 | Wednesday, June 25, 2008 Issue 861 | | Will Smith, Editor |  |
 |
 | Editor's Note: Today's top story is the Journal of the American Medical Association's publication of a study that documents how 125 KHz and 868 MHz RFID systems interfered with medical equipment. The study by Amsterdam-based researchers recommends site interference tests be performed before any potential RFID installation.
Battery-assisted RFID solutions provider Intelleflex has joined with Minds Inc., a provider of IT solutions to the road construction and agriculture industries, to offer an automated tracking solution for crop harvesting. According to the announcement, the solution combines RFID, GPS, and other wireless technology to track the location and efficiency of a harvester, including the movements of crop transport vehicles as they come and go from loading stations.
Lastly, Samsung SDS, a major IT solutions provider in Korea, will deploy TAP appliances from RFID network infrastructure developer Reva Systems. With clients all over Asia, the partnership adds a key distribution channel for the Reva technology. More details in the announcement. |
 |
 |
 Study Finds RFID Interferes With Medical Equipment
 By John Burnell
 Electromagnetic interference (EMI) caused by RFID systems interfered with medical devices in intensive care unit testing, according to a study published today in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA). The study, performed by researchers at the Academic Medical Center at the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands, tested 41 medical devices three times each. It documented 34 incidents of electromagnetic interference for the 123 tests. The study tested passive 868 MHz (the UHF band used in Europe) and active 125 KHz RFID technologies.
The report sparked extensive coverage by mainstream and IT media, including several reports that sensationalize the danger. The actual study summary reported by JAMA is much less alarmist. It said the danger to medical devices from RFID is comparable to that from cell phones and documented potential problems RFID devices can cause, but did not call for a ban on RFID in hospitals. The report ends with the following statement:
"In conclusion, in a controlled nonclinical trial setting, RFID technology is capable of inducing potentially hazardous incidents in medical devices. Implementation of RFID in the ICU and other similar health care environments should require on-site EMI tests in addition to updated international standards."
Pacemakers, defibrillators, dialysis machines, infusion/syringe pumps, and ventilators were among the tested devices that experienced interference. There were incidents recorded for all three external pacemakers tested, and for eight out of nine infusion/syringe pumps. No pacemakers stopped completely, but six out of nine infusion/syringe pumps did, as did both renal replacement devices tested.
The 41 medical devices tested included 17 categories of equipment from 22 manufacturers. Passive UHF signals created interference for 26 of the devices (63 percent), and active 125 KHz signals caused interference for eight devices (19.5 percent). All eight devices that experienced interference from 125 KHz signals also experienced interference from 868 MHz signals.
Researchers developed an adverse events scale to rate the severity of interference. Of the 34 instances of EMI, 22 were classified as hazardous, two as significant, and ten as light. Incidents were defined as "every unintended change in function of a medical device." "Hazardous" incidents were defined as a direct physical influence on the patient because of an unintended change in equipment function, such as an IV pump or pacemaker stopping. "Significant" incidents required additional patient monitoring or events that caused significant distractions from patient care, such as incorrect device alarms. Finally, "light" incidents referred to events that did not require a significant level of attention.
Tags and readers were tested in a patient room. The median distance between RFID tags and readers and affected medical devices was 30 centimeters. For comparison, report authors cited research into cell phone safety that found the median distance for harmful incidents in hospitals was 3 centimeters. The researchers reported that the incidence rate increased as the power output of RFID devices increased. RFID devices caused EMI incidents on medical devices that were up to 600 centimeters away.
The article said electromagnetic interference caused by RFID had never previously been reported. The study was developed out of research into the suitability for using RFID to track blood products and expensive medical supplies. Researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison RFID Lab are also currently investigating RFID's uses for blood tracking, which would require FDA approval (see RFID Holds Promise for Blood Supply Chain). In 2004 the FDA approved a class of RFID chips for human implant (see VeriChip RFID Technology Gets FDA Approval; Stock Surges).
