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THE
WORLD'S RFID AUTHORITY
TCM Introduces RFID-based Medicine-Dispensing
System
The Southeast Asian RFID systems provider is offering Intelli-MDS
to help health-care providers track pharmaceuticals and monitor
dosages.
By Beth Bacheldor
May
22, 2007The Corporate Machine (TCM), an RFID systems provider
with offices in Singapore and other Southeast Asian countries, has
introduced RFID-enabled products designed to help health-care providers
track pharmaceuticals and monitor when those drugs are administered,
to make sure correct doses are administered.
TCM's
intelligent medicine-dispensing system (Intelli-MDS) combines RFID
tags and readers, workflow software, electronic medical records
(EMRs) and a central database in an integrated solution. This enables
nurses and doctors to view patient records, update them in real
time and double-check prescription dosages at the moment they administer
them. The system can also automatically send prescriptions to pharmacists.
The
system was designed with patient safety in mind, says C.E. Tan,
a consultant with TCM, who points to statistics indicating thousands
of people die annually due to incorrect dosing and other medical
errors. In addition, Tan says, the system is designed to help hospitals
and other health-care organizations leverage EMRssomething
the Singaporean government is presently pushing. In March, the Singaporean
government unveiled plans to introduce an EMR system consisting
of a centralized database of patient records and data. The initiative,
which will occur in phases, is tagged with the slogan "One
Singaporean, One EMR."
TCM's
Intelli-MDS consists of three modules: Physician, Pharmacist and
Dispensing. These modules run on handheld mobile devices and communicate
with the back-end Intelli-MDS software, which is Web-based and includes
built-in security and encryption. TCM will design the system to
suit the needs of the health-care institution, such as deciding
which RFID interrogators and readers to use. The system is commercially
available now to hospitals in Asia, particularly in Singapore. A
public hospital in that country is piloting the system in its surgical
department, though Tan has declined to release further details because
the hospital has asked not to be identified.
To
use Intelli-MDS, a physician could employ a handheld mobile device
with a built-in interrogator to scan RFID-enabled patient wristbands
or tags assigned to patients. Each RFID tag's unique ID number would
be associated with a patient's record in the Intelli-MDS back-end
software. The physician could pull up the patient's electronic record
and input new information into the handheld, such as prescriptions.
Similarly,
hospital pharmacists could employ handhelds to wirelessly access
patient records and any new prescriptions that may have been written.
They could then complete the order by scanning RFID-tagged drug
bottles to document that the correct drug was being prepared, as
well as note dosage data, drug interactions and other medical information.
Finally,
nurses could use the handhelds to ensure that they administer the
proper drugs at the right times. In fact, the Intelli-MDS Dispensing
module walks nurses through five checks: right time, right drugs,
right patient, right dose and right method of administration.
In
addition to the Intelli-MDS system, TCM also introduced two new
products leveraging RFID and Wi-Fi technologies. The RFID Intelli-Trolley
is a self-powered, battery-operated mobile cart with an interrogator
that reads RFID tags on drugs placed on the top two shelves. This
enables it to record whenever drugs are removed from the trolley,
or placed back on. An 802.11 access point on the bottom shelf can
then communicate tag data back to the Intelli-MDS central database.
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