Last month, in Canada, a 63-year old engineer received his lung transplant via drone delivery. This was the world’s first drone delivered lung transplant. The drone flew for approximately 6 minutes from Toronto Western Hospital across the city to Toronto General Hospital to deliver the organ. The organ was packed in a lightweight, carbon fiber container suspended from the drone. This maiden voyage stems from Sirius Satellite Radio co-founder, Martine Rothblatt’s, desire to cut the wait-list in Canada. In 2020, 2,622 Canadians received transplants, 4,129 were on waiting lists and 276 died before an organ came available. Rothblatt started United Therapeutics in 1996 after his daughter was diagnosed with pulmonary arterial hypertension, and the drone that delivered this lung belongs to Unither Bioelectronique, which is a wholly owned subsidiary of Unither.

In 2019, the first organ delivered by a drone was completed by the University of Maryland Medical Center in Baltimore, with a drone-delivered kidney. Thereafter, MissionGo and Nevada Donor Network sent corneas on a 5-minute flight, a kidney on a 25-minute journey and, in May of this year, a pancreas was shipped via Minnesota’s skies.

This method is increasingly likely to become the norm in health care as a fast, safe way to deliver organs in the timeliest manner.

Photo of Kathryn Rattigan Kathryn Rattigan

Kathryn Rattigan is a member of the Business Litigation Group and the Data Privacy+ Cybersecurity Team. She concentrates her practice on privacy and security compliance under both state and federal regulations and advising clients on website and mobile app privacy and security…

Kathryn Rattigan is a member of the Business Litigation Group and the Data Privacy+ Cybersecurity Team. She concentrates her practice on privacy and security compliance under both state and federal regulations and advising clients on website and mobile app privacy and security compliance. Kathryn helps clients review, revise and implement necessary policies and procedures under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). She also provides clients with the information needed to effectively and efficiently handle potential and confirmed data breaches while providing insight into federal regulations and requirements for notification and an assessment under state breach notification laws. Prior to joining the firm, Kathryn was an associate at Nixon Peabody. She earned her J.D., cum laude, from Roger Williams University School of Law and her B.A., magna cum laude, from Stonehill College. She is admitted to practice law in Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Read her full rc.com bio here.