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Strategies & Market Trends : Technical analysis for shorts & longs
SPY 691.72-0.1%Jan 16 4:00 PM EST

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To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (42779)11/7/2005 11:01:33 PM
From: Johnny Canuck  Read Replies (1) of 69853
 
RFID could revolutionize patient safety

By Andrew Donoghue
news.com.com

Story last modified Mon Nov 07 12:28:00 PST 2005

RFID technology could dramatically improve the safety of outpatients by providing the National Health Service with the right information to intervene before an incident, according to health service specialists.

Speaking at the RFID Futures event in London on Monday, Chris Ranger, assistant general director of the National Patient Safety Agency, said that his agency was calling on the technology industry to provide the infrastructure to allow the elderly or infirm to stay at home, when otherwise they might have no option but to go into residential care.

"We are faced with heartbreaking decisions of sending people into residential care because they cannot be safe at home," he said. "We want to be in a mode where we are predicting. It's a bit like weather monitoring. By building up this pattern you can say this is a precursor of something bad happening."

Ranger said that by using RFID technology to tag outpatients and key devices in their homes, the NHS could enhance what he describes as "lifestyle monitoring." By seeing exactly how people interact with certain devices, health specialists could more easily determine if someone is coping on their own.

If people don't carry out relatively simple, everyday tasks--such as making tea--it can be a sign that they aren't as functional as they need to be to remain at home on their own. "If people don't make tea it's a sign they are not coping, but how do you monitor that? The key is the collection and collation of all this information. What we really want to do is build up a picture of how people really cope. Then we may be able to intervene before something happens," said Ranger.
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