Apocalyptic Hope ............................ VeriMed pg 1 ........pg 2 ...... Index ......Targeting the Vulnerable
VeriMed Chip Implant
System continued
...page 3
VeriChip Patient
Identification System

Applied MEMS ... medgadget
VeriChip : better than a key fob ? -- Nov. 21, 2005 ( until your read Rev. 14:9-11 )
Then again, given the frequency that people lose
their keys, maybe the VeriChip implant is the way to go. The
article pointed out that sixty Americans now have the chip --
looks like others could use some encouragement.
http://www.medgadget.com/archives/2005/11/government_push.html
http://www.medgadget.com/archives/2005/02/verichip.html
VeriChip VIDEO http://wusatv9.com/health/health_article.aspx?storyid=37422
Senate passes bill: patients must have access token for EMRs....
VeriMed System --- 11- 05
Ed : this paves the way for VeriChip to be
used by all to access Electronic Medical Records
http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7001103374
Physician wire thyself ( rationalizations for EMR )
The Practical Futurist
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/9274039/
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/9274039/page/2/
911 dispatchers, paramedics to have access to med records -- Nov.
8, 2005
http://www.news14charlotte.com/content/top_stories/default.asp?ArID=106406
Digitized drug labels for Online access "DailyMed"--
Nov. 4, 2005
(FDA) today began requiring drug
manufacturers to submit prescription drug label information to
FDA in a new electronic format. This electronic
format [
Ed : Digital ] will allow healthcare
providers and the general public to more easily access the
product information found in the FDA-approved package inserts
("labels") for all approved medicines in the United
States.
These new electronic product labels will be the key
element and primary source of medication information for "DailyMed"
-- a new interagency online health
information clearinghouse that will provide
the most up-to-date medication information free to consumers,
healthcare providers and healthcare information providers.
This information can be accessed through the National
Library of Medicine at
http://dailymed.nlm.nih.gov.
In the future, this new product information will also be provided
through
facts@fda.gov,
a comprehensive internet resource designed to give one-stop
access for information about all FDA-regulated products.
http://www.rxpgnews.com/research/pharmacology/article_2784.shtml
IBM Austin, TX and the VeriMed System -- Nov. 1, 2005
Growing acceptance of the VeriMed system
in the medical and scientific communities. VeriMed(TM) is now a
component of the Hospital demonstration area of the IBM
Solutions Experience Lab located in Austin, Texas.
The IBM Solutions Experience Lab conducts approximately 260 tours
annually for corporations and government agencies wishing to see
demonstrations of functional, integrated hardware and
software solutions for specific market sectors.
http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20051101005219&newsLang=en
WebMD showcases VeriChip ... Daniel DeNoon
When we first announced VeriChip, a network poll
asked people if they would put one in their bodies,"
Silverman tells WebMD. "Only 9% said yes. After FDA
approval, 19% said yes. When former HHS Secretary Tommy Thompson
joined our board, the rate went up to 33%. But our own study
shows that if you ask people whether they would have a
VeriChip implant to identify their medical records in case of an
emergency, the positive response goes to 80%
But soon he expects that millions
of people will get VeriChip implants every year.
http://my.webmd.com/content/Article/109/109216.htm
The idea of putting something in your head or in your arm
frightens people and stirs up privacy worries, even if they don't
make a lot of sense," he says. "Americans have an
almost obsessive drive to protect their personal privacy."
Halamka, however, is already dreaming about future upgrades.
"If a chip could also serve as a GPS, reporting my
location, or act as an emergency transponder
[ Ed: monitoring bio-data 24 / 7 ]
, requesting rescue, I would definitely upgrade," he says
http://my.webmd.com/content/Article/109/109216.htm?pagenumber=3
The New HealthCare System
Skeptics will dismiss Silvermans optimistic
business forecast as greatly exaggerated, and
those with a natural distrust of polls will question the validity
of the data. But putting that aside for a moment, consider
the fact that Applied Digital is positioning itself to get some
major help from the federal government
If this socialist healthcare scheme is allowed to
pass, and Applied Digital succeeds in partnering with government,
then Americans will be seduced into accepting a
seamless nationalized healthcare system. But those
who participate will also end up with a medical ID implant that
will undoubtedly morph into a mandatory national ID.
http://www.thenewamerican.com/artman/publish/article_2089.shtml
Internal and External rfid Medical devices -- Oct. 19, 2005
In 2004, the FDA authorized marketing of two different types of
medical devices that incorporate RFID. The first type is the SurgiChip
tag, an external surgical
marker that is intended to minimize the likelihood of wrong-site,
wrong-procedure and wrong-patient surgeries.
