Mommy the Automaton: New Interactive Simulators Teach Labor and Birth

A new generation of complex, electronic birth simulators allow medical students to practice labor and birth -- especially when there are complications. Meet the mannequins.
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Staff members "deliver" a baby from the medical-simulation device named "Noelle" at the Harvard University's Center for Medical Simulation. The Noelle mannequin, which costs up to $35,000, does just about everything except tell the partner with videocamera to scram. The cervix dilates and the mannequin's pulse rises as a compressor pushes out a bouncing baby mannequin. Noelle is a veteran of countless abnormal deliveries with babies in the wrong position.Photo: Courtesy of Center for Medical Simulation
Photo: Courtesy of Gaumard Scientific
Photo: Courtesy of Center for Medical Simulation
Photo: Courtesy of Brigham and Women's Hospital
Photo: Courtesy of Limbs & Things
Photo: Courtesy of Limbs & Things

Photo: Courtesy of

Musées en Haute-Normandie

Photo: Courtesy of

Musées en Haute-Normandie