2008年8月29日 星期五

Tamper-Resistant RFID Infant-Tracking System Improves Security轉貼

美國威斯康辛州某家醫院,把RFID應用在醫院內的病患控管制度上。對於這類型的應用,似乎只有花大錢,應該就可以做到。


門口用的是262Khz,一般走廊等病房環境用的是318 MHZ,應該就是空間大小的關係!


記得曾經在電影裡看過,國外的重罪囚犯假釋期間就有類似RFID的偵測器具佩帶在身上。


如果要轉用在病患身上,或許應該真的只能針對[嚴重失能或無無力自主能力等病患]吧


如果用在一般病患,不知道會有會衍生出人生自由的議題議題出來。甚至,Hacker能掌控整間所有病患的進出.....或者只要有權限的人員就能自由控制任何病患的進出權限...


我想,這類控制人類行為自由的系統,在設計的時候,一定要加入某些情理的考量才行


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Tamper-Resistant RFID Infant-Tracking System Improves Security




Waukesha Hospital switched to RF Technologies' SafePlace system to ensure identify bracelets can't be removed, and to identify which patient sounded the alarm.















































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By Claire Swedberg

August 27, 2008
Wisconsin's Waukesha Memorial Hospital, part of national health-care provider ProHealth Care, has completed one year with an infant and pediatric RFID security system that alerts staff members if a patient's ID tag is tampered with, or if that tag approaches an exit. The system, which replaces an older RFID infant-tracking solution, improves security and enables employees to determine which patient triggered an alarm, says Roberta Sonnentag, the hospital's clinical manager of labor/delivery/recovery/postpartum (LDRP) and gynecology services.

The previous system did not alert the hospital if a ID tag was removed, nor did it identify specific patients. Thus, if an alarm was sounded as a result of a pediatric patient approaching an exit or elevator, workers were unable to determine which patient had done so, only which exit or elevator that person was approaching. The greatest concern, Sonnentag says, was that the hospital could not detect when a security bracelet was being removed. Patients recognized that weakness in the system as well, asking the staff, "What would happen if I took this off?"

Therefore, about two years ago, Waukesha Memorial began reviewing its options. The staff investigated systems offered by three vendors, ultimately choosing the SafePlace Pediatric and Infant Security Solution, provided by
RF Technologies, because of its band-cutting technology
which transmits an alert if a band is tampered withand because RF Technologies offered what it deemed the best customer service. "All of the systems had sensors that would work," Sonnentag says, but RF Technologies also offered training and follow-up customer service.

The system was installed in the summer of 2007. "RF Technologies sent its staff and trainers on the site," Sonnentag states, "and they stayed with us for two or three weeks." During that period of time, the company set up the system, trained the staff on its use and provided troubleshooting as it was launched.

The system consists of RF Technologies RFID interrogators deployed throughout the women's and children's wing of the hospital, located on the building's third floor. There are 33 LDRP single rooms in that wing, as well as eight pediatric beds and 19 neo-natal beds. Sonnentag declines to provide the exact number, or locations, of those readers, but indicates they are deployed to locate RFID tags throughout the pediatric, obstetrics and infant intensive-care units, as well as to sound alerts if the tags approach an exit or elevator.

New pediatric patients and infants all receive an RF Technologies dual-
frequency RFID tag that transmits at 262 kHz to interrogators located in doorways, and at 318 MHz to readers deployed in hallways and other locations. Patients checking in are instructed as to the purpose of the tag, Sonnentag says, and instructed not to remove it. The hospital staff then inputs data about the patient, which is linked in a back-end server, managed by the hospital, to the unique ID number on the RFID tag.



Once a patient is wearing a tag on a wrist or ankle, readers deployed around the units capture the tag's ID number and transmit that number to the server via a cabled connection. The tag or bracelet must be attached shut on a patient in order to operate. If a person attempts to remove the bracelet, thereby breaking the connection, the tag immediately sends an alert to area interrogators that transmit data to the server. RFID Technologies software interprets that information, enabling the system to sound an audible alarm at nurses' stations, and to contact the staff's cell phones.

If a patient ID tag comes close to a doorway, a shut door will automatically lock. If the door is open, an audible alarm will sound and the doors will swing shut and lock. If an elevator door is open and the tag is in close proximity to the elevator, a louder audible alarm will sound. Staff members throughout the wing can view computer screens to see which zone the patient is in, as well as that patient's identity.

The original system also had many false alarms. Some still occur, Sonnentag says, though they are usually caused by human error. For instance, a patient may attempt to remove an infant's tag to readjust the fitting, thereby setting off an alarm. To prevent such false alarms, the staff can ask patients to inform a nurse if they need to adjust the fitting. The nurse can then input data into the system that a specific tag will be opened, and make the authorized adjustment.


















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According to Sonnentag, the hospital has conducted practice drills on the system several times throughout the past year, including removing tags in a hospital room and determining how appropriately the staff responded. She has been very happy with the results, she says, noting, "We know the system is doing its job. It's working very well."

The tag batteries have a life of about one year, says Kathie Vick, RF Technologies' marketing communications manager, but that is a conservative estimate. Waukesha purchases new tags every year to ensure there are no failures. Thus far, Sonnentag says, there have been no battery problems.


 



Sincerely,

--
Hung-Yu  Chien
Associate  professor
Department  of  Information  Management
National  Chi  Nan  University
e-Mail: 
redfish6@ms45.hinet.nethychien@ncnu.edu.tw
skype:  redfishchien

--==Mailed via NCNU E-Mail==--


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訪問五四三

其實以這篇訪問,我(旁人)看了也是很有感。 1. 為了不剝奪孩子與家人的時間,堅持每週訓練不超過17H,這個出發點真的很好。 2. 堅持一對一防守(讓每個人都必須全力以付)這個觀點也很棒,我甚至也認為應該變成統一規範。(NBA也是如此)。因為這樣會多了可看性。當然很多人會有各種不...