Nanotechnology involves controlling and manipulating matter at the atomic and molecular scale, typically 100 nanometers or smaller. Richard Feynman first suggested the possibility of nanomachines in 1959. Albert Hibbs later suggested using nanomachines for medical purposes like surgery. Today, nanotechnology has many medical applications including more targeted drug delivery, cancer treatment using gold nanoparticles, microsurgery using nanoscale instruments, medical robotics, and tissue engineering. While nanomedicine holds promise, it also raises social, economic, ethical and safety issues that must be addressed through careful development and regulation.