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Coronavirus pandemic
AsiaSoutheast Asia

In Indonesia, ‘drone medics’ help make no-contact deliveries to Covid-19 patients

  • A team of drone enthusiasts have been using the devices to deliver food and medicine to patients in South Sulawesi since July
  • During the peak of the latest outbreak in July, they made up to 25 rounds of deliveries in one day

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A volunteer flies a drone to deliver medical supplies in Makassar, Indonesia’s South Sulawesi province. Photo: Reuters
Reuters

A group of drone enthusiasts in Indonesia are using their aerial skills to help during the pandemic by providing a contactless medicine and food delivery service to Covid-19 patients isolating at home.

Armed with five drones, the seven-member team have been working around the clock in Makassar, the capital of the South Sulawesi province, since early July to provide deliveries.

Hartati, who along with her family, has been self-isolating since she tested positive for Covid-19 in mid-August, welcomed the innovative service.

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A medical worker watches a drone carrying medical supplies take off in Makassar, South Sulawesi province. Photo: Reuters
A medical worker watches a drone carrying medical supplies take off in Makassar, South Sulawesi province. Photo: Reuters

“I think the medicine received from a drone is more sterile,” said the 50-year-old housewife, who uses one name, noting how the system avoided the need for any direct contact when receiving goods.

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The family of four is living in an area where up to 80 per cent of residents are Covid-19 positive, according to data from Makassar’s coronavirus task force. Indonesia is one of the countries worst affected by the pandemic in Asia.

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