1.05.2006

Patient Smart Cards

High-tech identification cards could soon make hospital procedures much safer affairs if a Mt. Sinai Medical Center project goes as planned.

The New York City hospital is working with eight affiliated hospitals in the region to issue smart cards to 100,000 patients starting next spring. Doctors at any of the participating hospitals will be able to swipe patients' cards for an instant medical history, including current medications, conditions, allergies and lab results.
smartcard

The technology, developed in partnership with Siemens Communications, should help reduce medical errors and the time patients spend waiting for treatment, the hospital said this week. For instance, doctors could swipe the card before prescribing medicine to avoid harmful drug interactions.

"In terms of emergency care it can really improve the patient outcome," said Paul Contino, the hospital's head of technology.

Hospitals around the country are experimenting with smart card technology, but Mt. Sinai will be the first to use them on such a large scale, Contino said. The cards, which cost about $7 a piece, will hold more data than other patient smart cards and may eventually work at 45 affiliated health care facilities in the region, he said. The ultimate goal is to create a national standard, linking patient records at hospitals across the country, he added.

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