Verichip and EMR / EHR
The second type of RFID medical device is the
implantable [Ed: internal
] radiofrequency transponder system for patient
identification and health information. One example of this type
of medical device is the VeriChip Health Information Microtransponder
System, which includes a passive implanted
transponder, inserter and scanner. The chip stores a unique
electronic identification code that can be used to access patient
identification and corresponding health information in a database.
The chip itself does not store health information or a patient's
name.
RFID is considered by some to be dangerous because it can be used
for undesirable surveillance.
http://wistechnology.com/article.php?id=2384
Austco-USA : MediCom and Call Guard --June 2005
Austco is now pleased to further announce the start of its US
operations under the name
Austco Marketing & Service (USA) (Austco-USA)
as a new division of
Austco Communication Systems Pty Ltd.
The establishment of Austco-USA is based on the same approach
used very successfully by
Austco in Asia, Canada, the Middle East and the UK
REDy Corp.
the most recently being a 140 bed installation at the Renaissance
Hospital in Dallas, Texas with a full Ethernet
networked system, visit http://www.atintegration.com/picturepage.htm
Austco is a world leader in the highly specialized field of electronic
communications for the health care and
secured accommodation environments [ Ed : jails, prisons etc.] . With the
international head office located in
Perth, Western Australia and its North American head office
located in Richmond Hill, Ontario http://www.austco.com/Media%20Release%20-%20Austco%20USA.html
AUSTCO - CellGuard ( prisons etc. )
Designed
specifically for the harsh environment of prisons, police
lock-ups, remand and detention centres, ect., CellGuard provides
tamper proof emergency call and intercommunication integrated
with surveillance, monitoring, logging and printing of
records in accordance with statuatory "duty of care"
requirements
Each
'Local Control' is configured to operate via optic fibre to
'Central' and controls cell and door access intercoms in
its cell block
Covert
[ Ed : hidden] monitoring to all cells.
http://www.austco.com/cellguard.html
One drop, six seconds = results from your blood test--
Aug. 30, 2005
National Taiwan University showed off its latest application for
a worldwide patent on Monday: a multi-function blood-testing
device. The instrument requires only one drop of blood,
and can provide accurate data on blood glucose, cholesterol,
triglycerides, and hemoglobin in just six seconds via a
convenient, hand-held device.
If the device is paired with an
indwelling chip and a painless needle, a
patient's blood pressure, body temperature and other information
about blood status can be rapidly recorded and downloaded to a
computer for analysis. This greatly reduces the amount
of pain patients must endure to provide blood samples. The device
could be on the market as early as the year's end
http://english.www.gov.tw/index.jsp?id=13&recid=109591&viewdate=0
Mexican VeriChip System -- Oct. 7, 2005 (
google ) July 17, 2003
originally
SOLUSAT MEDICA is an application aimed at the general
public, which allows VERICHIP users to provide paramedics
and doctors with basic medical information
in an emergency situation, enabling them to take fast
and effective decisions, regardless of the physical condition of
the patient at the time of an emergency. The type of information
provided does not compromise either the condition of the user or
his privacy, since this information is used exclusively for
medical purposes to assist doctors in the event of an emergency.
The above-mentioned information basically refers to blood
type, known allergies, prescribed drugs, a description of the
patient's aliments and the name and telephone of
the head physician, etc.[ Ed: written
on the chip ? ]
SOLUSAT MEDICA is a database
containing medical information pertaining to VERICHIP users,
which can be accessed via the Internet
[Ed: web-enabled ] .
Associated hospitals and emergency services will have access
to this information for consultation purposes, while users
can consult and update their data via the Internet or by
calling our customer service department's toll-free number. To
guarantee the confidentiality of this information associates and
users will be furnished with a user name and password that
affords them access to the database.
The VERICHIP costs $150.00 dollars plus V.A.T. and can be
implanted at any VERICHIP (CIV) Implant Center in participating
medical centers.
Fortunately, I don't have any medical ailments, but I've been
unlucky enough to be involved in a couple of serious accidents
that have landed me in an emergency room. I didn't think twice about having a VERICHIP
implanted, after witnessing the distress
caused to my family when they couldn't find me, plus the risk of
being attended to by a doctor who doesn't know whether I have a
medical condition or not. This way I'll always be sure to
have my identity and my medical data on me," said
Marcos Escandon.
