Oxford Medical Simulation Closes €5.78M Funding Round
UK-based Oxford Medical Simulation has raised €5.78 million to accelerate the rollout of its virtual reality-based clinical training platform, targeting the persistent skills and capacity gap in global healthcare education. The latest funding round underscores growing investor confidence in immersive VR training as a scalable solution to workforce shortages and training bottlenecks.
Tackling the Healthcare Training Gap with VR
Oxford Medical Simulation develops highly realistic, scenario-based simulations that allow medical students, nurses and clinicians to practise complex clinical situations in a safe, repeatable virtual environment. Using virtual reality headsets and advanced simulation technology, learners can make real-time decisions, manage emergencies and receive instant performance feedback without risking patient safety.
The company’s platform is designed to address long-standing constraints in traditional healthcare education, such as limited access to clinical placements, faculty shortages and rising costs. By moving a significant portion of experiential learning into a virtual space, VR simulations can be delivered on demand, at scale and across geographies.
Scaling an Immersive HealthTech Platform
The new capital will be used to expand the platform’s clinical content library, enhance its underlying AI algorithms for performance assessment and grow the company’s presence in Europe and North America. Investment will also support integrations with existing medical education and hospital training systems, enabling institutions to embed VR directly into curricula and continuous professional development programs.
By combining evidence-based clinical scenarios with high-fidelity virtual patients, Oxford Medical Simulation aims to improve clinical decision-making, reduce medical errors and standardise training quality across institutions. The company’s growth reflects a broader shift in HealthTech, where immersive technologies and data-driven feedback loops are increasingly seen as critical tools for building a resilient healthcare workforce.
As health systems worldwide struggle with staff shortages and mounting patient demand, the latest funding positions Oxford Medical Simulation to play a central role in rethinking how clinicians are trained, assessed and upskilled.

