China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Drone drug deliveries take off

-

Companies help Tanzania to ensure its remote clinics are amply stocked

NAIROBI, Kenya — Tanzania is set to launch the world’s largest drone delivery network in January, with drones parachutin­g blood and medicines out of the skies to save the lives of women giving birth and children struck by malaria, in a country larger than Nigeria.

California’s Zipline will make 2,000 deliveries a day to more than 1,000 health facilities across the East African country, including blood, vaccines and malaria and AIDS drugs, following the success of a smaller project in nearby Rwanda.

“It’s the right move,” Lilian Mvule, 51, said by phone, recalling how her granddaugh­ter died from malaria two years ago.

“She needed urgent blood transfusio­n from a group O, which was not available,” she said.

Malaria is a major killer in Tanzania and children under the age of five often need blood transfusio­ns when they develop malariaind­uced anemia. If supplies are out of stock, as is often the case with rare blood types, they can die.

Tanzania is larger than Nigeria and four times the size of the United Kingdom, making it hard for the cashstrapp­ed government to ensure all of its 5,000-plus clinics are fully stocked, particular­ly in remote rural areas.

The drones fly at 100 kilometers per hour, much faster than traveling by road. Small packages are dropped from the sky using a biodegrada­ble parachute.

The government also hopes to save the lives of thousands of women who die from profuse bleeding after giving birth.

Tanzania has one of the world’s worst maternal mortality rates, with 556 deaths per 100,000 deliveries, government data shows.

“It’s a problem we can help solve with on-demand drone delivery,” Zipline’s chief executive, Keller Rinaudo, said in a statement.

We don’t realize that the drugs are not getting here on time due to bad roads.”

Angela Kitebi,

an inhabitant living 40 km to the east

of Dodoma, capital of Tanzania per 100,000 deliveries, Tazania’s maternal mortality is the world’s worst

“African nations are showing the world how it’s done.”

Companies in the United States and elsewhere are keen to use drones to cut delivery times and costs, but there are hurdles ranging from the risk of collisions with airplanes to ensuring battery safety and longevity.

The drones will cut the drug delivery bill for Tanzania’s capital, Dodoma, one of two regions where the project will first roll out, by $58,000 a year, according to Britain’s Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t, one of the project’s backers.

The initiative could also ease tensions between frustrated patients and health workers.

“We always accuse nurses of stealing drugs,” said Angela Kitebi, who lives some 40 km east of Dodoma.

“We don’t realize that the drugs are not getting here on time due to bad roads.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States