
Mentice
Medical simulation software
Health care software
- Features
- Ease of use
- Ease of management
- Quality of support
- Affordability
- Market presence
Take the quiz to check if Mentice and its alternatives fit your requirements.
Contact the product provider
Small
Medium
Large
-
What is Mentice
Mentice is a medical simulation software platform focused on endovascular and interventional procedure training and rehearsal. It is used by hospitals, training programs, and medical device companies to support clinician education, skills assessment, and procedure planning workflows. The product centers on simulated angiography and catheter-based interventions using procedure-specific modules and compatible hardware interfaces.
Specialized endovascular simulation focus
Mentice concentrates on catheter-based and endovascular procedures rather than broad, general-purpose clinical simulation. This specialization supports training scenarios aligned to interventional radiology, cardiology, and vascular surgery workflows. For organizations prioritizing these disciplines, the scope can be more directly applicable than generalized simulation platforms.
Procedure modules and scenarios
The platform provides structured procedure content that can be used for guided training and repeatable practice. Scenario-based simulation supports standardized instruction across cohorts and sites. This can help educators run consistent sessions and track completion of defined learning activities.
Supports device and industry training
Mentice is commonly positioned for use in medical device training environments in addition to clinical education. This makes it suitable for programs that need simulation for product training, proctoring support, or controlled practice on specific procedural steps. The ability to align simulation sessions to device-related workflows can be useful for industry-led education programs.
Narrower scope than broad simulators
Because Mentice is oriented to endovascular/interventional use cases, it may not cover the full range of nursing, emergency, or general clinical simulation needs. Organizations seeking a single platform for many specialties may require additional tools. This can increase vendor management and integration effort across a simulation curriculum.
Hardware and setup considerations
Interventional simulation typically depends on dedicated hardware interfaces and room setup to approximate procedural workflows. This can introduce procurement, maintenance, and space planning requirements beyond software-only training tools. Deployment timelines and total cost of ownership may be higher than lightweight, screen-based simulation products.
Integration and reporting variability
Healthcare training programs often need integration with LMS platforms, identity management, and standardized reporting for competency tracking. Depending on the specific deployment and modules, organizations may need additional configuration or services to align reporting with internal assessment frameworks. Buyers should validate data export options, user management, and interoperability requirements during evaluation.
Seller details
Mentice AB
Gothenburg, Sweden
1999
Public
https://www.mentice.com
https://x.com/mentice
https://www.linkedin.com/company/mentice/