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Nepal's medical drones bring healthcare to the Himalayas

by Gopal Sharma | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Monday, 30 April 2018 00:00 GMT

Medical drone carrying a pack of medicines takes flight in Myagdi, Nepal, April 9, 2018. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Kamal Pun/Handout

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Thousands of people living in remote areas of Nepal have no access to proper healthcare facilities

By Gopal Sharma

KATHMANDU, April 30 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - When Nepali labourer Om Bahadur Purja sprained his leg in his remote village he would have faced a four-hour trek to the nearest medical centre - but for a pioneering scheme to bring healthcare to the Himalayas.

Instead, the 60-year-old father of three received the treatment he needed in his home village thanks to the recent arrival of a drone carrying basic medicines and equipment.

"This saved me a lot of trouble, time and money," Purja told the Thomson Reuters Foundation from Ramche, a Himalayan village 250 km (150 miles) northwest of the Nepali capital Kathmandu.

Thousands of people living in remote areas of Nepal have no access to proper healthcare facilities, which means they have to walk or be carried long distances if they fall ill.

The poor Himalayan country has just over 2,600 doctors - less than one for every 10,000 people - and many of the 2,000 village health posts meant to provide urgent treatment lack basic medicines as supplies often take months to reach them.

That means many Nepalis resort to traditional healers or even go without any medical care.

Enter Mahabir Pun, a 63-year-old former teacher who won national fame more than a decade ago with an ambitious scheme to connect Himalayan villages like Ramche to the internet.

Pun's non-profit National Innovation Centre (NIC) has developed the country's first "medical drone", aiming to bring care to the remote mountain communities that need it most.

Nepali engineers pose for a picture along with the medical drone used to supply medicines in a remote village in Myagdi, Nepal on April 9, 2018. Thomson Reuters Foundation/Kamal Pun/Handout

The machine, designed and assembled by young Nepali graduates, is the most effective way of bringing health services to people in difficult-to-reach areas, said Pun.

He also hopes the scheme can provide employment for talented young Nepalis who might otherwise move abroad for work.

"It was designed, fabricated and assembled by the innovative young college graduates in our lab to keep costs low," he said.

"This way I am trying to promote innovation among the young engineers and contribute to slow the trend of people leaving Nepal for jobs abroad."

The drone can carry samples of blood and other fluids to the nearest laboratory for tests, and deliver supplies, he added.

Pun won the Ramon Magsaysay prize - seen as Asia's Nobel - for his work connecting Himalayan villages in Nepal to the web.

At present it can only carry a one kg (two pound) load about two km (1.2 miles), but the team is working on improving the range so it can carry a heavier load over a longer distance.

The internet connection proved a lifeline for villages with no road access or mobile phone reception - an achievement all the more impressive as it was achieved during a 10-year Maoist insurgency that brought large swathes of Nepal to a standstill.

The country of 28.6 million people restricts drone use, so Pun is working with officials to ensure his scheme is a success.

"We must identify remote villages where drones are effective to carry medicines," said public health worker Roshan Neupane.

"Bigger drones should be designed and developed so heavier loads could be sent." (Reporting by Gopal Sharma @imgsharma, Editing by Claire Cozens.

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