It is said that
constraint can breed innovation, and when it comes to delivering medical cargo
by land in Rwanda, also known as the "Land of Thousand Hills," there
are some serious limitations at play. To overcome the nation's challenging
topography, the local government and US startup Zipline are launching a drone
delivery service that will start dropping much-needed blood bags to 20 remote
hospitals in the coming months.
The lack of road
infrastructure coupled with the mountainous landscape make servicing rural
health centers in Rwanda a difficult proposition. Earlier in the year, the
Government of Rwanda announced a partnership with Zipline to
implement a drone delivery program that would make the country's hilly terrain
a non-factor.
Zipline has now
revealed a few new details about its plans to carry out this task. Dubbed Zip,
the fixed-wing aircraft can fly at up to 100 km/h (62 mph) and will be launched
into the air from medical warehouses to make hundreds of deliveries per day.
Doctors will send
through their orders via phone or text message and warehouse workers then load
up the drone with the blood bag or other necessary items. The team runs
pre-flight tests and then Zip flies autonomously to the drop-off point,
alerting the doctor on approach and deploying the package with a parachute
attached, before returning to base for its next run.
The ultimate goal is
to put every one of Rwanda's 11 million-plus residents within a 15 to 35 minute
delivery time of any urgent medical product. The effort will begin by bringing
blood products to 20 hospitals and health centers this Northern Hemispher
summer.
Fixed-wing gliders are
becoming a go-to tool for certain drone applications, such as
environmental conservation, agriculture and surveillance. They lack the agility of consumer-focused quadcopter designs,
but typically offer longer flight times, which makes them ideal for these kinds
of application where maneuverability takes a back seat to range.
Without revealing how
far its Zip drone can fly at a time, Zipline says its "unprecedented
range" makes national-scale coverage possible from a single base.
Source: Gizmag
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