It has a wide variety of applications, such as
personal safety and identification, providing general medical
information on the user in the event of accident or emergency,
and since it has restricted access, confidentiality is
guaranteed,
making it suitable for
financial applications, too.
See www.cybertime.net/~ajgood/trust.html
http://www.hispanicprwire.com/news.php?l=in&id=1088&cha=12
US - Mex Binational Health Plan -- Oct. 8, 2005
The Institute for Mexicans Abroad (IME), in
cooperation with over a thousand agencies, will convene the
FOURTH Binational Health Week (BHW) to conduct health-promotion
activities for Latinos and Mexican immigrants and migrants and
their families. This year, Binational Health Week expands from
California to 17 other U.S. states with the participation of the
California-Mexico Health Initiative (CMHI) and the US-Mexico
Border Health Commission.
The 2004 BHW will kick off with a formal inaugural ceremony
followed by a two-day policy forum on United States-Mexico
binational health topics
The inauguration will be hosted by Mexican
President Vicente Fox together with the U.S. Secretary of
Health Dr. Tommy Thompson and Mexico's Secretary of Health Dr.
Julio Frenk.
http://www.hispanicprwire.com/news.php?l=in&id=3120&cha=9
49
more Hospitals on VeriMed-VeriChip System -- Oct. 4, 2005
Most of the hospitals entering into agreements to
implement VeriMed in September did so as a result of the
Company's demonstration of the system at the American College
of Emergency Physicians' (ACEP) Scientific Assembly that took
place September 26-29, 2005 in Washington, D.C.
"We believe the strong acceptance that the VeriMed System
achieved at a key industry conference represents a significant
step in developing widespread
acceptance of VeriChip and expanding our
strategic options for the company," said Scott R. Silverman,
Applied Digital's Chairman and Chief Executive Officer.
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/051003/35478.html?.v=1
The RFID device is implanted in the patient using
a reversible insertion process. The microchip
contains a secure and unique 16-digit number, which acts as a
portal to patient information accessible through the medical
facility's electronic medical record system or through VeriChip's Web site.
The device is read by healthcare professionals using a hand-held
reader
http://www.frontlinetoday.com/frontline/article/articleDetail.jsp?id=184944
Hurricanes, Health Records and you -- Sept. 23, 2005
In the wake of Katrina, the federal government
responded by beginning to collect pharmacy,
Medicaid, Veterans Administration and other medical information
for a centralized database that
doctors can use as they treat displaced patients.
when doctors and hospitals have your records
theyre called electronic medical records, or EMRs,
but once you have them, theyre
called personal health records, or PHRs
3 sites :
The American Medical Associations iHealthRecord.org
coordinates with more than 100,000 doctors own
Web sites; if your physician is one of them,
thats a logical choice.
WebMDs Health Manager offers
storage along with many interactive features and tests.
FollowMe is a five-year-old service that also allows
groups employers or hospitals to offer PHRs as a
service to customers or employees. All these sites, of course,
emphasize high security standards: You control access to your
records
One Solution with chip
The ultimate solution may be that provided by a
service called VeriMed.
As do the other providers, VeriMed stores your PHR online
but then also provides a tiny chip that is implanted,
usually under the skin of your upper arm, containing a unique 16
digit number.
Even if you are unconscious, a VeriMed
scanner can read that number from your chip and locate your
health records online. VeriMed offers
the scanners to hospital emergency rooms for free."
VA, Kaiser and others have Online Medical services
Networking
"On the Web, patients can make appointments, check on
lab and other test results and view some of their medical
records. Our clinics are all linked together
so a patient being seen at one center can have her record, lab
results and even digital x-rays viewed by a specialist at another
center. If needed, we also have a video system where a specialist
can talk and see a patient who is in another center.
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/9431650/
Personal observation:
We
have been to an emergency room this month visiting a friend.
Our friend was medicated and in an altered state of mind and did
not recognize us ( though should have). .
This person was fully alert and talking upon being carried from
their residence a few hours earlier.
Through out our visits to the hospital, our friend was constantly
on medication and in a very
acquiescent disposition, answering "yes" to many
questions that were not necessarily a "yes".
