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Norway Trials Drone Transport Of Medical Samples

Young entrepreneurs are testing out drone transport of medical samples between two hospitals 100 kilometres apart.

The distance between 搁酶谤辞蝉 and Trondheim is about 100 kilometres as the crow flies. Three NTNU entrepreneurs want to use drones to transport medical samples between them.

Drones are being used to transport medical samples in Central Norway.
This sight could become commonplace in the future. Delivery drones do jobs faster and require fewer working hours. Photo: Aviant

搁酶谤辞蝉 Hospital is a branch of St. Olavs Hospital in Trondheim. The hospital takes medical samples all the time, but these often have to be analysed in Trondheim.

Today, these medical samples are largely transported by car. But the two areas are 150 kilometres apart by road, and especially in winter the idea of 鈥嬧媋nother option is appealing for the transporters.

Read more: Healthcare in Norway

Entrepreneurs Herman 脴ie Kolden, Bernhard Paus Gr忙sdal and Lars Erik Fagern忙s are working on a solution.

Can make a difference

鈥淲e鈥檙e building something that can make a difference, and that can hopefully save lives and contribute to society. It鈥檚 really rewarding and motivating,鈥 says Fagern忙s.

Winter scene from 搁酶谤辞蝉, Norway
搁酶谤辞蝉 is 100km away from Trondheim.

The three entrepreneurs are nerds in the best sense of the word. They鈥檙e civil engineers with a somewhat greater than average interest in drones, and together they have complementary specialist expertise in physics, mathematics, cybernetics, robotics and computer science. They are a match that wasn鈥檛 created in heaven, but at NTNU.

Test flight completed

In 2019, the three master鈥檚 students completed a study year abroad at MIT in Boston, with some of the most talented drone lecturers in the world. That experience sparked their idea to develop delivery drones.

They started the company . Not long afterwards, Aviant secured an agreement with St. Olavs Hospital to develop a solution for sending biological samples between the two hospitals.

鈥淲e use pre-built drones but replace most of the electronics with solutions we鈥檝e developed,鈥 says Fagern忙s.

The Aviant startup team.
Herman 脴ie Kolden, Bernhard Paus Gr忙sdal and Lars Erik Fagern忙s have found the start-up company Aviant. They aim to halve the time it takes to send medical samples between hospitals. Photo: Aviant

A test flight between the cities has already been completed. Using 4G, the drone flew a total of 120 kilometres at 120 metres above the ground. A drone can carry medical samples in half the time that a car requires 鈥 and can help save lives.

Strong confidence in the solution

Currently, an operator on the ground needs to follow the delivery drone on a screen during transport.

鈥淏ut in the future, the idea is that this operator would be able to follow several drones at the same time. Then you save working hours in addition to delivery time,鈥 Fagern忙s says.

Numerous entities have expressed confidence in the solution. Innovation Norway has given them NOK 1.5 million (EUR 147,000) in grant funding. The Research Council has contributed NOK 1 million (EUR 98,000) in support of the start-up.

Other companies are thinking along the same lines. Fagern忙s hopes they will be able to create a Norwegian collaboration and develop solutions that can compete with foreign actors.

This article was originally published by  and has been republished here with kind permission.

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