Radio Frequency Identification Technology for Logistics, Tagging and EPC

South Carolina hospital deploys ThingMagic devices

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

The Greenville Hospital System University Medical Center, a health care institution affiliated with the University of South Carolina Medical School and several other colleges in the South Carolina region, has announced the deployment of RFID solutions in its operating room facilities.

The solutions, used for tracking high value equipment and supplies, integrate Mercury5 UHF RFID readers provided by ThingMagic with hardware provided by the Industrial Portals division of Jamison Door to create RFID Loss Prevention Portals. The portals are installed at OR exits leading to laundry facilities and decontamination areas. Small surgical instruments, vulnerable to loss among bulky linens or surgical scrubs, are tagged with passive RFID tags which cause an alarm to sound if they pass through the portals.


The hospital is also using ThingMagic technology to support the preparation of OR case carts. In a system which deploys ThingMagic’s Astra Integrated UHF readers, hospital personnel can monitor each stage of equipment flow through contaminated cart storage, decontamination and sterilization, perioperative staging and the case staging area.

ThingMagic readers have also been deployed throughout the hospital to track mobile equipment such as infusion pumps, an increasingly common RFID application in hospitals around the country.

All of the hospital’s RFID-enabled solutions are integrated with the SynTrack for Health Care software system, a product of Integrated Business Systems and Services, Inc. (IBSS). The IBSS system enables Greenville staff to locate and map any type of RFID-tagged asset with handheld computers and application software. [end] 

The Basque National Health System has launched a neonatal security system designed to monitor and protect new-born infants using RFID technology.

When a pregnant woman is admitted to hospital, she is provided a tag with a unique identification which can be read in all the maternity zones. When the baby is born, an RFID tag specially designed for the new born is fitted to its ankle. The device monitors the infant 24 hours a day, detecting unauthorized movements, registering entries and exits to and from and enabling immediate location information.

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Centros Especializados de San Vicente Fundacion, Columbia has chosen Orange Business Services to integrate and deliver RFID-based technology and communications services at its new branch launched in October.

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VeriTeQ announced its plans to offer the FDA-cleared VeriChip microchip, a rice grain-sized passive RFID microchip, for the identification of breast implants and other medical devices.

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Campus card provider NuVision Networks, Napa, Calif., has named Brian Adoff as the company’s new executive vice president.

Adoff, formerly NuVision’s national sales manager, will now oversee company-wide operations and develop strategic partnerships.

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Heartland Payment Systems Campus Solutions division, in partnership with Bridgeway Solutions, an identification and security solutions provider, has been chosen as one of South Carolina’s preferred system providers for electronic disbursement of financial aid refunds and payments to students.

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Trimble announced XECAN has integrated the ThingMagic Astra ultra-high frequency reader into its RFID oncology solution, which was also just recently deployed at Jordan Hospital in Plymouth, Mass.

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