We thought : "What if the staff were to ask our Christian
friend if they could inject so-and-so for easier access to their
medical file ? Most likely our friend would have said yes, even
though our friend is against the 666 Mark of the Beast. Our
friend would not have made the close-connection, nor had the will
to resist under so much medication.
Do all of us have our guard up ? Do we all see how easily this
could come upon us, unless we have settled it in our mind to
resist the System while we still have a choice ?
As a snare shall it come upon the whole world .... Luke 21:35
Ireland working on biochips -- Sept. 9, 2005
The research will take place at DCU's Centre for Future
Diagnostics and Health (CFDH), which was officially opened on
Wednesday
The bio-chips will be used for cancer detection and
assessing cardiac health, and will also be used in systems that
monitor the coagulation of blood.
http://www.enn.ie/frontpage/news-9636454.html
VeriMed integrated with IBM Lab ... Austin, TX -- Sept. 8, 2005
for more unified databases and
networking
"The Hospital area demonstrates currently available
technologies compatible with IBM healthcare solutions that
provide integrated, state-of-the-art
capabilities in the healthcare environment.
The Hospital demonstration area illustrates the potential of
VeriMed to enhance the IBM
Aligned Clinical Environment Solution.
This is an integrated solution designed to
connect disparate healthcare information sources while also
reducing costs. The solution enables data collection
and manages integration and analysis
[ Ed: shades of voodoo 'Minority Report' ]
of patient information"
rapid access to vital clinical information
http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20050908005379&newsLang=en
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/050908/85379.html?.v=1
9 Hospitals link with VeriMed -- Sept. 1, 2005
VeriChip Corporation Chief Executive Officer Kevin
McLaughlin noted, "Recently, our efforts to achieve a
hospital roll-out program in the Northeast have begun to gain
momentum, as there has been a growing recognition of the key role
that the VeriChip can play in emergency medical situations. We
anticipate achieving our stated goal for VeriChip-enabled
hospitals by year-end."
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/050901/15449.html?.v=1
T Thompson wants 1.8 billion from insurance for electronic
medical records ( EMR ) -- Sept. 1, 2005
Wants to decrease federal monies for Medicaid and Medicare
Ed: Will getting
"chipped " lower your insurance rates ?
Thompson suggested the $1.8 billion HHS collects from
health care fraud and abuse should go to help providers implement
an electronic medical record
Thompson proposes that with proper technology, providers
can lower costs and reduce proper prescribing of medication. He
said such a system would permit hospitals all over the
country to receive information about a specific patient anywhere
else in the country, thus preventing treatment
errors
http://nashville.bizjournals.com/nashville/stories/2005/08/29/daily21.html
http://www.insurancejournal.com/news/southeast/2005/08/31/58981.htm
COA Community Oncology Alliance teams up with Tommy Thompson--
Aug 17, 2005
Tommy G. Thompson, former Secretary of the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, and his colleagues at
Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP have joined forces with
the Community Oncology Alliance (COA) to preserve quality,
affordable, and accessible care for Americans battling
cancer.
Sec. Thompson joins former Congressmen Harold Ford, Sr.
and Bob Livingston in working with COA to promote these
initiatives.
Over 80% of the nation's cancer care patients are treated in
community cancer clinics close to home. COA has been working with
the Congress and the Administration to reform the Medicare Part B
payment system for cancer care.
COA is a non-profit organization representing community cancer
clinics, which provide quality, affordable, and accessible cancer
care for the 80% of Americans with the disease
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/050817/nyw098.html?.v=21
Chip: Privacy Scare ? -- Aug 2005
Implanted RFID Chips Carry Coded Medical Information
http://my.webmd.com/content/article/109/109216.htm
http://my.webmd.com/content/Article/109/109216.htm?pagenumber=2
http://my.webmd.com/content/Article/109/109216.htm?pagenumber=3
VeriChip receives Well-Tech Italian award--March 23,
2005
The Award, given annually by Italian-based Well-Tech, goes to the
invention that scores the highest in three categories, including eco-friendliness,
accessibility, and quality of life. A panel, including
leading Italian educators, government representatives and
business executives, selects the winner. Well-Tech is a
development team founded in 1999 by the architect Chiara
Cantono.
http://www.tmcnet.com/usubmit/2005/Mar/1127811.htm
"We are honored to receive this recognition
from such a prestigious Italian organization," said Scott R.
