
Quick Summary : In the medical healthcare field, technologies like Virtual reality, augmented reality, and mixed reality are creating new avenues of treatment, therapies, and care. VR in healthcare is assisting doctors and medical practitioners in treating chronic diseases like diabetes, to provide painless treatment options for invasive surgeries. Futuristic VR tech like VR haptics, BCI VR therapies, AI-powered VR, etc. will go a long to uncover the untapped potential in the healthcare ecosystem.
Healthcare today stands as one of the top five use cases of virtual reality. Virtual reality-powered simulated experiences are easing the lives of doctors, medical students, and patients. From diagnosis to treatment, VR technology has a 360-degree application in healthcare. Many futuristic VR applications are now in pipelines and many are awaiting patent approvals. Even VR headsets are getting more sophisticated day by day. Hyper-realistic CGIs from this immersive technology are impacting the whole healthcare spectrum. Healthcare VR’s future applications are immense and only limited by our imagination.
This article discusses the future of VR in healthcare and details how emerging VR technologies, wearable VR, and VR apps will change the paradigm of the healthcare sector in the future.
VR in Medical Practices: The Future of Treatment and Therapies
The use of virtual reality in medicine dates back to the late 1960s. Robert Mann developed a platform where orthopedics can practice. Since then, from treating Parkinson’s disease to increasing the efficacy of neurorehabilitation, virtual reality systems have never looked back. VR’s role in healthcare has been transformative, particularly in the fields of clinical training, pre-operative practice, and pain management.
Virtual reality is a way to immerse patients in alternative worlds, different landscapes, environments, different planets, or places that they haven’t even imagined before. Such engagement improves the quality of care and patient experiences.
Below are some of the top futuristic use cases of the VR in healthcare:
Diagnostics | Practising Surgeries | Painless Treatment | Phobia Therapies | Stroke Rehabilitation |
Eating Disorders Treatment | Addiction Treatment | Chronic pain management | Dentistry | Autism Therapy |
Diagnostics
Practicing Surgeries

VR is helping surgeons practice complex surgeries using 3D VR models of patient anatomy. For complex procedures, surgeons can simulate the actual operation theatre procedure using VR.
See the below still from a VR simulation application:
Even students of medical science can use VR to explore the human body’s anatomical structures. This reduces the need for actual bodies (cadavers) in medical hospitals and colleges. Medical faculties can simulate surgical procedures to explain them in a better way to students. Also, with VR, students can explore the body’s interiors or otherwise inaccessible parts with clarity in a 360-degree reconstruction.
Painless Treatments

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Phobia Treatment

Mental health practitioners can create stimuli to assess the patients using VR devices. This provides a safer way to create challenging situations for patients without actual risks. For example, a patient with height-related fear (Acrophobia) can treated using a VR environment where there is no actual fear of falling.
People with claustrophobia (fear of closed space) experience dizziness, fear, shortness of breath, and severe nervousness when they are in such spaces. For claustrophobic patient treatment, doctors use VR to create environments like enclosed spaces. VR provides greater control, flexibility, and customization of virtual environments. International Journal of Engineering Trends and Technology published findings of research in January 2024 titled:Â Application of Virtual Reality in the Treatment of Claustrophobia in Adolescents. Such studies aim to show how VR can help in therapies involving phobic patients. Even patients who require MRI but are claustrophobic can use VR while they have to go inside the MRI machine.
Stroke Patient Rehabilitation
Eating Disorders
Addiction Treatment

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Chronic Pain Management
Chronic pain impacts and worsens the lives of millions of people globally. Generally, people take OTC medications, and prescription drugs, use TEN stimulation therapies or devices, go for physiotherapy, etc. However, a new treatment using VR systems is gaining popularity for chronic pain treatment. The US FDA authorized an immersive VR system EaseVRx (medical grade) that uses CBT for pain reduction for chronic lower back pain patients above 18 years.
VR for chronic pain aims to calm rather than excite. It creates serene environments like grassy fields, birds chirping, streams flowing, etc. to induce calmness. Mindfulness technique along with guided imagery is impactful in treating chronic pain.
Dentistry

