Health systems across Africa face persistent logistical challenges, including poor road infrastructure, remote locations and seasonal variations that hinder the timely delivery of essential medical supplies. Using drones or uncrewed aerial vehicles is an emerging technology approach for cutting transit times and enabling point-to-point connectivity between distant medical facilities and distribution centers. Blood delivery, vaccine transportation, and specimen movement are among the early deployments in Africa that have demonstrated promise in enhancing disease surveillance and emergency care responsiveness. This review evaluates drones’ role in African health logistics, focusing on operational performance, health-system integration, regulatory environments, financing, and ethical considerations. Drones have a clear positive impact on healthcare access, supply chain efficiency, and emergency response globally, with Africa leading innovative implementation. Although there are still issues with infrastructure, legislation, and scaling, new developments in technology and growing interaction with healthcare systems suggest that widespread use is highly likely. This study recommends that for drone operations in healthcare, governments should create uniform, transparent standards that cover privacy, safety, and licensing.
Ramadile Moletsane (Thu,) studied this question.