Tag Archives: rfid

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Healthcare Inventory

RFID drives $68 Million Expected Savings at Hospital

Category:eChain News,RF Healthcare,RF ROI Tags : 

BJC HealthCare has achieved incredible results during the first year pilot of BJC SuppyPlus End-to-End Supply Chain Visibility (E2ESCV) project, partnering with Cook Medical and Cardinal Health,

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eChainRF Automated Asset Management

eChainRF Automated Asset Management

Category:eChainRF-Asset Mgt Tags : 

eChain Technology is pleased to present our comprehensive asset management solution,  the eChainRF Advanced Asset Management solution (eChainRF AAM).  eChainRF AAM is an integrated hardware/software solution that incorporates long-range RFID technology with an advanced Asset Management platform to automatically track assets and inventory in real time, triggering reorders, expired stock notifications and alerts as needed.  eChainRF AAM allows multiple groups to effectively manage and track assets, asset interactions, and asset workflows from multiple locations across the planet.

The eChainRF AAM solution is a cloud-based asset management application, automated by RFID technology installed at the client’s location.  Asset location and movement data is captured by the RFID infrastructure and communicated to the external cloud-based application servers and storage via an Internet connection.  Local users interface with and retrieve information from the cloud-based application using standard PC computers via a secure Internet URL.

Our system supports role-based access with granular user and group item level permissions. It has the flexibility for multiple, customized classifications and groups of assets such as fixed assets, computers, documents, equipment, people, etc.

About eChainRF AAM

Automated Item Management

Automated Item Management

The eChainRF AAM system is a modern asset management solution that utilizes RFID technologies to provide and automate total item visibility and control.  Our open framework and template-based approach allows rapid implementation and customization to meet many organizations’ asset tracking and management needs.

The eChainRF AAM system architecture allows for superior scalability, allowing the solution to extend asset tracking to multiple existing locations and adapt to add/incorporate future locations.  The system is hosted in a secure, managed, cloud-based site.

eChainRF Mobile

eChainRF Mobile

eChainRF AAM is a true solution for your asset management needs, built onto high-performance cloud-based servers and designed from the beginning to work with massive streaming data generated by RFID tag reads.

eChainRF was created to be infinitely flexible and rapidly implemented, supporting multiple business and asset management scenarios, with the ability to add/customize fields and to track assets based on those fields, and in multiple languages. eChainRF AAM captures, reports and archives the full asset history of events such as item location, transfers, custodial stewardship changes, audit events, and final disposition.

This solution has the added capability of configuring alert conditions and automatically generating notifications when these alert conditions have been met.  Examples of common alerts configured for previous customers include assets moving into restricted areas, monitors to inform administrators of expired and expiring assets, and notification alerts related to required maintenance schedules.

eChain BYOD iPhone

eChain BYOD iPhone

We also understand the value of mobile tracking, and have integrated executive mobile devices for RFID and Barcode scanning integrated into our solution.  We support Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) and have an integrated asset scanning application that works on smart devices using the camera and GPS with barcode and location.

Our solution supports multiple inventory and asset-related activities (Procurement, Receiving, Work-in-Process, Service/Maintenance, Damaged Goods Management, Quality Hold, Repository Storage, Leasing, and Loaning.

Our Role-based security allows access and visibility to specific roles (i.e., Service/Maintenance, or Locations (Stock Room A,).

Solution – Application

eChainRF Reports Dashboard

eChainRF Reports Dashboard

eChainRF AAM provides advanced asset management for real-time asset visibility utilizing RFID technologies for automated transactions and interactions.  eChainRF AAM captures, reports and archives the full asset history of events such as item location, transfers, custodial stewardship changes, audit events, and final disposition.

eChainRF AAM is traditionally an integrated hardware/software solution that incorporates RFID technology with an Asset Management platform that automatically tracks assets and reorders inventory as needed from multiple warehouses or stock locations.  eChainRF AAM currently interfaces with Impinj Passive UHF reader infrastructures, and provides support for handheld RFID readers

eChainRF AAM employs a centralized, cloud-based architecture, connected to RFID and barcode infrastructures via the web.  Transactions can be automated with RFID/Barcode, or manually input.  It utilizes a relational database, which allows isolation of asset data to a group of users via such methods as multiple databases, separate tables, flags in the records, or other, as required by client.

