
Medical practitioners will do their practical lessons without endangering actual patients
Delhi Academy of Medical Sciences (DAMS) has finally launched its long-awaited Simulation-based Medical Education project. With this new technology-based learning format, medical practitioners will do their practical lessons without endangering actual patients.
DAMS recently celebrated its 22nd anniversary of classroom teaching, and its app, eMedicoz, has had over 500,000 million downloads. Adding simulated-based education to its other learning platforms is a huge milestone for DAMs and the entire education industry in India. This idea will be very beneficial to all practitioners of this academy. It will make it much easier for them to practice what they study in theoretical lessons without putting patients at risk.
This new way of learning will surely bridge the gap between medical students preparing for the different post-doctoral career opportunities. This app also provides students with a common platform to access all the information they need while preparing for national-level exams, including NEET-PG and NEXT. Medical students can also discuss and share ideas about different topics with their colleagues and senior doctors via this app.
At this event, Dr. Sumer Sethi, the Founder of DAMS, shared his vision and commitment to making medical education accessible to all practitioners worldwide. In his words, he said, “At DAMS, we are on a mission to make sure each medical student gets to learn from the best, irrespective of place or college. We are now starting a new mission, DAMS-SIM, simulation-based skill training for medical students, starting in the Delhi center this week. If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more, and become more, you are a leader.”





















