Drone firm in talks in Uganda on
medical supply delivery deal
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[November 22, 2019]
By Elias Biryabarema
KAMPALA (Reuters) - A drone service firm is
in talks with the Ugandan government on a deal to deliver blood
packages, drugs and medical equipment to public health facilities, an
executive told Reuters on Friday.
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A deal could see Uganda join a small number of other African
countries, such as Ghana and Rwanda, that have deployed unmanned
aerial vehicles (UAVs) to help public health logistics.
Uganda's public hospitals often face shortages of essential
supplies, such as blood, drugs, syringes, gauze and gloves,
sometimes due to unreliable transport through the gridlocked capital
or along poorly paved or dirt roads in the countryside.
John Goslino, business manager at Flexdrone, told Reuters the drone
services firm launched by a Ugandan and a German aimed to start a
delivery service in March if talks were successful.
He said the service had already secured approval from the
Information and Communications Technology Ministry and they were
awaiting an endorsement from the Health Ministry.
"We are trying to provide the products that are needed by the
patient and the health worker who is working in the village when
that person needs it," Goslino said.
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Most smaller public health facilities in Ugandan do not have proper
facilities to store blood and supplies often need to be transported
across long distances in an emergency. Ugandan media have in the
past reported deaths due to delayed blood deliveries.
Goslino said his firm had partnered with Ugandan start-up firm
Sysimo Technologies to develop a mobile app for the on-demand
delivery service.
Flexdrone planned to deploy drones capable of carrying 5 kg each but
could use bigger drones as demand grew, he said.
A similar service led by Zipline, a California-based robotics
company, was launched in Ghana. Rwanda has been operating a similar
service since 2016.
(Reporting by Elias Biryabarema; Editing by Edmund Blair)
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