Forbes: Telehealth drones bring health care to you

UC drone project expands technology for telehealth

Forbes highlighted the work of four inventors at the University of Cincinnati who are exploring new technology in telehealth.

Inventors Victoria Wangia-Anderson, Manish Kumar, Seung-Yeon Lee and Debi Sampsel from three colleges at UC collaborated to develop a semi-autonomous drone that can be dispatched right to people’s homes. The drones are big enough to carry medicine or medical supplies but small enough to maneuver the tight confines of a home using navigational algorithms developed by UC engineers.

Still in development, the drone has cameras and a display screen so patients can talk to health care professionals from the comfort of their home. The prototype carries a waterproof box the size of a small first-aid kit to deliver medical supplies or collect self-administered lab tests.

"These multiple functions — the ability to deliver medical supplies, collect tests, and integrate display screens for telehealth, in addition to better tools to empower autonomous navigation inside households, if executed well, may potentially serve as a relatively novel and improved solution for telehealth," Forbes contributor Sai Balasubramanian wrote.

The researchers in UC’s College of Nursing, College of Allied Health Sciences and College of Engineering and Applied Science secured a UC Office of Research grant to develop a prototype to test the feasibility of dispatching a telehealth care delivery drone to a patient's home to provide health assessments or medical interventions.

The researchers also talked to MedCity News about the promise of telehealth drones. The global COVID-19 pandemic demonstrated the benefits and demand for telehealth services. But it also exposed a digital divide that is leaving some people behind. Not everyone has easy access to digital devices or the ability to use them comfortably.

“That’s one of the things that’s invaluable when you are looking at the fact that not everybody has the wherewithal or dexterity to download apps and create that two-way communication with a device,” Sampsel told MedCity News.

Read the Forbes article.

Featured image at top: Seung-Yeon Lee, an associate professor of nutrition sciences in UC's College of Allied Health Sciences, sits across from a telehealth drone that allows patients to talk face-to-face to health care professionals from the comfort of their home. Photo/Joseph Fuqua II/UC Creative + Brand

Left to right professor educator director Victoria Wangia-Anderson, associate professor Seung-Yeon Lee, PhD professor Manish Kumar, PhD, and Dr. Debi Sampsel, DNP shown here drone at the home of Dr. Sampsel in West Chester. UC/ Joseph Fuqua II

Three colleges at the University of Cincinnati partnered on a project to develop a telehealth drone that health professionals can send to a patient's home. Pictured from left are Professor Victoria Wangia-Anderson and Associate Professor Seung-Yeon Lee from the UC College of Allied Health Sciences, Director of Telehealth Debi Sampsel from the UC College of Nursing and Professor Manish Kumar from the UC College of Engineering and Applied Science. Photo/Joseph Fuqua/UC Creative + Brand

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