News
19/
NOUVEAU
:
USA,
la verichip est sur le point d'envahir...les hôpitaux !
"La
Food and Drug Administration est en train d'examiner e dossier
verichip dans le but de permettre l'utilisation de la verichip
en hôpital . La verichip servira tout simplement à remplacer...
les autres moyens biométriques disponibles, tels que les empreintes
digitales "
"la
verichip permettra de "régler des transactions" , "d'entrer
dans une pièce sécurisée", "d'identifier les patients" ainsi
que "le personnel autorisé à avoir accès aux dossiers médicaux"
__________________________________________________________
SOURCE
http://www.infowars.com/print/bb/implants_hospitals.htm
Under-the-skin
ID chips move toward U.S. hospitals
By Michael
Kanellos CNET News.com /July 27, 2004
VeriChip, the
company that makes radio frequency identification--RFID--tags
for humans, has moved one step closer to getting its technology
into hospitals. The Federal Drug Administration issued a ruling
Tuesday that essentially begins a final review ! process that
will determine whether hospitals can use
RFID systems
from the Palm Beach, Fla.-based company to identify patients
and/or permit relevant hospital staff to access medical records,
said Angela Fulcher, vice president of marketing and sales
at VeriChip. VeriChip sells 11-millimeter RFID tags that get
implanted in the fatty tissue below the right
tricep. When
near one of Verichip's scanners, the chip wakes up and radios
an ID number to the scanner. If the number matches an ID number
in a database, a person with the chip under his or her skin
can enter a secured room or complete a financial transaction.
"It is used instead of other biometric
applications,"
such as fingerprints, Fulcher said. The approval process does
not center on health risks or implications, Fulcher said.
VeriChip can already sell implantable RFID chips in the United
States for standard security applications and the financial
market. The company's basic technology has also been
used in animals
for years. Instead, the FDA may mostly examine privacy issues,
Fulcher indicated. In other words, the agency will look at
whether the technology will lead to situations where confidential
information can get improperly disclosed. Technically, the
FDA on Tuesday issued a letter stating that
there were no
equivalent products on the market. This allowed VeriChip to
then seek a de novo, or additional, review. The application
process started in October 2003. The Italian Ministry of Health
kicked off a six-month trial of the chips for hospitals in
April. VeriChip, a division of Applied Digital Solutions,
generated headlines
worldwide recently with the announcement that the Attorney
General of Mexico implanted one of the small company's RFID
tags in his arm. Fulcher said the basic technology has been
around for a while. For 15 years, Digital Angel , a sister
company under the Applied corporate umbrella,
has sold thousands
of tags for identifying animals. The U.S. Department of Energy
emplo! ys Digit al Angel's technology to monitor salmon migration.
Several implants have been placed in household pets and livestock.
"We believe the tags can last 20 years," Fulcher said. The
idea for employing the tags to
identify humans
came after the horror of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the
World Trade Center and the Pentagon, Fulcher said. Richard
Seelig, vice president of medical applications at Applied,
saw on TV how firemen were writing their badge numbers on
their arm with pen so they could be identified in the
event of a disaster.
He inserted Digital Angel tags in his body and told the CEO
that they worked. VeriChip was born. In June, the company
hired Next Level and Motorola alum Kevin Wiley as CEO. About
7,000 VeriChip tags have been sold, and approximately 1,000
have been inserted in humans. The
chips only work
with VeriChip's scanners. Along with scanners, VeriChip also
sells complementary security systems for opening or shutting
doors after the identification process. So far, most of the
sales have been outside the United States. Along with its
attorney general's implant, Mexico has evaluated the
chips as a way
to better identify children in the event of a kidnapping.
The Baja Beach Club in Spain has used them as electronic wallets
to buy drinks. Sales have also taken place in Russia, Switzerland,
Venezuela and Colombia. "The applications that have taken
hold at this point have been international so
far," Fulcher
said. But FN Manufacturing , a South Carolina gun maker, is
evaluating the technology for "smart guns," which contain
sensor-activated grips so that only their owners can fire
them. The chips themselves are inserted into humans and animals
with a syringe. When emerging from the syringe, the
chips get coated
with a substance called BioBond, which insulates the chip
from the body and allows it to adhere to local tissue. If
removed, it becomes inactive. Privacy has been an issue for
the company, but the complaints have actua! lly begu n to
die down. "The pushback is less and less," Fulcher said. The
chip is an ID
tag, Fulcher emphasized. When a person with an embedded chip
passes near a scanner, the dormant chip simply wakes up and
issues an ID number. The administrator of the security systems
and databases determines how the information is used. A person
has to stand within a few feet of a
scanner for the
tag to wake up. Thus, the tags can be used to follow someone's
steps only when they are near scanners. The company's hand
scanners can ping chips about 12 inches away, although the
devices for counting salmon are 10 to 12 feet away from the
fish. Also, VeriChip is working on an implant
that will contain
a Global Positioning System . Such a device would allow an
individual with a scanner to pinpoint someone's position on
the globe. The lab device, however, is relatively large right
now, about the size of a pacemaker.
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