eChainRF Drill-down Charts

eChainRF Drill-down Charts Display Assets by Location

Features include:

  • Responsive UI – The screen adjusts to fit your device. Works with desktop, notebook, mobile.
  • International – Cloud-based solution is accessible anywhere in the world via internet connection. Multiple language support for use in native language.
  • RFID Integration – Seamlessly integrated to eChain RFID Portal for automated transaction updates.
  • Barcode Support – This is a full featured inventory and asset management solution.  Out of the box support for barcode scans, and manual entry in addition to RFID integration.
  • Mobile Solutions – Integrated executive RFID scanner and BYOD Mobile phone scanning app
  • Location History – Automated transfer transactions generated and archived on item movements
  • Multiple Locations – Know where items are at all times, whether inside a stock room, or in different countries.
  • Sales Support – Quotes/ Sales/ Returns/ Invoice Processing/ Customer Mgt (in different currency)
  • Procurement – Manage Suppliers/ Purchasing/ Transfers/ Shipping/ Freight /Handling charges
  • Role-based access– Multiple User Roles, control access by function (sales) or location (UAE Distribution Center)
  • Rich Reporting – Multiple Built-In Metrics Reports with visual drill-down, real-time profit/loss, sales reports, item location reports, item history reports, etc.
  • Make to Order – Supports linking and consuming materials and equipment used to manufacture “Make to Order” sales.  Track net cost per order, and link specific equipment, materials or employees to sales order.

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eChain Technology Advanced Solutions that Automate Global Commerce

Automated Asset Management with Extreme RFID

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eChain RFID Portal: RFID CUSTOMER GATEWAY TO THE FUTURE OF INTEGRATED COMMERCE

Visit at http://echainrfid.com

eChain Technology Advanced Solutions that Automate Global Commerce

eChain Technology Advanced Solutions that Automate Global Commerce

No more lost sales due to misplaced items. Stock automatically reordered as soon as it leaves the stock room. Receiving is automatic as items are unloaded from the truck.  WIP is dynamically tracked.  Financial systems continuously updated and accurate. Real-time consumption triggers optimal reorders.  Workflow and employee tracking.

For Healthcare, real-time hospital inventory visibility in every stock room in the entire hospital system. Automated safeguards to ensure patients are not exposed to expired or non-sterile items. Par order levels continuously optimized.  System identifies older items for FIFO picking ensures expired stock is dramatically reduced.

Complete asset management solutions using long-range Passive UHF RFID technology in a seamless and integrated cloud-based, mobile and responsive format. We are an expert RFID, Asset Management, Supply Chain and Advanced Analytics System Integrator who configures and implements comprehensive solutions that meet your goals and objectives. The eChain RFID Portal accelerates adoption of total item visibility, control, tracability and touch-free transactions.


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Advanced Manufacturing with RFID

Finding RFID value in manufacturing

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RFID Max ROI

RFID Max ROI

RFID delivers tremendous value and control for product genealogy and lifetime traceability, material management and replenishment, especially in just-in-time (JIT) and kanban environments, asset tracking, warehousing and yard management processes. Below  are some excellent examples and scenarios that show how RFID brings benefits to common industrial environments.  Thanks to ReliablePlant and Intermec Technologies for authoring this invaluable document.  Lewis Kilby, eChain Technology.

Radio frequency identification (RFID) has always been considered a forward-looking technol­ogy. Today, most of the focus is on how emerging Electronic Product Code (EPC) RFID tags can help connect trading partners and align supply chains. However, to see the immediate benefits RFID can provide, manufacturers should look inward at their operation’s own business process­es, not forward into just supply chain customer’s compliance requirements. RFID provides a quick return on investment in many factory and warehousing industrial operations, without as much coordination and complexity as supply chain implemen­tations require. Manufacturers that consistently experience bottlenecks, desire traceability, or who want to reduce the labor required for costs associated with materials management and replen­ishment, are excellent candidates to save money with RFID.

