Use of Implanted
Patient-Data Chips Stirs
Debate on Medicine vs.
Privacy
April 24 2006
By Rob Stein
Washington Post Staff
Writer
Wednesday, March 15,
2006; A01

When Daniel Hickey's
doctor suggested he have
a microchip implanted
under his skin to
provide instant access
to his computerized
medical record, the
77-year-old retired
naval officer
immediately agreed.
"If you're unconscious
and end up in the
emergency room, they
won't know anything
about you," Hickey said.
"With this, they can
find out everything they
need to know right away
and treat you better."
Roxanne Fischer felt the
same way, and she had
one of the devices
injected into the arm of
her 83-year-old mother,
who has Alzheimer's
disease. "I may not be
available if she ends up
in the emergency room.
This gives me tremendous
peace of mind," Fischer
said.
The two D.C. residents
are among just a handful
of Americans who have
had the tiny electronic
VeriChip inserted since
the government approved
it two years ago. But
the chip is being
aggressively marketed by
its manufacturer, which
is targeting Washington
to be the first
metropolitan area with
multiple hospitals
equipped to read the
device, a persuasive
factor for Fischer and
Hickey. Within weeks,
the first hospital is
expected to announce
plans to start routinely
scanning all
emergency-room patients.
Some doctors are
welcoming the technology
as an exciting
innovation that will
speed care and prevent
errors. But the concept
alarms privacy
advocates. They worry
the devices could make
it easier for
unauthorized snoops to
invade medical records.
They also fear that the
technology marks a
dangerous step toward an
Orwellian future in
which people will be
monitored using the
chips or will be
required to have them
inserted for
surveillance.
"It may seem innocuous,
but the government and
private corporations
could use these devices
to track people's
movements," said Liz
McIntyre, who co-wrote a
book warning about the
dangers of such
radio-frequency
identification (RFID)
technology. "It may
sound paranoid, but this
is bound to be abused."
The devices, originally
developed to track
livestock, have been
implanted in more than 6
million cats and dogs to
trace lost or stolen
pets. For medical
identification, the
device -- a microchip
and a copper antenna
encased in a glass
capsule about the size
of a grain of rice -- is
inserted, usually under
the skin on the back of
a patient's arm, in a
quick, relatively
painless procedure. Each
unit, which lasts
indefinitely, transmits
a unique 16-digit number
that can be read by a
handheld scanner. The
number is used to locate
a medical record
previously stored on a
secure Web site.
Using the system,
emergency-room doctors
could scan unconscious
or incoherent patients
to quickly check their
blood type and find out
if they are taking any
medications or have
allergies or other
medical conditions.
Nurses could identify
family members and
determine whether
patients are organ
donors or have living
wills. Surgeons could
scan patients on the
operating table to make
sure they are working on
the right person.
VeriChip Corp. of Delray
Beach, Fla., is selling
kits containing scanners
and the large-bore
needles used to insert
the chips, and
recommending that
doctors charge patients
about $200 each. The
company has sold about
2,500 chips worldwide
for use in people, and
several hundred have
been implanted,
including about 100 in
the United States,
spokesman John Procter
said. So far in the
United States, however,
most of the chips have
been implanted into the
company's own employees.
Suspecting that many
people are hesitant to
get the chips until more
emergency rooms are able
to scan them, the
company has begun giving
scanners to hospitals
for free, Procter said.
Hackensack University
Medical Center in New
Jersey became the first
hospital to begin
routinely scanning
emergency-room patients
last summer, and about a
dozen people in that
area have now been
"chipped," Procter said.
About 80 other hospitals
nationwide have agreed
to follow, a number the
company hopes will reach
200 by the end of the
year.
Many of the hospitals,
including three in the
Washington area, have
received scanners and
started training their
emergency-room staffs in
their use, he said.
Procter declined to name
the hospitals until they
formally announce their
plans.
One area doctor has
begun implanting the
chips.
"I thought this would be
important to offer to
many of my patients,"
said Jonathan Musher, a
Chevy Chase physician
the company hired to
help recruit hospitals
and assemble a
nationwide network of
doctors offering the
chips. "With this, a
quick scan back and
forth across their arm
could make all the
difference in critical
life-and-death
situations where seconds
count."
Privacy advocates,
however, worry that the
devices are prone to
invasion because they
can be surreptitiously
scanned from a distance.
"As far as I can tell,
there are no security
measures taken with the
chip. It's not a secure
chip," said Richard M.
Smith, an Internet and
privacy consultant in
Boston. "There's nothing
to stop someone from
accessing the code and
cloning the chip" to
access records, he said.
Even though the medical
information is stored in
a protected computer,
anyone with a password
could obtain the
information.
"Once the identification
number is obtained, who
gets to decide who gets
access to the Web site?"
asked Janlori Goldman of
the Columbia College of
Physicians and Surgeons,
who heads the Health
Privacy Project, a
Washington-based
research and advocacy
group. "Can law
enforcement have access?
Can public health
workers have access? Can
employers have access?
Given the recent efforts
by law enforcement and
data monitoring by the
government, this is
exactly the kind of
technology that would be
attractive."
And, like any
computerized database,
it could be vulnerable
to hackers.
"We know from many other
examples that there are
lots of security
breaches that occur
across the country,"
said Marc Rotenberg of
the Electronic Privacy
Information Center,
another Washington
research and advocacy
group. "There's no
reason to think this
will be any different."
Company officials and
other proponents say the
device and accompanying
system are carefully
designed to protect
recipients.
"The privacy of
VeriChip's customers is
our highest priority,"
said Scott Silverman,
the chief executive of
Applied Digital
Solutions Inc., the
firm's parent company.
"Both the amount of
information and who has
authorized access to
that information is
determined by the user."
Others worry about how
the devices will be used
in the future.
"This device is intended
to uniquely number
humans. It's embedded in
the flesh, and it's
permanent. It can be
read without someone's
knowledge and consent,"
McIntyre said. "Scanners
can be installed in
doorways or ceiling
tiles to track people's
comings and goings
without people even
being aware it's
happening. That's not so
far off."
Company officials scoff
at those fears.
"Some people say, 'Oh,
my God. It's "1984."
It's George Orwell,' "
Musher said. "But this
is a passive device.
It's not controlling or
tracking anyone."
The company is, however,
marketing the devices to
limit entry to secure
facilities. The Mexican
government is using the
implants like key cards
for high-security
offices. And
CityWatcher.com of
Cincinnati, which stores
surveillance-camera
footage from around the
country, recently
started using the chips
to control access to
tapes. Bars in Spain and
Amsterdam, meanwhile,
are offering the chips
to patrons who want
quick entry and to run
electronic tabs.
"We're just waiting for
the first case where a
convicted sex offender
on condition of release
is required to have a
VeriChip implanted,"
Rotenberg said.
For their part, Fischer
and Hickey hope the
devices catch on.
"This is the wave of the
future," Fischer said.
"I'm looking at this
from the positive side.
To obtain optimal care,
I think we have to take
advantage of the best
technology available."
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