Using an infrared camera, the robot identifies a suitable vein and accesses the vein with ultrasound guidance.
A second video, not embedded in this post, explains that the robot is about 83% successful at drawing blood which compares favorably to the success rate of experienced human phlebotomists. The robots inventor hopes to refine the procedure to get the success rate up to 90%.
It also says that there are 9 billion blood draws per year in the United States suggesting that a market is certainly there.
The second video also mentions the discomfort patients experience when a phlebotomist misses or damages the vein.
However, the robot needs quite a bit of help from a human phlebotomist both before and after the actual blood draw takes place.
The robot cant apply a tourniquet, cant wipe the skin with alcohol, cant take the cover off the needle, once the vein is accessed cant actually remove the blood from the vein with a syringe, cant take off the tourniquet [the human assistant didnt do it correctly either*], cant apply pressure to the puncture site, cant put a Band-Aid on the skin, and cant safely dispose of the needle.
Its not clear what the robot would do if a patient flinches or withdraws his arm. Patients have been known to do those things.
For the foreseeable future, the robot would have to be accompanied by a human. So whatever the cost of the robot, personnel would not be eliminated.
Its a clever idea, but I dont think a robot will be drawing your blood any time soon. ________________________________________________________
*One must undo the tourniquet before taking the needle out of the arm or the back-pressure will cause bleeding and/or a hematoma
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