A major reason manufacturers can gain a rapid return on RFID investment is because industrial applications use currently available, highly proven technology. Many of the concerns and per­ceived implementation challenges for supply chain RFID applications center on the uncertainty of tag standards. Numerous industrial applications, including work-in-process tracking, parts identification, replenishment, asset and fleet management, are closed loop and do not require RFID technology to be coordinated with customers, suppliers, logistics providers or other outside organizations. This gives users a much wider range of opportunity for RFID adoption. This also provides users with the choice of many proven products that are backed by mature international standards.

Manufacturers, mechanics and service technicians know that no single tool is right for every job. RFID needs to be viewed in the same way. The RFID tag is only one component of a total system that may combine bar codes, mobile computers, wireless LANs, material handling systems and industrial controls to manage materials and assets more effectively. A “tag first” approach – i.e. looking at tag capabilities and trying to force-fit them into operations – is not advisable. Instead, begin an RFID solution design from a business process perspective, identify­ing points in the process where data is classified, collected, communicated and acted upon. Companies need to look beyond the tag to see the value of RFID. This white paper will describe how companies have used internal RFID systems to reduce costs and improve efficiency, and explain how the lessons learned can be applied to a variety of industrial operations.

RFID in Manufacturing and Inventory Management

RFID in Manufacturing and Inventory Management

Where Is RFID Providing Value Today?

RFID technology was originally developed in the 1940s and has been used commercially for more than 30 years. In industrial environments, RFID is commonly used to automatically route materials, identify containers and track equipment. Generally, RFID provides the highest value in situations when traceability through a process or item life cycle is required, where labor costs or data errors related to identification and handling are high, when there are time or labor constraints related to item identification, handling or replenishment, and any time business processes or software applications need more information about an object than bar codes or other forms of automated data capture technology provide.

Specifically, RFID delivers tremendous value and control for product genealogy and lifetime traceability, material management and replenishment, especially in just-in-time (JIT) and kanban environments, asset tracking, warehousing and yard management processes. Here are some examples and scenarios that show how RFID brings benefits to common industrial environments.

Yard management:

High-value assets and time-critical operations define the business environment for Old Do­minion Freight Lines (ODFL), a trucking and logistics provider whose drivers operate from 117 service centers throughout North America. ODFL relies on RFID to manage its 2,600-truck fleet and to provide the foundation for new business processes that get trucks loaded on unloaded faster, with less labor.

Permanent RFID tags were applied to every truck in the ODFL fleet. When trucks pull in to service centers, an RFID reader at the gate automatically identifies the vehicle and notifies the dispatcher of its arrival by wireless LAN. The dispatcher then assigns a “switcher” driver in a shuttle trailer to meet the vehicle and to take the trailer to storage or a dock door for immediate processing. Switcher driv­ers receive their instructions by an Intermec in-vehicle computer that receives the information from the dispatcher over a wireless LAN connection. By using real-time systems to identify loads and direct activity, ODFL frees its drivers from having to pull up to the dock or office and wait while their paperwork is looked up and workers are found to process the load. After implementing the system, ODFL significantly improved yard productivity, eliminated some switcher positions, and was able to reassign some shuttle tractors to over-the-road duty. The system streamlines loading and unload­ing operations, where wasted time is a profit-killer for logistics companies who need to have their assets on the road.

Paramount Farms, a California nut processor that supplies approximately 60 percent of the U.S. pistachio crop, integrated an RFID receiving system with production control operations to increase throughput and accuracy. During the peak processing season, Paramount Farms receives 400 truck­loads of pistachios and almonds from growers every day. Each truckload weighs about 50,000 tons, which means Paramount Farms has 20 million pounds of nuts to check in, weigh, sample, grade and record daily.

An RFID reader at the Paramount yard automatically identifies the incoming truck as it is being weighed in. The truck ID and load weight is transmitted over a wireless LAN to a host computer inside the processing center. A database on the host looks up the truck’s profile information and returns handling instructions to a worker at the weigh station, who carries an Intermec wireless mo­bile computer. Paramount must collect detailed information about the load – for example, the field on which it was grown on and method of harvest, and include it with the grower’s records. Much of the data entry is done by bar-code scanning and input into the handheld computer. Once the data is collected and the load has been graded, documentation is automatically printed for the grower.

