS to be plug-and-play. All that’s needed is WiFi (or even a phone hotspot). No IT support. No complicated setup. We provide onboarding, training, and continuous customer service to make integration seamless. We also share real-life curriculum models that require little to no lift from your team.

📚 Hiemstra et al.,Orthopaedic Sport Medicine Surgeons and Fellows Value Immersive VR,” Journal of ISAKOS, 2024 — 84% of surgeons and fellows found VR easy to adopt and valuable for education and mentorship.


5.“There’s no accreditation or requirement to use PrecisionOS.”

True—but that’s changing. Our modules align directly with ACGME milestones, Entrustable Professional Activities (EPAs), and board prep standards. Leading programs are already using PrecisionOS to support competency-based education and performance tracking.

Testa & Fadale,Arthroscopic Training: Historical Insights and Future Directions,JAAOS, 2023 — emphasized the urgent need for structured, competency-based simulation like VR in surgical training.


6.“Residents won’t take it seriously.”

When VR is integrated thoughtfully into your curriculum, it works. Programs that map cases to rotations and set expectations see high usage—often exceeding 100 hours of virtual reality surgery training annually. Usage climbs when performance is linked to goals, evaluations, or reviewed by faculty. Read how WVU implemented our arthroscopy suite aquí.

📚 Patel et al.,Fake It ’Til You Make It: Pressures to Measure Up in Surgical Training,” Academic Medicine, 2018 — highlighted how VR creates safer learning environments, reducing stress and encouraging practice.


7.“We don’t have time to add more to the schedule.”

We get it. That’s why PrecisionOS works asynchronously. Residents train when they have time—between cases, on lighter rotations, or at home. This flexible access reduces remediation, saves OR time, and ensures learning doesn’t stop when schedules get tight or Attendings aren’t available.

📚 Patel et al.,Fake It ’Til You Make It: Pressures to Measure Up in Surgical Training,” Academic Medicine, 2018 — highlighted how VR creates safer learning environments, reducing stress and encouraging practice.


8.“We’ve had trouble integrating VR in the past.”

Integration can be challenging without structure. That’s why we offer Rotation Mapping—a service that aligns VR cases with your program’s rotation schedule embedding VR into your surgical curriculum. Residents receive content relevant to their current service, which ensures engagement and reduces administrative overhead for faculty.

📚 Crockatt et al.,Comparing Skill Acquisition in VR vs. Cadaver Labs,JBJS Open Access, 2023 — found VR delivered equivalent skill acquisition, especially when integrated systematically.


9.“We’re already doing fine without VR.”

VR isn’t for programs that are failing—it’s for programs that want to be exceptional. PrecisionOS standardizes exposure, levels the playing field across volume disparities, and provides objective data that lectures and cadavers can’t. It’s the next step in surgical education excellence.

📚 Codman Shoulder Society,Orthopedic Surgery Post COVID-19: Innovation and Transformation,” Journal of Shoulder and Elbow Surgery, 2020 — emphasized how post-pandemic VR accelerated equity and innovation in training.


10.“Is the data secure?”

Absolutely. We don’t use patient data. Resident performance data is encrypted, securely stored, and fully compliant with educational privacy standards. No integration with hospital EMRs or PACS is required.

📚 Lohre, Leveille, Goel,Novel Application of IVR Simulation Training,JAAOS Global Research & Reviews, 2021 — confirmed that immersive VR training can safely translate to the OR without compromising data integrity.


Conclusion: Future-Proofing Surgical Education

PrecisionOS isn’t just a VR platform—it’s a surgical education accelerator. The question isn’t whether VR replaces traditional training. The question is: How can we better prepare residents with tools that scale, personalize, and support mastery in a modern surgical curriculum?

If you’re curious to explore how this could work in your program, our team is happy to show you real integration examples, success metrics, and a customized roadmap for your institution.

Let’s redefine surgical readiness—together.

Sobre PrecisionOS 
PrecisionOS is an award-winning medical software company redefining surgical training through virtual reality. Built by surgeons for surgeons, PrecisionOS empowers healthcare teams around the world with immersive, measurable, and patient-centered learning experiences. 

info@precisionostech.com 
www.precisionostech.com