Remote surgery raises a simple question: who is accountable?
- Published
- Letters to the Editor

Technical breakthroughs are impressive, but trust in systems, liability and safeguards must come first
Sir,
It was extraordinary to learn that surgeons can carry out operations over a hotel internet connection (‘Surgeons just changed medicine forever using hotel internet’). What stayed with me, however, was not the technology itself, however capable it might be, but the question of trust. Surgery relies on absolute confidence in the system, the team, and the safeguards in place when something goes wrong. While the article makes a good case for how far robotics and connectivity have advanced, it also raises uncomfortable questions about governance, accountability and resilience. A frozen screen during a video call is an irritation but in an operating theatre it is something else entirely.
When operations span continents, networks and vendors, it is not immediately clear to me where liability ultimately sits, or how failures are investigated and learned from. Those answers matter just as much as latency speeds and robotic precision.
That said, it would be a mistake to let caution harden into resistance. Every major advance in medicine has faced scepticism at the outset. If the safeguards, training and oversight can keep pace with the technology, this could reshape access to specialist care in ways that are hard to overstate.
The challenge now is to ensure that innovation is matched by rigour, and that excitement does not run ahead of systems designed to protect patients when technology inevitably fails.
Yours faithfully,
Jonathan Reeves
Bath, UK
RECENT ARTICLES
-
Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey cuts nearly half of Block staff, says AI is changing how the company operates -
Brisbane named world’s best city to raise a family, with London second -
Hornby sells iconic British slot-car brand Scalextric for £20m -
WPSL targets £16m-plus in global sponsorship drive with five-year SGI partnership -
Dubai office values reportedly double to AED 13.1bn amid supply shortfall -
€60m Lisbon golf-resort scheme tests depth of Portugal’s upper-tier housing demand -
2026 Winter Olympics close in Verona as Norway dominates medal table -
Europe’s leading defence powers launch joint drone and autonomous systems programme -
Euro-zone business activity accelerates as manufacturing returns to expansion -
Deepfake celebrity ads drive new wave of investment scams -
WATCH: Red Bull pilot lands plane on moving freight train in aviation first -
Europe eyes Australia-style social media crackdown for children -
These European hotels have just been named Five-Star in Forbes Travel Guide’s 2026 awards -
McDonald’s Valentine’s ‘McNugget Caviar’ giveaway sells out within minutes -
Europe opens NanoIC pilot line to design the computer chips of the 2030s -
Zanzibar’s tourism boom ‘exposes new investment opportunities beyond hotels’ -
Gen Z set to make up 34% of global workforce by 2034, new report says -
The ideas and discoveries reshaping our future: Science Matters Volume 3, out now -
Lasers finally unlock mystery of Charles Darwin’s specimen jars -
Strong ESG records help firms take R&D global, study finds -
European Commission issues new cancer prevention guidance as EU records 2.7m cases in a year -
Artemis II set to carry astronauts around the Moon for first time in 50 years -
Meet the AI-powered robot that can sort, load and run your laundry on its own -
Wingsuit skydivers blast through world’s tallest hotel at 124mph in Dubai stunt -
Centrum Air to launch first European route with Tashkent–Frankfurt flights


