“Crop receipt data accuracy affects our greatest processing expense — raw material costs — and drives our annual production planning process. It’s imperative for us to ensure that the volume and quality we pay for is the volume and quality we receive,” said Andy Anzaldo, Paramount’s director of grower relations. “We are more confident than ever of our data system’s integrity and the accuracy of the information, since more of the data is collected using radio frequency identification tags and bar code scanners.”

Asset management:

Paramount Farms and ODFL rely on RFID to manage their most expensive and time-sensitive assets. RFID is so adaptable that many other types of businesses can use it to improve the tracking, avail­ability and utilization of their valuable assets, whether they are tools, equipment, materials or work in process machinery. Asset tracking holds excellent return-on-investment potential that virtually any company can enjoy. Because RFID tags can be read automatically without any worker intervention, RFID systems can be designed to provide unattended, constant tracking. All asset movements are automatically recorded as they pass by RFID readers, and unauthorized movements can trigger an alarm or event notification. RFID systems could help manufacturers reduce inventory theft by up to 10 percent and lower their fixed asset base up to 5 percent according to a series of studies by Accenture.

The U.S. Social Security Administration (SSA) estimated its RFID pilot program for asset manage­ment would produce more than $60,000 in annual savings just by eliminating manual data entry and paperwork processing. The SSA put RFID tags on the key fobs for the 86-vehicle fleet at its headquarters facility. To sign out a vehicle, an RFID reader was used to read the employee’s RFID identification badge and the key fob. The RFID readings created a database record of who had what vehicle. RFID readers at the fleet fueling station automatically recorded the vehicle ID, fuel con­sumption and mileage. The system provided accurate, real-time information about the avail­ability and usage of fleet vehicles, without requiring office personnel to enter and transcribe data or prepare reports.

RFID is more commonly used in industrial environments to track assets like forklifts, returnable containers, equipment and tools. It is easy to imagine how the Social Security Administration’s procedures could be modified to provide tool crib management. Permanent tags would be applied to high-value tools and equipment and read when an employee checked the tool out for use. By scanning the employee’s bar code ID card at the same time, the enterprise could au­tomatically build custody and usage records. If RFID employee ID cards are used, check-in and check-out operations could be completely automated by positioning readers to automatically record all item movements and the person associated with them. These applications provide in­formation that prevents time-wasting searches for missing items, deters unauthorized borrow­ing or theft, and improves asset utilization. Tracking and dispensing systems can also be linked to asset and maintenance management software applications to provide accurate information about how often tools and equipment are used, helping the organization plan purchasing, service and preventive maintenance.

Product tracking and genealogy: RFID tracking is also highly valuable to organizations that must trace genealogy of their prod­ucts or provide lifetime identification. In the aviation industry, for example, if positive identifi­cation and lifetime service records aren’t available for a part, it can’t fly. Misidentification and record-keeping errors could potentially cost airlines millions of dollars in unnecessary replace­ment costs. That is why the aviation industry is a leader in developing RFID product tracking standards and applications. There are similar initiatives in other industries. The Transportation Recall Enactment, Accountability and Documentation (TREAD) Act requires manufacturers to include identification and production history information about tires, child restraint systems, drive trains and other parts that can be accessed throughout the entire product life cycle. In response, the industry created an RFID tire tracking standard in recognition of RFID’s ability to provide accurate, lifetime identification when exposed to heavy use in a variety of environmen­tal conditions.

Consider how traceability applications could be enhanced with RFID by the ability to update item information throughout its life. Read-write RFID tags can permanently and securely store an item ID number and reserve additional memory for data that can be written and updated later. Maintenance, asset management and warranty applications could benefit from this capability if item tags were regularly updated with inspection dates, service codes, or even data from sensor readings. These applications go beyond the basic requirement of providing track­ing and identification and can provide true value and cost savings to the enterprise.

Having accurate product genealogy data can provide a big boost to service, returns and recall operations. Companies could detect and prevent ineligible service claims with an RFID system that enables them to uniquely identify otherwise look-alike parts. The ID information could also verify that items being returned for credit rightfully belong to the registered user. Linking individual part numbers with customers also enables companies to conduct narrow, targeted recalls should the need arise. The data can also limit liability exposure and provide valuable service and maintenance evidence if product performance is ever in dispute.

