Literature DB >> 22048779

Enhanced UHF RFID tags for drug tracing.

Luca Catarinucci1, Riccardo Colella, Mario De Blasi, Luigi Patrono, Luciano Tarricone.   

Abstract

Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology is playing a crucial role for item-level tracing systems in healthcare scenarios. The pharmaceutical supply chain is a fascinating application context, where RFID can guarantee transparency in the drug flow, supporting both suppliers and consumers against the growing counterfeiting problem. In such a context, the choice of the most adequate RFID tag, in terms of shape, frequency, size and reading range, is crucial. The potential presence of items containing materials hostile to the electromagnetic propagation exasperates the problem. In addition, the peculiarities of the different RFID-based checkpoints make even more stringent the requirements for the tag. In this work, the performance of several commercial UHF RFID tags in each step of the pharmaceutical supply chain has been evaluated, confirming the expected criticality. On such basis, a guideline for the electromagnetic design of new high-performance tags capable to overcome such criticalities has been defined. Finally, driven by such guidelines, a new enhanced tag has been designed, realized and tested. Due to patent pending issues, the antenna shape is not shown. Nevertheless, the optimal obtained results do not lose their validity. Indeed, on the one hand they demonstrate that high performance item level tracing systems can actually be implemented also in critical operating conditions. On the other hand, they encourage the tag designer to follow the identified guidelines so to realize enhanced UHF tags.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22048779     DOI: 10.1007/s10916-011-9790-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Syst        ISSN: 0148-5598            Impact factor:   4.460


  1 in total

1.  A comprehensive RFID solution to enhance inpatient medication safety.

Authors:  Pedro Peris-Lopez; Agustin Orfila; Aikaterini Mitrokotsa; Jan C A van der Lubbe
Journal:  Int J Med Inform       Date:  2010-11-26       Impact factor: 4.046

  1 in total
  2 in total

Review 1.  RFID-enabled healthcare applications, issues and benefits: an archival analysis (1997-2011).

Authors:  Samuel Fosso Wamba
Journal:  J Med Syst       Date:  2011-11-23       Impact factor: 4.460

2.  Low-energy Bluetooth for detecting real-world penetrance of bystander naloxone kits: a pilot study.

Authors:  Jeffrey T Lai; Brittany P Chapman; Katherine L Boyle; Edward W Boyer; Peter R Chai
Journal:  Proc Annu Hawaii Int Conf Syst Sci       Date:  2018-01-03
  2 in total

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