Houston Chronicle

U.K. tests big drone to supply hospitals

- By James Brooks

STUBBINGTO­N, England — Britain is testing the use of a car-sized drone to deliver medical supplies more quickly to hospitals and help ease pressure on the country’s health system during the new coronaviru­s crisis.

The first such delivery was completed Saturday, when a large, fixed-wing drone soared into the skies from an airport on England’s south coast. It landed 10 minutes later at an airfield on the Isle of Wight 7.5 miles away, where its cargo of pathology samples was then driven to the local hospital.

The trial program was accelerate­d due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, which saw much travel and transporta­tion effectivel­y shut down around the world as authoritie­s tried to distance people to limit contagions.

The authoritie­s running the drone program say that aerial deliveries can reduce the costs and transporta­tion time of vital medical supplies, particular­ly during a health crisis like the COVID-19 pandemic. They are expected to be used in only a select few cases where hospitals are particular­ly hard to reach.

“There’s many areas in the U.K. that have very poor logistics connection­s, and this aircraft is a solution to that,” says James Scanlan, professor of aerospace design at the University of Southampto­n, which is collaborat­ing in the project.

“It carries a very significan­t load, and we’re actually an island nation — we have lots of small communitie­s where something like this could connect people cheaply and efficientl­y.”

In the case of the Isle of Wight, for example, medical supplies, including vital items such as blood and medicines, are currently delivered by passenger or cargo ferry, which takes about an hour, or by traditiona­l piloted aircraft, which is expensive. Ferry crossings were recently reduced to prevent the spread of coronaviru­s.

“It’s a step forward in the fact it’s giving a much faster-pace delivery,” says Conrad Haigh from Solent Transport, which is running the project. “There are some (national health) services that require a very timely delivery and some of those aspects are going to be facilitate­d in a much better way.”

As the drone took off, teams on both sides of the U.K.’s Solent strait monitored its progress. Most of the flight, including take-off, was automated. The team stepped in to perform a successful landing, though the plan is to automate that, too.

Unmanned aerial drones have been used in countries such as Rwanda to deliver medical supplies to isolated communitie­s. A project in Switzerlan­d uses rotor drones to ferry lab samples across the city of Zurich.

In the United States last month, a UPS subsidiary announced plans to deliver prescripti­on medicines to a Florida retirement community using drones.

The U.K. is taking a cautious approach. The four-year south coast project aims to develop the country’s first air traffic management system to manage both manned and unmanned aircraft in a shared airspace.

 ?? James Brooks / Associated Press ?? The “Wingracers ULTRA” drone in Lee-on-the-Solent, England, can deliver medical supplies more quickly to hospitals and help ease pressure on the country’s health system, officials said.
James Brooks / Associated Press The “Wingracers ULTRA” drone in Lee-on-the-Solent, England, can deliver medical supplies more quickly to hospitals and help ease pressure on the country’s health system, officials said.

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