EMS droneEMS drone dramatically increases survival chances of heart attack patients, accident victims

Published 29 October 2014

A Dutch graduate student has designed an unmanned, autonomously navigating mini airplane that can quickly deliver a defibrillator to where it is needed. When the emergency services receive a cardiac arrest call, this drone can quickly deliver a defibrillator to the emergency scene. Via a livestream video and audio connection, the drone can also provide direct feedback to the emergency services and the persons on site can be instructed how to treat the patient. The drone finds the patient’s location through the caller’s mobile phone signal and makes its way to the location using GPS. The drone can carry up to four kilograms of medical equipment.

Graduate student Alec Momont of TU Delft in the Netherlands has designed an unmanned, autonomously navigating mini airplane that can quickly deliver a defibrillator to where it is needed. A network of such drones could significantly increase the chance of survival following a cardiac arrest: from 8 percent to 80 percent.

Momont, of TU Delft’s Faculty of Industrial Design Engineering, designed his prototype for an ambulance drone together with the Living Tomorrow innovation platform as part of his graduation program. A Delft TU release reports that when the emergency services receive a cardiac arrest call, this unmanned, autonomously navigating plane can quickly deliver a defibrillator to the emergency scene. Via a livestream video and audio connection, the drone can also provide direct feedback to the emergency services and the persons on site can be instructed how to treat the patient. The drone finds the patient’s location via the caller’s mobile phone signal and makes its way there using GPS. The drone can fly at around 100 km/h, weighs 4 kg, and can carry another 4 kg.

“It is essential that the right medical care is provided within the first few minutes of a cardiac arrest,” says Momont. “If we can get to an emergency scene faster we can save many lives and facilitate the recovery of many patients. This especially applies to emergencies such as heart failure, drowning, traumas, and respiratory problems, and it has become possible because life-saving technologies, such as a defibrillator, can now be designed small enough to be transported by a drone.”

So Momont set to work and designed a new type of drone: a compact flying “medical toolbox,” which carries essential medical equipment that anybody can use. This first prototype has been designed to transport a defibrillator.

“Some 800,000 people suffer a cardiac arrest in the EU every year, and only 8 percent survive,” Momont explains. “The main reason for this is the relatively long response time of the emergency services (approximately ten minutes), while brain death and fatalities occur within four to six minutes. The ambulance drone can get a defibrillator to a patient inside a twelve km2 zone within one minute. This response speed increases the chance of survival following a cardiac arrest from 8 percent to 80 percent.’

The communications channel (a Webcam) built into the drone is also very important. This allows the emergency operators to see what is going on and provide instructions to the person applying the defibrillator, who in their turn can also ask the emergency operator questions. “Currently, only 20 percent of untrained people are able to successfully apply a defibrillator,” says Momont. “This rate can be increased to 90 percent if people are provided with instructions at the scene. Moreover, the presence of the emergency operator via the drone’s loudspeaker helps to reduce the panic of the situation.”

Momont proposes expanding the existing emergency medical infrastructure with a network of fast and compact drones that have communication capabilities and can carry medical auxiliary equipment. “The costs should not be an issue; I have calculated these at approximately €15,000 per drone, which is clearly a reasonable amount if you consider the number of lives that could be saved.”

“There are still a number of obstacles in the way of the development of the ambulance drone,” says Momont. The drone can fly autonomously, however, and this is still not permitted by law. New Dutch legislation in this area is expected to be passed in 2015. Moreover, the drone has not yet been tested on “real” patients, and the object avoidance system for avoiding obstacles in the drone’s path needs improvement. Momont, however, still thinks his invention could be implemented within five years. A number of parties in the medical sector have already registered their interest in the project.

Momont developed the ambulance drone in collaboration with the Belgian innovation platform Living Tomorrow, which helped to fund the project. The next steps towards the development and implementation of the prototype are presently being considered together with Ghent University Hospital and Ghent University, both partners in Living Tomorrow. Momont is also working together with the Amsterdam Ambulance Service.