Patients told about
VeriChip concern
September 19 2007
Patients told about
VeriChip concern
By BOB GROVES
The Record
Wednesday, September 19,
2007
Thirty North Jersey
patients who have
microchips containing
their medical records
imbedded in their skin
have been told to
consult their doctors
after recent studies
linked similar devices
to cancer in some
animals, spokesmen for
the research project
said Tuesday.
The patients, all
affiliated with doctors
at Hackensack University
Medical Center,
volunteered to test the
emergency room efficacy
of the VeriChip in a
project sponsored by
Horizon Blue Cross Blue
Shield of New Jersey.
The chip, the size of a
grain of rice, can be
scanned at the hospital
to produce a patient's
medical history, if he
or she is unable to
communicate, and help
physicians determine
what treatments to use
or avoid. About 2,000
people worldwide have
the chip.
Although federal
officials say the
VeriChip appears to be
safe for human use,
Horizon has informed
patients using it to
talk to their doctors or
the manufacturer if they
have questions, said Tom
Rubino, spokesman for
the state's largest
health care insurer.
"We'll just give people
the information and let
them make up their own
minds," Rubino said.
Several animal studies
linked use of similar
chips to malignant
tumors in rats and mice,
according to recent news
reports.
A spokeswoman for the
Food and Drug
Administration, however,
said the VeriChip
appears to be safe for
humans.
"Although we continue to
monitor articles on the
VeriChip, at this time
there appears to be no
credible cause for
concern," Karen Riley
said in an e-mail
Tuesday. "Many divisions
within FDA continue to
contribute to the
assurance of device
safety."
Federal veterinary
officials are "not aware
of reports concerning
microchips in animals,
despite many pets and
livestock that are
tagged each year," she
said.
Until it hears from the
FDA that the VeriChip is
unsafe for patients,
Hackensack will
participate in the
project, said Dr. Joseph
Feldman, chairman of the
emergency trauma
department.
Rubino said Hackensack
is the only hospital in
New Jersey equipped to
use the device, which
was developed in part by
a retired Montvale
surgeon.
The project, begun in
2006, will continue for
several years. VeriChip
is particularly useful
for chronically ill
patients, such as
diabetics, he said.
"You don't want somebody
going into the E.R. not
able to communicate, and
get medications that
cause them to die,"
Rubino said.
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