Robots are revolutionizing the world and beginning a new era of technology. Imagine a day in a hospital with a robot delivering a baby, and another robot treating or operating on a patient with severe complications just like every other day in a hospital. Sooner or later, Earth’s future will look like this. People assume that engineering and medicine are two separate fields that never coincide. When anyone thinks of robots, automated butlers, cleaners, construction bots, or anything that would make one’s life easy are what comes up; the last place one would imagine for a robot to be is in the field of medical science. Trust is one of the most important factors that decide the intersection of humanity and technology. The main question is, can robots be trusted with human lives? Robots should be in a state to emphasize (or at least act) their feelings to humans so that their patients could trust them. The key things that doctors have and robots do not are empathy and other social skills like communication (Tapus et al.). Technology is advancing day by day; robots are entering the world of medicine to participate in healthcare institutes, help doctors treat their patients, and operate even during complicated tasks. Robots are vital in the field of medicine, especially for surgery and treatment. It would take some time to earn the genuine trust of patients to establish automated surgery. Inventions like the stethoscope, the thermometer, and various other pieces were only possible due to the merging of engineering and medicine. Taking these inventions one step further can show humanity to trust robots and what types of robots exist, or robots that would come in the field of medicine is the main challenge to start a new revolution. Increasing the trust of humanity on robotics in the medical industry could start a new era, and it is the possible future.