Silverman, Applied Digital's Chairman and CEO. "Since April,
we have been working on a clinical study in Italy utilizing the
VeriChip healthcare application at the Instituto
Nazionale Lazzaro Spallanzani Hospital in Rome
The Well-Tech award is given annually to an innovative technology
product, with particular attention to its environmental and
functional aspects and its potential to improve the quality of
life. Selection criteria include reduction in energy consumption,
use of materials and renewable energy sources, ease of use for
elderly persons, product safety, design
and ease of understanding of the product, appropriate
application of manufacturing and materials technology, as well as
the qualitative, functional, and aesthetic aspects.
Further information about Well-Tech is available at www.well-tech.it.
http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20050323005437&newsLang=en
Sensor to check vital signs -- March 9, 2005
In October, the Food and Drug Administration approved Applied's
VeriChip device, an implantable chip
that can be read by a remote sensor to check human vital signs
and diagnose other problems.
http://www.forbes.com/smallbusiness/feeds/ap/2005/03/08/ap1871176.html
Subdermal meds and illness ID ... drug-delivery systems
Mind
control ? Behavior modification ??
Drugs-on-a-chip Jan. 28, 2005
Sastry had earlier said this cheaper alternative
to DNA sequencing can be used to treat India-specific genetic
disorders such as hypertension (
Ed: high blood pressure ) and thalassaemia.
While DST has given a grant of Rs one crore for the project,
Sastry had said that the DNA chip,
being developed at the laboratory, will be planted
into the human body to treat ailments. The process
is not only aimed to reduce cost of drug production
and enhance level of automation, but also revolutionize medical
science.
NCL is not only institution attempting to develop a chip. The
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) is also working on a
chip, which when implanted into the human body with a cocktail of drugs,
can avert any medical emergencies.
On the other hand, a disposable lab-on-a-chip
(inch by inch with 2-3 millimetres thickness) developed by Indian
scientists at the US is also showing promise for conducting
various pathological tests at non-laboratory conditions.
Currently undergoing pre-clinical trials at the US for a couple
of infectious diseases and gynaecological disorders, Handylab,
the spinout company of the university of Michigan, is planning to
tailor-make the chip for detection of diseases at Indian
conditions.
http://www1.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1003957.cms
Coming : Drug-chips ??? ... "soma, soma, soma "........
May 20-2002
The device has been developed by Massachusetts-based
company MicroCHIPS and has been successfully
tested in a lab rat.
It has been in development for three years and inventor
John Santini is promising it will be ready for humans
within five years.
The fingernail-sized titanium chip is inserted beneath
the skin. It contains hundreds of tiny reservoirs, filled with
different drugs which are released as needed by software on
board.
http://www.ananova.com/business/story/sm_591643.html
Dr. John Santini -- MicroCHIPS
A PhD graduate of MIT,
Dr. Santini is one of the founding members of MicroCHIPS,
a developer of implantable microchip drug
delivery systems to be used in pain management, hormone
and steroid delivery, and some cancer and CNS disorder therapies. The company's
patented technology uses silicon microchips and wireless
communication to accurately dispense medicine to the body.
http://www.biospace.com/news_story.cfm?StoryID=8802119&full=1
SARS chip in Singapore --Oct. 6, 2003
Singapore
hopes to launch in January [2004] an electronic
chip that will give an almost instant diagnosis of
whether a person has Sars, dengue fever, flu or some other
respiratory illness.
Ren Ee Chee of the government-run Genome Institute of Singapore told the island republic's Sunday Times newspaper that the respiratory pathogens detection chip would undergo testing soon in conjunction with an unnamed US company.
Detection
probes on the chip, which is about the size of a 10p coin, will
analyse saliva or nasal mucus dropped on to it and deliver a
rapid diagnosis.
It is also hoping to turn Singapore into a
global biomedical hub as part of its strategy to
diversify an economy battered by the technology slump.
High-profile scientists including Ian Wilmut, who cloned Dolly
the sheep, have been lured to the tightly controlled state.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/sars/story/0,13036,1056738,00.html
BioMEMS
Micralyne, a developer and OEM and manufacturer of BioMEMS
and other MEMS components, will work with MicroCHIPS as
MicroCHIPS continues device development and proceeds towards
clinical trials.