WIP tracking:

The sooner that RF identification is applied to products and components, the more benefits it can provide. Tags for genealogy and lifetime traceability can serve double duty as enablers of efficient production tracking, routing and materials management applications. Manufacturing operations that require sequencing or build-to-order production rely on item-level identifica­tion to ensure the right components are added to assemblies. RFID provides a way to quickly verify identities, and can be integrated with material handling and production control systems to route items to the appropriate assembly, testing or packaging locations.

In the automotive industry, where just-in-time, just-in-sequence delivery requirements are com­mon, automakers and their suppliers routinely use RFID to identify sub assemblies to ensure they are installed in the correct chassis. One OEM applies RFID tags to racks that carry engines to their installation location. Each engine has a bar code serial number, which is scanned to associate the specific engine with the rack that is carrying it in a database. The database verifies that all engines on the rack have the same configuration, to prevent the possibility of the wrong type of engine be­ing installed in a chassis. Forklift-mounted RFID readers confirm to operators that they are picking the right rack. The racks are read again prior to the engines being unloaded. All RFID and bar code scan data is communicated to the database application in real time over a wireless LAN that covers the facility. By preventing sequence loading and installation errors, the company avoids the high cost of product rework.

Replenishment:

RFID is also used to provide timely replenishment of materials used for production. In the previous example, suppose the simple act of moving the engine rack from an assembly station triggered a wireless signal to deliver another rack to the station for work. Or suppose that after 10 racks had been moved, the workstation was automatically replenished with a new bin of parts for the assem­bly process. RFID has the potential to bring kanban and other just-in-time replenishment processes to new levels of responsiveness and efficiency. These performance improvements provide the con­fidence and control that let companies lower their materials inventory, thereby reducing operating expenses with no adverse effects.

Think about all the capital your organization has tied up in raw materials and finished goods inven­tory, plus the capital equipment, storage space and labor needed to process it. Seemingly modest incremental improvements to how goods are managed, processed and accounted for can unlock a significant amount of cash for your business. The examples presented here have shown how RFID can facilitate these improvements – by complementing your business processes, not by requiring you to reengineer them. Organizations who are finding value in RFID today are profiting by becom­ing more efficient in their internal processes, without waiting for supply chain partners to adopt the technology.

The following section provides guidance on how RFID can be integrated to leverage current data collection systems and processes.

Unlocking the Value

In many applications, the RFID tag serves as a key the system uses to unlock item information from a database. Just as you need to look beyond the supply chain to see RFID’s benefits, you need to look beyond the tag to understand how RFID will create value and provide a return on investment. Characteristics like frequency, size, standards support and cost provide a good basis to compare tags, but not to evaluate the total value of an RFID system. Value – and more significantly, invest­ment ROI payback – depends on how successfully the entire system works together to provide operational improvements.

One reason Old Dominion Freight Lines’ application was so successful is that it fully leveraged the company’s existing wireless LAN and mobile computing infrastructure. Application software was modified to accept input from RFID gate readers, and to communicate the information to personnel who could make use of it. The result was an incremental process improvement that did not require replacement of existing technology, which led to a rapid ROI payback period that ranged from eight to 11 months per facility. Paramount Farms benefited by upgrading its gate operations to leverage its processing and production applications.

The Social Security Administration had no data collection infrastructure, but kept its program affordable by selectively using RFID. Tags are not applied to every asset the SSA uses, only to vehicles, which are among the highest-cost assets to purchase and maintain. The system was developed as a standalone application to improve one specific operation, which helped hold down development costs and minimized the need to integrate with other enterprise applica­tions.

In these examples, the greatest benefits came from process changes that the unique properties of RFID made possible. And these process changes did not require business re-engineering by hired consultants. The benefits were not dependent on anyone outside the organization apply­ing tags or reading them. Closed-loop systems like these can be planned and implemented in less time than supply chain applications and allow organizations to choose from a wider range of RFID products to meet their needs.

This flexibility is important, because tags are not the largest part of the total cost of ownership of an RFID system. Readers, software and host-level integration are all required to make an RF system work. The talent and experience of the system provider is an even larger factor, because skillful integration can prevent many unnecessary equipment, software development and fu­ture migration costs. For example, an experienced RFID implementation partner might conduct a thorough wireless site survey that provides excellent coverage and read rates without requir­ing redundant readers or customized tag modifications that an inexperienced integrator might specify.

