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Print 10 comment(s) - last by slowsociopath.. on Dec 11 at 6:54 PM

Radio nodes being used to replace RFID for monitoring blood supply and equipment

The supply of blood in a hospital is a very important thing to monitor. For blood to last, it has to be kept is an environment that is closely monitored.

If the blood gets too warm it can’t be reused if it is not needed during the surgery or procedure. The bags that hold blood supplies are getting smarter and will be able to monitor themselves and even help prevent the wrong blood type form being administered to a patient. Research being conducted at the Fraunhofer Institute in Germany is using radio nodes attached to the bags blood are stored in to make monitoring easier.

These radio nodes will be able to continuously monitor the temperature of the blood to ensure it is not getting too warm to be used. The nodes can also interact with other nodes on the patient's bracelet, sound an alarm, and flash a red light if the wrong blood type is presented for patient use.

The intelligent radio nodes were developed by researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated Circuits IIS and the Fraunhofer Working Group SCS in collaboration with T-Systems, Vierling, delta T and the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg. The German ministry of economics and technology is funding the project.

“In contrast to tags that use RFID – radio frequency identification – we do not expect intelligent radio nodes to interfere with hospital medical devices,” explains Jürgen Hupp, head of communication networks department at IIS. “While the transmit power required for RFID tag reading can be as much as two watts, radio nodes only transmit in the milliwatt range.”

Another big improvement of these radio nodes compared to more traditional RFID chips is that the RFID tag can only be read when activated by the RFID reader whereas radio nodes broadcast continually. The continual transmitting of the radio nodes also makes them a good option for tracking important equipment within a hospital. Equipment routinely gets moved between departments at the hospital and finding the equipment can be a challenge. Equipment with the radio nodes attached could send constant location updates to a central location.



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RFID readers
By Drag0nFire on 12/7/2009 10:52:37 AM , Rating: 2
I had no idea RFID readers put out 2 Watts of power to read tags. I'm suddenly less excited about putting my hand near the RFID readers I use every day at work and on the subway. Yuck.




RE: RFID readers
By Devo2007 on 12/7/2009 11:02:31 AM , Rating: 3
...and how many watts do you think your cell phone is generating? (whether near your head, or in your pocket?)


RE: RFID readers
By ratbert1 on 12/7/2009 11:46:17 AM , Rating: 2
my CDMA phone is less than 1 watt.


RE: RFID readers
By slowsociopath on 12/11/2009 6:54:12 PM , Rating: 2
its 600 milliwatts transmitting unles you have an old analog device which could transmit up to 1500mw


RE: RFID readers
By darkhawk1980 on 12/7/2009 11:42:51 AM , Rating: 5
I continually work with equipment that radiates hundreds of watts of power all day long. It amazes me that people are afraid of a few watts of 'power'. Afraid that 2 watts is going to melt your hand off? Or mutate it so you only have 3 fingers instead of 5? Give me a break, and get some common sense.


RE: RFID readers
By nafhan on 12/7/2009 11:48:47 AM , Rating: 2
Also, when you are in the supermarket and you see someone about to use a barcode scanner DROP TO THE FLOOR. There's a laser in the scanner! You can stand up again after verifying with the cashier that they are done using THE LASER.


RE: RFID readers
By Omega215D on 12/7/2009 11:50:05 AM , Rating: 2
I don't know about where you are but subways in NYC (stations, trains etc) put out more than 2 watts of power. I'm pretty sure those Metrocard machines radiate a bit of power. I end up being more concerned with leaking pipes and mold all over the station.


RE: RFID readers
By MozeeToby on 12/7/2009 12:55:59 PM , Rating: 2
There is a big difference between ionizing and non-ionizing radiation. Ionizing radiation causes cell and DNA damage that leads to cancer and radiation sickness. Non-ionizing radiation will start a fire before it does anything else.

To put it more bluntly... I heard there's a big ball of fire in the sky that causes 700 watts of radiation per square meter on the surface of our planet.


RE: RFID readers
By AssBall on 12/7/2009 4:54:06 PM , Rating: 2
And some of that energy is ionizing!


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