NHS delivery drones take flight offering faster and greener patient care

By Published On: November 14, 2024Last Updated: September 23, 2025
NHS delivery drones take flight offering faster and greener patient care

Urgent blood samples are now being transported by electric drones in a medical delivery service which aims to improve patient care by speeding up testing turnaround times.

The service involves delivering blood samples for patients undergoing surgery who are at high risk of complications from bleeding disorders.

Moving samples between Synnovis’ lab at Guy’s Hospital and the lab at St Thomas’ Hospital can take more than half an hour by road but takes less than two minutes by drone.

This enables quicker analysis, helping to efficiently determine whether patients are safe to undergo surgery or be discharged.

Lawrence Tallon, Deputy Chief Executive of Guy’s and St Thomas’, said: “This drone trial to deliver blood samples should speed up test results for some of our most vulnerable patients, ensuring they have the very best care.

“It combines innovations in healthcare with sustainability to give us an NHS fit for the future.”

Blood samples are currently delivered by van and motorbike couriers.

Alongside the efficiency advantages, switching to drone deliveries will have significant environmental benefits by removing carbon emissions and reducing traffic congestion.

Lightweight commercial drones can reduce CO2e emissions by up to 99 per cent compared to non-electric cars and reduce transportation electricity needed compared to electric delivery vans.

The six-month operation is regulated by the Civil Aviation Authority, which has granted the airspace approval, and NATS, the air traffic management service, is ensuring the service operates safely alongside crewed aircraft.

It has been organised as a partnership between Guy’s and St Thomas’; Apian, a healthcare logistics company founded by NHS doctors; and Wing, a global drone delivery company that is part of Google’s parent company, Alphabet.

Apian and Wing have previously partnered on medical drone delivery in Dublin, Ireland, and Apian has trialled medical drone deliveries in rural areas of the UK.

The six-month trial could serve as the foundation of a healthcare drone distribution network for the NHS across London.

Alexander Trewby, CEO and Co-Founder of Apian, said: “Cities like London face a unique challenge: built vertically but relying on 2D roads, they’re choked by polluting congestion.

Apian’s ambition is to create an autonomous delivery network operating at NHS scale, moving physical items as productively as the internet moves information.

“Kudos to Guy’s and St Thomas’ and the Civil Aviation Authority for leading the way.

“If we can pioneer drone delivery here, we can do it anywhere!”

Professor Dominic Harrington, Chief Scientific Officer, Synnovis, added: “Tens of thousands of essential patient samples are analysed by pathology laboratories across London each week.

Reducing the time it takes to transport these samples means results are available more quickly to inform best possible patient care.

“We’re excited to be working with Apian on this pioneering project and look forward to seeing where this can go next.”

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