Abstract
This perspective examines the introduction of robotic-assisted surgery (RAS) in rural and regional Australia, using the experience of a single regional public hospital as a case exemplar. It explores potential benefits, implementation challenges, and broader implications for surgical equity, workforce sustainability, and health-system planning. Rural Australians face persistent disparities in healthcare access, surgical outcomes, and specialist availability. Robotic-Assisted Surgery offers superior visualisation, precision, and patient recovery compared to traditional approaches, but remains largely concentrated in metropolitan centres. The inequitable distribution of RAS risks exacerbating urban–rural health divides unless deliberately addressed. The paper synthesises emerging evidence on RAS implementation across specialties, including colorectal, thoracic, urology, and gynaecology. It explores workforce implications, economic modelling, and training infrastructure challenges in the context of regional deployment. The Ballarat program is profiled in detail, including procedure volumes, workforce upskilling, and local system impact. Key enablers and barriers to sustainable RAS integration are mapped, with reference to training models, policy frameworks, and funding structures. The introduction of RAS in regional centres supports decentralisation of complex surgical care, and attracting a modern surgical workforce in turn contribute to reducing geographic healthcare inequity. While promising in terms of clinical outcomes and economic value, challenges remain around cost, training accessibility, and long-term sustainability. National strategies, investment in regional training pipelines, and equitable funding models are critical to ensure RAS becomes a scalable and inclusive solution for rural surgical care in Australia.