As the costs of virtual reality devices get more affordable, their use in dentistry as a psychological aid is gaining traction. The fear of dentists is real for many. Remember the Mr. Monk Goes to the Dentist episode (season 4 Ep: 15) of the famous Monk Series. Mr. Monk, an exceptional detective is reluctant to go to the dentist due to his irrational fear.
VR headsets and VR solutions like Google Cardboard are effective in changing the perception. The patients can be given multi-sensory experiences or advanced isolation with immersive VR while dentists can conduct procedures like tooth extraction or cavity refills. Research showed an 8-point reduction in anxiety (STAI-YA) by VR use during a dental procedure involving anesthesia. Already virtual reality platforms like Dentaverse are creating venues for dentists to examine and analyze patients in immersive dental lab environments from anywhere in the world.
Autism Therapy
VR Applications and Benefits for PTSD: Integrating VR for Mental Health
Non-Immersive VR | Semi-Immersive VR | Full-Immersive VR | |
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Application | Primarily used for cognitive interventions in PTSD | More engaging experiences than non-immersive VR, Post-traumatic stress reduction | Intense and realistic form of exposure therapy for PTSD |
Benefits | Accessibility Easily accessible and user-friendly for initial exposure to therapeutic VR environments. Control Offers patients a controlled introduction to therapy, minimizing potential overwhelm. Functionality Well-suited for cognitive behavioral therapy exercises. | Gradual Exposure Helps patients gradually confront fears or stressors by controlling the intensity of exposure. Safety and Control Maintains a balance between immersion and awareness of the real world Controlled Anxiety Management Safe space for patients to explore and interact with their anxieties. | Deep Immersion Transports patients fully into scenarios that replicate real-life situations Personalization Environments and scenarios can be customized to match individual patient needs and therapeutic goals, Engagement and Interaction Interactive and multisensory engagement (visual, auditory, tactile) with cognitive processing Real-Time Feedback Systems adapt to the patient’s biofeedback, promoting mindfulness |
VR Healthcare Future: Emerging Technologies
By 2025, the VR software market size for healthcare alone will reach $5.1 billion and around $38+ billion by 2032 (CAGR of 32%). VR healthcare start-ups who want to establish VR application businesses can collaborate with healthcare professionals and developers of VR software applications.
Emerging VR healthcare technologies discussed below are poised to make innovative changes and betterments in the healthcare ecosystem.
VR Haptics in Healthcare: The feel for real-life simulations
VR Haptics refers to the integration of touch technology ‘the feel’ and ‘the physical sensations’ into virtual reality (VR) systems for more realistic simulations. Haptic feedback technology adds a sense of touch to the visual and auditory elements of VR devices. For example, vibrotactile haptics VR devices have small motors that create vibrations felt by hand.
With VR Haptics, users can feel sensations such as pressure, texture, and resistance, making VR a more immersive tool for medical training and patient treatment. In surgical training, haptic feedback can simulate the feel of different tissues and organs, helping surgeons refine their techniques.
Brain Computer Interfaces (BCI) in VR Therapy

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AI-powered VR healthcare
You must have heard that the convergence of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Virtual Reality (VR) will be a game changer in the healthcare field. In February 2024, a team from Cedars-Sinai disclosed the creation of a new AI/VR app Xaia that merges artificial intelligence (AI) with virtual reality (VR) technology. The app helps patients with mental depression using Apple Pro Vision, one of the most sophisticated VR headsets. AI-powered VR healthcare systems enhance the virtual reality experience, making it more interactive, intelligent, and personalized.
For surgical training, AI can create highly detailed and accurate simulations of human anatomy. AI algorithms can adjust VR therapy sessions based on the patient’s progress, offering a truly personalized rehabilitation journey.
VR Gaming in Healthcare
Personalized Medicine Approaches
Telemedicine
How Emerging VR Reality Technologies Will Benefit Patients, Doctors, and Medical Students?
Patients | Doctors | Medical Students |
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