Las Vegas Review-Journal

Berlin trying drone delivery of tests

Aerial route saves time by skirting city’s traffic

- By Jona Kallgren

BERLIN — A German lab is hoping to cut the time it takes to send coronaviru­s tests across Berlin by using drones, thereby avoiding the capital’s clogged roads.

California-based company Matternet is currently testing drone deliveries between a hospital and Labor Berlin, one of the largest laboratori­es in Europe.

The route from drone to lab is about 7 miles as the drone flies, and officials expect to cut standard delivery times from about an hour to around 10 minutes when service on the route begins in January.

The hope is that drones will eventually provide regular deliveries to the lab from six points around Berlin, shaving vital minutes off the turnaround time for COVID-19 tests.

“The whole topic of ‘time to the result’ is really important, especially when there is the suspicion of an infection,” said Klaus Tenning, who is leading the project for Labor Berlin. “You want to identify the person and get the result as soon as possible so that the person can self-isolate or be able to just continue with normal daily life.”

Each route will be served by two drones that can theoretica­lly fly 24 hours a day. The batteries in the

drone simply get switched when they are running low, eliminatin­g charging time.

Each drone can carry about 40 samples. It won’t just be COVID-19 tests that are transporte­d, but any samples that need to be examined in a lab.

“We said from the start that this would be a working project,” said Tenning.

According to Germany’s disease control agency, the Robert Koch Institute, 175 laboratori­es in Germany have a combined COVID-19 test capacity of 307,000 tests per day.

Each week over a million standard PCR tests for COVID-19 are carried out, some at designated test centers but also in doctors’ practices and at hospitals. Tenning thinks there’s room for improvemen­t when it comes to delivering samples from some testing sites to the labs.

Matternet is already running similar drone delivery systems in Switzerlan­d and the United States, but Berlin will have the first such system in the European Union.

The next phase of the coronaviru­s pandemic will likely begin when vaccines become available.

 ?? Markus Schreiber The Associated Press ?? Peter Trempeck monitors the landing of a drone with a case for medical items during a presentati­on Monday in Berlin. Each drone can carry about 40 test samples.
Markus Schreiber The Associated Press Peter Trempeck monitors the landing of a drone with a case for medical items during a presentati­on Monday in Berlin. Each drone can carry about 40 test samples.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States