This Town Is Testing Drone-Delivered Defibrillators. Will It Work?

Clemens, North Carolina, is acting as one big guinea pig, a testing ground for a whole new kind of rapid response: drone defibrillators.

It sounds odd. It sounds like a drone with a Taser taped to it. The reality of it is much more practical, even if it is rather sci-fi. Duke University’s Duke Health is testing out drones that air-drop automated external defibrillators, or AEDs, straight to bystanders during a cardiac emergency. It’s being billed as the first study of its kind in the United States.

There’s some logic behind it: even if the fastest an EMS team can get to you, it still has to cut through traffic and a complex web of roads. If the quickest route between two points is a straight line, why not attach a payload of medical emergency equipment onto a drone that can fly directly from a dispatch center to the precise spot of the emergency?

Drone-Delivered Defibrillators Are Being Tested in This Town

Once a 911 call comes in, dispatch fires up a drone, straps on an AED, and sends it off. While the caller gets coached by the operator, the drone beelines to the scene. When it arrives minutes later, it drops in to provide the caller with an AED to try to revive or stabilize the victim while EMS is on the way. It’s not a replacement for an ambulance and the trained medical professionals inside…

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