RFID in Health Care Expert Views
Viewing Articles: 11-20 of 20
A recent study published in The Journal of the American Medical Association is not in line with the reality of most current hospital RFID deployments.
Return on investment is not the only way to calculate the value of RFID.
Radio frequency identification could offer an affordable way to serve the medical needs of the world's growing elderly population.
A number of factors are conspiring to significantly increase the potential for counterfeit drugs to wind up in our homes.
Although RFID volumes in the retail and pharmaceutical markets fell short of expectations, the technology saw widespread deployment in other sectors.
Steve Dean, director of business development at RFID systems integrator Franwell, says it can—and explains why.
By tuning or enhancing their existing wireless networks, hospitals and other facilities can implement an RFID-based system to locate RFID-tagged assets, thereby extending the value of their investment.
The pharmaceutical industry will significantly influence how the RFID industry addresses item-level tracking and high-compliance applications on a global scale.
You can add RFID and maintain network performance—without redesigning your infrastructure. Here's how.
The future of vehicle-mounted printing and data-collection devices seems secure, helping companies improve efficiency and create a competitive advantage.