"We believe that the technology that MicroCHIPS is
developing for implantable MEMS-based drug delivery has the
potential to be an important step forward for the effective
implementation of therapeutic regimens in the future",
commented Chris Lumb, President and CEO of Micralyne. "We
are excited to be involved in this work with MicroCHIPS, and
pleased to be working for the first time in drug delivery, a
relatively new area for BioMEMS applications
http://www.biospace.com/news_story.cfm?StoryID=9846620&full=1
Microchip
releases chemicals on demand
The researchers have demonstrated this for multiple
chemicals in separate reservoirs. In other words, they applied a
small voltage between a reservoir containing chemical A and a
cathode and observed that chemical's release, then at a later
time did the same for a reservoir containing chemical B with the
same results. They did this for several different reservoirs
filled with one or the other chemical over a period of several
hours. This shows "that multiple compounds can be released
independently from a single microchip device," the trio
write in Nature.
http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/nr/1999/microchip.html
Implantable chip's medical
dangers
http://worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=41000
Implantable Medical Devices -- Jan. 20, 2005
medical radio frequency band: MICS Medical Implant Communications
Service
....subcutaneous radios and imaging
Boston -- Cambridge Consultants has designed an intelligent
radio transceiver architecture that introduces a new
level of power economy and performance for in-body
medical diagnostic and therapeutic applications.
The design is intended for implementation on system-on-chip
(SoC) solutions and provides a
control and communications platform
suitable for implantable medical devices
- a market currently growing at double-digit rates. The
device will operate in the Medical Implant Communications Service
(MICS) frequencies - the medical band now emerging as a global
standard.
http://boston.dbusinessnews.com/shownews.php?newsid=8481&type_news=latest
There really is no need for a subdermal chip.
MedicAlert's Personal HealthKey
--- Jan. 5, 2004 www.medicalert.org
externally worn http://www.medicalert.org/home/HomeCatalog.aspx?Catalog=Standard
SanDisk(R) Corporation (NASDAQ:SNDK) today
announced that the MedicAlert(R) Personal HealthKey(TM) will use
USB flash drives from SanDisk. Powered by CapMed, the
MedicAlert Personal HealthKey is a consumer health
care application for the secure storage, maintenance and
communication of personal health information.
The MedicAlert Personal HealthKey
will enable secure storage and immediate access to emergency and
personal health information. Updates to the personal health
record can by provided by both the patient and those authorized
by the patient such as a physician, specialist or pharmacist.
First responders can easily access the critical emergency
information by simply inserting the SanDisk USB drive into any
computer equipped with a USB port. In the event that a patient is
unconscious, this MedicAlert Personal HealthKey is designed to
display select critical medical information as previously
authorized by the patient.
http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20050105005320&newsLang=en
http://www.sandisk.com.
www.sandisk.com/about/media.asp#photos.
Seamless Security with MedicAlert
http://home.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20050107005052&newsLang=en

Verichip adsx
Lifesavers in their Arms -- Jan. 5, 2005
..."The VeriChip System"
Now, patients can have a computer chip embedded
in an arm to provide an electronic link
to their medical information when they can't
communicate or don't have someone to speak for them.
Diabetics may be among the first New Jerseyans offered the choice
of having subcutaneous chips implanted to give
health-care workers access to their medical records.
VeriChip, developed by a retired New Jersey surgeon, was
recently approved by the federal Food and Drug Administration.
The implant is strictly voluntary and requires physician
authorization.
http://www.northjersey.com/page.php?qstr=eXJpcnk3ZjczN2Y3dnFlZUVFeXk2MTAmZmdiZWw3Zjd2cWVlRUV5eTY2MzM0OTkmeXJpcnk3ZjcxN2
Y3dnFlZUVFeXk1
VeriChip : bad for your health...physically and spiritually
http://www.michnews.com/artman/publish/article_5504.shtml
http://www.michnews.com/artman/publish/printer_5504.shtml
FDA approves VeriChip for medical applications --Oct. 13, 2004
The 134.2-KHz RFID chips could save lives and
possibly limit injuries from errors in medical treatments,
according to VeriChip Corp
http://informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=49901698
Medical veriChip-- Oct. 14, 2004
If removed, the chip becomes inactive. (Ed. note: by no longer being scanned
? or inherently ??)
Endowed with 128 characters of read-only memory,
the chip has an electromagnetic cell for transmitting data and a
tuning capacitor that responds when it comes within 12 inches of
an authorized scanner.
Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy
Information Center in Washington, said precautions need to be
adopted to keep some people from being forced to get the
implants.
"When you put an identification tag under a person's skin, you
make it impossible for a person to remove the tag, much
like branding cattle," Rotenberg said. "The
most likely applications would involve prisoners and parolees and
perhaps one day persons in the United States who are not
citizens. I think there needs to be some legislation put in place
to prevent abuse."
