RFID in Health Care Expert Views
Viewing Articles: 1-10 of 20
EPCIS can support chain-of-custody verification—without a cumbersome data burden.
Real-time safety solutions protect employees in dangerous industries.
An RFID e-seal designed for ammunition, file or medical boxes can monitor for tampering.
If medical equipment manufacturers integrate dual-interface RFID chips into the devices they make, hospitals could use the technology to communicate with those devices, access maintenance records and alerts, and upgrade software.
New challenges to RFID adoption signal innovation and progress.
Amazon, eBay and Google were all dumb ideas.
Depending upon application requirements, low-frequency passive RFID tags and readers often outperform their high-frequency counterparts—so why do people believe otherwise?
RFID could be the food supply chain's equivalent of the flight data recorder.
The goal of instituting RFID security measures should be to find a balance between an investment in security and the resulting business benefits.
In the short term, companies could use a transponder ID written to every microchip to ensure the authenticity of an EPC tag.