Journal
DRONES
Volume 5, Issue 2, Pages -Publisher
MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/drones5020038
Keywords
UAV; drone; Dangerous Goods; regulations; logistics; medicine; healthcare
Categories
Funding
- EPSRC [EP/V002619/1]
- EPSRC [EP/V002619/1] Funding Source: UKRI
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Commercial operations of UAVs are expanding, with a focus on medical logistics in health service supply chains. Regulations for transporting Dangerous Goods by air need to be reevaluated to fully exploit UAVs in safe medical supply chain operations.
Commercial operations of uncrewed aerial vehicles (UAVs or drones) are expanding, with medical logistics using UAVs as part of health service supply chains being targeted. The ability to transport cargos that include items classified as Dangerous Goods (DG) is a significant factor in enabling UAV logistics to assist medical supply chains, but DG regulations for air transport have developed from the perspective of crewed aircraft and not UAVs. This paper provides an important audit of the current DG regulations, best practice in their application and the development of much-needed new governance that will be required to fully exploit UAVs for the safe transport of DG in medical logistics. Findings from the audit provide a summary of the circumstances and potential challenges resulting from the application of DG regulations as they stand to UAV operations, particularly for medical logistics, and convenient guidance on the practical implications of DG regulations for UAV operators. The main conclusion is that this is an under-researched domain, not yet given full consideration in a holistic way by regulators, governments, industry bodies, practitioners or academia.
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