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To: John Mansfield who wrote (19482)6/27/1998 3:21:00 PM
From: John Mansfield  Respond to of 31646
 
'EPRI's Siebenthal Calls for Cooperative Efforts to Prepare the Nation's Power System for Year 2000 Readiness

At the June 12 Senate Special Committee on the Year 2000 Technology Problem hearing about the utility industry's readiness, Dr. Charles Siebenthal, manager of EPRI's Year Two Thousand (Y2K) program testified, "We all share the goal of having this essential industry well prepared for the Year 2000 transitions."

"On such a complex, interrelated issue with absolute time deadlines, we we are committed to working together in the public interest," Siebenthal stated. He noted the key roles of the White House Council on Year 2000 Conversion, Department of Energy (DOE), Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), Congress, North American Electric Reliability Council (NERC), the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), the trade associations - Edison Electric Institute (EEI), American Public Power Association (APPA), National Rural Electric Cooperatives (NRECA), individual electric power companies in both the regulated and unregulated sectors, and key vendors, suppliers, and major electricity customers.

...

year2000.epriweb.com



To: John Mansfield who wrote (19482)6/27/1998 3:26:00 PM
From: John Mansfield  Respond to of 31646
 
'Of growing concern is the impact on health care devices. Setterberg gives the example of a child born in 1995:

"It might be a piece of equipment that gives a dosage of a certain kind of a medicine to a five-year-old," he says. "However, it's possible that that piece of equipment will simply shut down, or it would read that that person they're giving information on is 95 years old, perhaps resulting in a different dosage and potentially having an impact on the health of that person."

And if medical devices don't work properly and related problems kick in ... and one major hospital is worried.

"They expect that there will be patient injury, and they anticipate the possibility of patient death," says Setterberg. "They have said specifically that we will not be ready by the Year 2000."

Rx2000 did a survey of health care representatives.

"One of the questions we asked them was, 'Do you agree or disagree that the Year 2000 issue has a significant potential to lead to unnecessary deaths in health care?'" says Ackerman. "Now these are some of the people in the trenches working on the issues. Ninety-four percent of them agreed with that."

Part of that death risk is the poor job of preparation by most medical device manufacturers. Ackerman says some are even lying to their hospital customers that everything is fine.

...

cbn.org