Nonmedical uses in the United States do not require
federal approval
Economic Future
for the Chip
But the VeriChip maker hopes the FDA's action will expand
the chip's acceptance as an identification tool for the military,
security agencies and perhaps even to verify the identify
of credit card holders and users of automated teller machines.
The technology is still in its infancy. The company is currently
working to double the chips' memory, develop
read-write capabilities to allow updating
of stored information and expand the range of its
scanners from several inches to several feet.
Future models might contain sensors to monitor blood
sugar, body temperature or other vital signs.
Despite privacy concerns, John Petersen, a security
analyst for the Arlington Institute in Arlington, Va., said the
realities of a post 9/11 world probably make the
"chipping" of human society inevitable.
The technology will insidiously insert itself into the system,
first in smaller ways, then in larger ways. Then it will become a
common and easy way to establish identity.
"There's not much difference between carrying
information around under your skin than carrying it around on a
smart card in your wallet."
Ed note: oh, but there
is all the difference in the world.... and in eternity too. Rev. 14:9-11
http://www.rockymounttelegram.com/featr/content/shared/health/stories/FDA_CHIP_1014_COX.html;COXnetJSessionID=B
9ovAfwfYuMjmtPgTGyFJiwJx1iuFmPdbJW2gcClAYLtixImIors!-1236286748?urac=n&urvf=10987379035370.2446876542310885
Med-Info Chip --August 23,
2004
http://www.medinfochip.com/
In the meantime, privately-held Med-InfoChip, based
in Boynton Beach, Fla., recently began offering a USB
drive that stores personal medical histories. The drives are not
designed to replace the files in a doctor's office, but are
simply a way for patients to centralize and digitize their
records from their personal computer.
Dr. Carl Franzblau, associate dean of Graduate
Medical Sciences and chairman of the department of biochemistry
at Boston University, developed the Med-InfoChip after becoming
frustrated with having to fill out forms every time he went to a
new doctor.
The chip is easy to use, and it plugs into the USB port on most
desktops or laptop PCs manufactured in the last five years. Once
inserted, a pop-up window guides you through the press of filling
in information ranging from name and date of birth to known
allergies and past medical conditions. It can even store digital
images, such as X rays, electrocardiograms, photos or birth
certificates.
http://www.forbes.com/personaltech/2004/08/23/cx_mh_0823tentech.html?partner=yahoo&referrer=
Accessed by Phone or Internet
The registry, which can be accessed via
telephone or the Internet, contains an accurate,
subscriber-supplied account of medical conditions, pacemakers or
other implants, medications, prior surgeries, allergies and
other information that can facilitate quick and
appropriate emergency treatment. Persons in emergency
medical situations could be unconscious or otherwise unable to
give complete and accurate medical information. In the emergency
room, time may be wasted locating the patient's physician, who
might have to go to the office to get the patient's medical
chart.
http://www.svcn.com/archives/sunnyvalesun/20020807/sv-seniors2.shtml
VeriChip "Technology that Cares" -- July 31, 2004
the FDA has approved a final review process to
determine whether or not hospitals
can implant RFID chips in people in order to track patients
and to grant hospital workers access to confidential records.
http://www.thefeature.com/user/frauenfelder/journalentry?id=887&ref=-1
VeriChip to be used in hospitals soon
http://news.com.com/Under-the-skin+ID+chips+move+toward+U.S.+hospital+use/2100-7337_3-5285815.html?tag=alert
VeriChip
readied for US Marketing
-- July 28, 2004
VeriChip, the company that makes radio
frequency identification--RFID--tags for humans, has moved one
step closer to getting its technology into hospitals.
The Federal Drug Administration issued a ruling Tuesday that
essentially begins a final review process that will determine
whether hospitals can use RFID systems
from the Palm Beach, Fla.-based company
to identify patients and/or permit
relevant hospital staff to access medical records,
said Angela Fulcher, vice president of marketing and sales at
VeriChip.
The approval process does not center on health risks or
implications, Fulcher said. VeriChip can already sell implantable
RFID chips in the United States for standard security
applications and the financial market. The company's basic
technology has also been used in animals for years.
Instead, the FDA may mostly examine privacy issues, Fulcher
indicated. In other words, the agency will look at whether the
technology will lead to situations where confidential information
can get improperly disclosed.
