
Immersive Training for Respiratory Emergencies Wins Bardon Hall Award 2025
8 January 2026 at 15:39:00
Cassette and Pfizer are proud to have won a Brandon Hall award for Best Advance in Augmented and Virtual Reality.

Pfizer partnered with Cassette to deliver a pioneering, immersive VR training programme for healthcare professionals focused on respiratory infections.
By simulating complex clinical scenarios traditionally reliant on physical facilities and in-person facilitation this solution enables scalable, consistent, and highly engaging medical education.
The VR platform empowers clinicians to practice high-stakes decision-making in realistic, guideline-based environments, driving improved learning outcomes and operational efficiency.
“Cassette Group’s ‘Respiratory VR’ transformed our onboarding process. The feedback from trainees and managers has been overwhelmingly positive.”
The Challenge
Traditional clinical training for respiratory emergencies is resource-intensive, requiring simulation labs, medical props, and significant coordination.
Junior doctors and hospital staff often face high-pressure situations with limited opportunities for safe, hands-on practice.
This can lead to variability in preparedness and confidence, especially when managing complex cases such as respiratory infections that may escalate to sepsis.
Pfizer identified the need for a modern, scalable approach to equip clinicians with the skills and confidence to deliver best-practice care, without the logistical and financial barriers of conventional training.
Our Solution
Cassette designed and deployed a multiplayer VR simulation, featuring:
- Immersive Clinical Role-Play: Realistic scenarios covering emergency triage, paramedic handover, and ICU decision-making, with AI-driven patient avatars that respond dynamically to clinical interventions.
- Remote Multiplayer Capability: Facilitators and participants can join from any location, eliminating travel and enabling global reach.
- Performance Analytics: Embedded tracking of clinical decisions and timing provides objective, actionable feedback.
- Observer Mode: Trainers and stakeholders can observe sessions in real time, supporting feedback and continuous improvement.
The VR training is structured in progressive levels, mirroring the patient journey from emergency admission through to ICU care, including critical decision points such as vaccination status checks, antibiotic selection, and sepsis management.
The experience is enhanced by debriefing sessions and role-reversal opportunities, deepening empathy and retention.
The result is a sustainable, modular platform that delivers measurable improvements in clinician competence, confidence, and patient safety, while reducing costs and logistical complexity.
Medical Consultant
“Thank you again for the wonderful event yesterday in Homburg. It was really impressive to see what you have achieved. The feedback I received was unanimously positive—my colleagues were thoroughly impressed. I am convinced that this format will become an integral part of teaching in the future. Perhaps we can tackle such a project together again in the future”
Nina Lammers, Director of Medical Exchange and Collaboration and head of the Medical Education Team.
"Pfizer has already brought a very successful VR training course on stroke to hospitals. Now, another one is being added on the correct diagnosis and treatment of an initially non-specific respiratory infection that can also develop into life-threatening sepsis,"
The goal is to give junior medical professionals the opportunity to practice guideline-based procedures in the safe environment of the virtual world, where mistakes are allowed without harming patients.
"Especially in older people, an infection that initially seems trivial can sometimes develop into something serious," says the epidemiologist. "If you have practiced this vividly beforehand, you will be more experienced in an emergency.“
