Latest update March 26th, 2026 7:55 AM
Dec 09, 2025 Letters
Dear Editor,
The recent announcement that Guyana will conduct its first robotic-assisted surgery in 2026, with U.S.-based surgeons operating remotely, has rightly captured national attention. This bold vision, framed as a leap into the Fourth Industrial Revolution, symbolizes ambition. However, between this dazzling promise and the everyday reality of countless Guyanese lies a gap that demands honest, balanced national conversation. We must temper futuristic dreams with today’s foundational needs.
The Pros: A Vision for a Modern Guyana
The promise of robotic surgery is not an isolated stunt but sits within a declared, large-scale modernization effort. Proponents argue this is about positioning Guyana for 2050 and signalling serious investment in becoming a regional healthcare hub.
The Cons: When the Horizon Obscures the Footpath
Despite this activity, the central critique is one of priorities and perception. A single, complex robotic procedure risks being a “political theater” of advancement while systemic cracks remain unsealed.
The Balanced Way Forward: Bridge the Gap, Don’t Leap It
The ambition is not inherently wrong, but its presentation must be coupled with tangible, daily progress. The way forward requires a dual-track approach that marries vision with humility.
Every announcement about a 2026 robot must be paired with a transparent, quarterly public report on the 2025 basics: maternal mortality rates, emergency room wait times, and medication availability in hinterland regions. The impressive training statistics must translate into better-staffed and more functional local health centres.
The first robotic surgery should not be the primary goal. Success should be defined by how this technology integrates into the public health system. The government must preemptively outline a clear, funded plan for which public health indications will be served and how patient selection will be fair and equitable.
Leadership must consistently link high-tech projects to their direct, long-term benefit for the average citizen. Explain how the digital infrastructure for remote surgery will also bolster nationwide telemedicine for diabetic care and prenatal check-ups. The narrative must be about a rising tide that lifts all boats, not a single dazzling skiff.
In conclusion, Guyana’s ambition is commendable, and the partnerships forged are valuable. However, the trust of the people will be won not in a single, remote-controlled operation theater in 2026, but in the thousands of unglamorous, fully-staffed, and reliably stocked clinics across the country every day until then. Let us pursue the future without losing our grip on the present. Our nation’s health depends on it.
Sincerely,
Hemdutt Kumar
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