The Italian
Ministry of Health kicked off a six-month trial of the chips
for hospitals in April.
http://news.com.com/Under-the-skin+ID+chips+move+toward+U.S.+hospitals/2100-7337_3-5285815.html?tag=nefd.hed
Could be implanted in both patients and staff -- July 28, 2004
http://hardware.silicon.com/storage/0,39024649,39122659,00.htm
FDA set to
approve VeriChip for US health care info applications -- July 27,
2004
This assures the Company that the FDA will
determine, in a relatively short period of time, whether
we can introduce the VeriChip to the health care market in the
United States.
VeriChip is the world's first implantable
microchip designed for human use. Digital Angel Corporation filed
the 510(K) application with the FDA in October 2003 on behalf of
VeriChip seeking the agency's approval to market VeriChip's healthcare
information applications in the United States.
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/040727/275212_1.html
Siemans to
pilot rfid bracelets --July 28, 2004
Siemens Business Services announced this week a pilot project
with Jacobi Medical Center in New York to
track patients by incorporating RFID chips into the
ubiquitous plastic band strapped onto patients' wrists during
hospital admissions.
Encoded on the band is patient name, date of birth, gender, and a medical record number, linked to the hospital network that connects the patient record to labs, billing, and the pharmacy.
Doctors and nurses will be
equipped with a tablet-style PC with an RFID reader and a
Wi-Fi connection to access the network.
The RFID project includes software and rolls of wristbands
already embedded with RFID chips. When admitted, the basic
patient information is put into the application and run through a
printer encoder that impresses the patient data onto the RFID
chip.
http://www.infoworld.com/article/04/07/23/HNrfidimplants_1.html
Mexicans receive VeriChip
for Solusat medical program and for VeriGuard security - July 2004

Jose Luis Magana / AP file ...msnbc
.....note: LEFT arm
Carlos Altamirano is scanned to show the 16-digit
code of his implanted VeriChip chip in this
file photo from July 2003 in Mexico City.
In addition to the chips sold to the Mexican government, more
than 1,000 Mexicans have implanted them
for medical reasons,
Aceves said. Hospital officials can use a scanning device to
download a chip's serial number, which they then use to access a
patient's blood type, name and other information on a computer.
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/5439055
1,000 people take the
VeriChip--- July 16, 2004
About 1,000 people in Mexico have had the
VeriChip implanted, said Antonio Aceves, president of Solusat,
the chip's Mexican distributor. He said most customers have had medical
problems.
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2004/07/16/mexico_hopes_chip_signals_gain_vs_crime/
VeriMed Healthcare Network (certifying Yahoo's health portal )
VeriMed medical information networking system using the
VeriChip
(database medical
history and current stats)
http://www.verimedhealthcare.com/about.html
Biomedical
Consulting, Life Science, Financial service all
in one VeriChip
The VeriMed Healthcare Network provides
biomedical consulting to life sciences companies
and financial services firms.
http://www.verimedhealthcare.com/services.html
VeriMed International, Corral Springs, Florida, Doug Mee
http://www.obgyn.net/cfm/suppliers/suppliers.cfm?ID=910&SearchType=manufacturerdetail
VeriChip application: VeriMed --Oct. 29, 2003
The company said the timetable for FDA approval,
though not defined, could take several months or more to run its
course. If the FDA approves the device, Applied
Digital plans to market VeriChip as VeriMed for healthcare
applications, such as in-hospital patient identification,
vaccination histories and emergency access to patient-supplied
health information.
http://biz.yahoo.com/djus/031029/1018001115_2.html
also on this webpage:
THERMO LIFE ... a
self-generating implanted battery (bio-sensor) to monitor one's
vital statistics in real-time:
also
"Wander-Alert";
and Implanted
medicine-dispensing microchips, MEMS, and Health Issues
Medication microchips ..... biological drugs
The chip for monitoring animal physiology is called
"bio-thermo" ; not to be confused with
"Thermo-Life" for humans.

coming soon
Isaiah 27 : 1
"leviathan the piercing serpent"
VeriChip ... different sizes, different applications
VeriMed --- The application
of VeriChip to the Medical field
Telemedicine
http://telemedicine.weblogsinc.com/entry/2375938736293572/
More VeriMed links at www.cybertime.net/~ajgood/medchip2.html
Salvation www.cybertime.net/~ajgood/sal.htm
Bible www.blueletterbible.org