Sunday Express

The drone will see you now...machines to deliver medicine

- By Lucy Johnston HEALTH EDITOR

TECH gurus are in talks with the UK’S air safety bosses to pave the way for widespread medical drone deliveries by next year.

They are hoping to expand trials which are currently using drones in certain parts of the country to slash delivery times and ease pressures on the NHS.

There are fears the impact of strikes, traffic congestion in urban areas and unpredicta­ble weather can prevent vital medical supplies being delivered on time.

Skyfarer is one of the specialist firms hoping to “open up the skies” to increase the use of medical drone deliveries, which it believes help patients receive swift access to medicines, vaccines, medical devices, blood units and timesensit­ive medical supplies.

It believes the use of drones could help to revolution­ise the supply of healthcare.

But suppliers first need to prove they can conform to complicate­d safety rules set out by the Civil Aviation Authority, the official body responsibl­e for air safety.

This could include proof that the signal from the drones will not interfere with other aircraft and that the drones are not at risk of crashing into other air traffic.

Founder and managing director of Skyfarer, Elliot Parnham, said: “We want to provide a service to society and we believe we have the technology to ensure that we do not impact other flight routes or interrupt other flight paths.

“We want to increase the scale of this work and change the whole structure of airspace so we can create a corridor for networks of drones day in, day out. We believe drones can provide a service to society and we are working with the Civil Aviation Authority to open up the skies.

“We are hoping we will have final sign-off for this by 2024. This would mean we can use drones to deliver medicines

in a same-day fashion but also other healthcare products such as hip replacemen­ts, blood units and chemothera­py drugs.”

Skyfarer is running a trial funded by and in partnershi­p with Medical Logistics UK using drones to send medical supplies between University Hospital Coventry and Warwickshi­re Trust’s hospitals in Coventry and Rugby.

Georgia Hanrahan, Skyfarer project manager, said: “As a result of significan­t road congestion and heavy infrastruc­ture, we believe the use of drones can help support medical deliveries and speed up the process.

“There are no potholes in the sky, nor is there as much congestion, and without the need for heavy infrastruc­ture to land, unmanned aerial vehicles can add to the fleet of logistical transfers and provide a faster, more sustainabl­y friendly and cheaper solution.”

Last summer, the NHS used drones to fly chemothera­py drugs to cancer patients from Portsmouth Hospitals University NHS Trust to St Mary’s Hospital on the Isle ofwight as part of a different trial.

The drones were able to fly 30 minutes across the Solent, saving patients on the island a three to four-hour round trip by ferry or hovercraft.

An NHS trust in Northumbri­a has also trialled the use of drones to transport chemothera­py medicines and blood samples between hospitals in the region.

‘We are working to open up the skies’

 ?? Picture: BOB LEVEY/ GETTY ?? HIGH HOPES: Skyfarer’s Elliot Parnham
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Picture: BOB LEVEY/ GETTY HIGH HOPES: Skyfarer’s Elliot Parnham GIVE US A BURL: Taylor performs in a glitzy burlesque outfit

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