Forward this to a colleague | Request reprints: reprints at rfidupdate dot com |

|
|
 |
 |
| RTLS & Active RFID | Locate it now. How? Ekahau. That's how! Ekahau RTLS (Real-Time Location System) automatically tracks assets and people via your existing Wi-Fi network. Control costs and improve asset management with Ekahau. For more information, visit us at www.ekahau.com. |  | | Products & Services | PCB Tracking & Visibility Solution from Omnitrol Networks Off-the-shelf solution provides automated real-time visibility and complete electronic pedigree for traceability on parts and WIP providing real-time dashboards, alerts and reports for shop-floor management. The pedigree information is automatically programmed into Texas Instruments' RFID tag for access to critical data without the need for connection to a back-end database. Learn more. | Employees steal over $1 billion per week from employers the American Management Association reports. 95% of businesses are victimized by employee theft. Managers are reluctant to ask questions, because trusted employees may feel offended, leaving business owners in a difficult situation. What can you do? Nox: Intelligent Perimeter Defense from Simply RFID provides advanced security and protection for business assets. |  | | RFID Tags & Labels | Ferroxtag HF tags: Smart on Metal! Ferroxtag is a new family of HF RFID tags suitable for operation on metallic surfaces. Ferroxtag's special ferrite antenna was developed using Ferroxcube's years of experience in ferrite technology. The high performance antenna means longer read range with a smaller tag. Visit www.ferroxtag.com |  | | Employment | RFID Recruiters - 100% Focused on RFID Recruiting Whether your company is looking for the best RFID talent or you have the best RFID talent and are looking for the best RFID employer, RFID Recruiters offers the most focused approach to your objective. To learn how the RFID industry and the RFID job market are evolving, visit www.rfidrecruiters.com |  | | Upcoming Events | AWA PABS08 N. America Conference, Sept 11-12, Chicago, IL AWA is organizing the Product Authentication & Brand Security Conference 2008 on September 11-12 in Chicago, IL. The event includes presentations and panel discussions with brand owners, legal authorities, associations, converters and suppliers; also networking sessions, a supplier forum, a social program and more. Find more on the program here. | AWA PABS08 Asia Conference, Dec 4-5 - Hong Kong, China AWA presents the Asian Product Authentication & Brand Security Conference 2008, to be held on 4 & 5 December in Hong Kong, China. PABS08 Asia focuses on the threats specific to the Asia Pacific region, various elements of IP Theft, and leading-edge solutions. Find more on the program here. |  | | Research & Whitepapers | RFID Marketing Strategies Report Thirty-nine pages of original research on RFID audience perceptions, including 30+ figures of tactics, content & messaging, and recommendations to guide marketing strategy. Also, Top-10 RFID company rankings based on 550+ survey respondents. View the executive summary free, with Top-3 sample rankings. Only $495 Individual License or $795 Corporate License. Available now |
This email was intended for , who subscribed
RFID Update is the RFID industry daily. Launched in early 2004 to provide timely analysis of RFID industry news, RFID Update publishes editorial briefings every weekday for the growing ranks of top level executives involved in the deployment of RFID. Each issue delivers the breaking news and analysis most pertinent to successful RFID implementations, allowing readers to understand global RFID developments as they happen.
RFID Update Editor: Will Smith, editor at rfidupdate dot com Press releases and public relations inquiries should be directed to Will.
To advertise in RFID Update, email advertising08 at rfidupdate dot com to request a media kit.
RFID Questions? Ask at RFID Talk (www.RFIDtalk.com).
Forward this issue of RFID Update to your colleagues, or tell them to subscribe free at: www.RFIDupdate.com
View all past issues of RFID Update in the archive.
Update your subscription settings: subscriptions08 at rfidupdate dot com
We take your privacy seriously. View our Privacy Policy here.
RFID Update -- The RFID Industry Daily 3213 Duke Street #266 Alexandria, VA 22314 http://www.rfidupdate.com
© 2008, ALX Technologies. All Rights Reserved. |
|
|