FROM THE FOUNDATION

The Social Life of Health Information

A new Pew Internet/CHCF national survey finds the Internet has joined doctors and family members as one of the top three ways people search for answer to their health care questions.

Evaluating One-e-App

CHCF and The California Endowment funded the development of One-e-App, a Web-based program that enables users to apply for multiple public insurance programs at once. Read a business case assessment by The Lewin Group.

Privacy, Security, and the Stimulus Bill

The recently enacted economic stimulus legislation includes a number of improvements to federal health privacy law. This brief looks at issues of privacy and security in the wake of ARRA.

Consumer Information

Tuesday, September 13, 2005

Study: Health Care Organizations Prefer Active RFID to Passive RFID

A recent study found that health care organizations prefer active radio frequency identification technology to passive RFID technology, which often is used in retail warehouses, Healthcare IT News reports.

The "Healthcare Without Bonds: Trends in RFID" study, conducted by Spyglass Consulting Group, found that passive RFID technology accounts for less than 23% of all RFID applications implemented by health care organizations. In passive RFID systems, a reader must be waved next to a transponder with an RFID chip, while in active RFID systems, signals constantly are transmitted between transponders and transceivers, Healthcare IT News reports.

"Passive RFID is not ready for primetime," said Gregg Malkary, founder and managing director of Spyglass Consulting. Spyglass, which interviewed more than 100 health care organization professionals for the study, found that lack of industrywide standards, less-expensive strategies such as barcoding, and a lack of government or regulatory mandates deter the implementation of passive RFID technology, Healthcare IT News reports.



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