From the BBC:
“Life-saving kidney delivered by
drone”
A donor kidney has been delivered
to surgeons at a US hospital via drone, in the first flight of its kind. Many
see huge potential for unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) delivering medical
products, with some drones already doing so in Africa. The US flight required a
specially-designed drone which was able to maintain and monitor the organ. It
is hoped that it can pave the way for longer flights and address safety issue
with current transport methods. The recipient, a 44-year-old from Baltimore,
had waited eight years for the transplant. She said of the unusual delivery
method: "This whole thing is amazing. Years ago, this was not something
that you would think about." According to the United Network for Organ
Sharing, which manages organ transplants in the US, in 2018 there were nearly
114,000 people on waiting lists, with 1.5% of organs not making it to the
destination and nearly 4% being delayed by two hours or more. "Delivering
an organ from a donor to a patient is a sacred duty with many moving parts. It
is critical that we find ways of doing this better," said Joseph Scalea,
assistant professor of surgery at University of Maryland School of Medicine
(UMSOM), and one of the surgeons who performed the transplant. "As a
result of the outstanding collaboration among surgeons, engineers, the Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA), organ procurement specialists, pilots, nurses,
and, ultimately, the patient, we were able to make a pioneering breakthrough in
transplantation." The three-mile
journey required a lot of new technology, including a custom-made drone capable
of carrying the additional weight of an organ, which also needed on-board
cameras and organ tracking, and communications and safety systems for a flight
over an urban, densely-populated area. It also had a parachute recovery system
in case the aircraft failed. The drone's mission was a success and the patient
has now left hospital "There's a
tremendous amount of pressure knowing there's a person waiting for that organ,
but it's also a special privilege to be a part of this critical mission,"
said Matthew Scassero, part of the engineering team based at the University of
Maryland. Charlie Alexander, chief executive of The Living Legacy Foundation of
Maryland, a charity working to increase organ donation, said: "If we can
prove that this works, then we can look at much greater distances of unmanned
organ transport. "This would
minimise the need for multiple pilots and flight time and address safety issues
we have in our field."
^ This sounds like a really interesting
and important way to use drones. ^
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