The design and features of the RFID equipment itself also contribute to total cost of ownership and system value. Agile systems that support multiple frequencies and readers with modular radios provide the flexibility to change the system without having to rip out and replace the hardware. Read-write tags can be erased and reused thousands of times, along with providing the ability to encode additional data on existing tags if operational needs change. Again, appli­cation changes won’t necessarily require hardware changes. Smart label printers will give users the ability to encode RFID tags on demand, wherever they’re needed in the enterprise. Flexible features like these provide a migration path when RFID applications change and help organiza­tions fully leverage their initial investments.

Conclusion

Tags are one component of RFID systems, which are themselves components of the enterprise information system. To evaluate how RFID can provide value to your organization, its impact on legacy hardware, software and processes must be considered. As we have seen, there are nu­merous opportunities to profit by selectively using RFID in targeted applications that comple­ment and leverage legacy operations. This approach will provide value today while positioning you to gain future benefits from your supply chain or other extended applications.

About the author
Intermec Technologies offers a complete range of services and products to help organizations evaluate if they could benefit from RFID and how it could be integrated into business process­es. Intermec is a leader in RFID technology and standards development, with extensive experi­ence helping manufacturers, distributors, logistics providers, retailers, service companies and other businesses implement complete RFID data collection systems. Visit www.intermec.com to see complete case studies on Old Dominion Freight Lines, Paramount Farms and the Social Security Administration, and additional white papers on RFID technology, lean and agile manufactur­ing applications and other data collection topics. You may also try the Intellitag RFID Online Assessment Tool, which leads you through a targeted assessment to determine if RFID-based technology is a good fit for your company.

http://www.reliableplant.com/Read/8161/tag-rfid-manufacturing


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eChain Osaka Japan

eChain Technology opens first international branch office in Osaka Japan.

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eChain Technology opens its first international branch office in Osaka Japan effective 14 September, 2014. “We see Osaka as an emerging tech center in Asia,” states Lewis Kilby, President of eChain Technology. “There are many companies in Japan that are aggressively pursuing ways to use RFID technology, who have been very responsive to our solutions and capabilities. We are also working closely with several Japanese companies who are manufacturing next-generation RFID technology. Opening a branch office in Osaka gives us direct access to, and removes barriers for us to do business with the traditionally honor-bound Japanese society. This is a perfect match for the way we have always done business since our founding in 2001.”

Historically, Osaka was the center of commerce in Japan, and several major companies like Panasonic, Sharp and Sanyo are still headquartered in Osaka. Recently, however, Osaka has been heavily investing in technology innovation to create a hub for competitive technology advantage. Witness the Osaka Innovation Hub (http://www.innovation-osaka.jp/en/aboutus). “A huge factor in our decision to select Osaka over Tokyo for our first Japan office was to be close to, and be a part of the exciting energy of the Osaka Innovation Hub,” says Mr. Kilby.

If you are interested in reaching out directly to eChain Technology, Japan, please contact Yoshiko Kubo at ykubo@echaintechnology.com.

Osaka Innovation Hub

Osaka Innovation Hub

About Osaka Innovation Hub

Global Innovation Osaka (http://www.innovation-osaka.jp)

An epicenter of innovation, continuing creating a ripple effect of passion for technology, strong desire for success, and result-oriented mindset, helps you grow.

Osaka Innovation Hub delivers Japanese ideas for technology, creating a competitive advantage and information about exciting, emotional, or unexpected series of events made by those involved in a variety of activities in full swing to commercialize new products and services.
The development and commercialization of technologies based on a business cluster, which has been spawned by a lot of small- and medium-sized companies that manufacture a variety of products, may proceed to the destination in Osaka Innovation Hub, which concentrates its efforts on fostering technology innovation as a competitive advantage.

Services

Supporting Venture Creation and Commercialization
The super producer has a proven track record of success in conducting technology commercialization both domestically and internationally to speed the process of venture creation and commercialization.

Conducting Partner Search and Teaming
To start off with a series of activities for business creation, Osaka Innovation Hub helps get in touch with not only those who own unique and competitive technology but entrepreneurs and technology-focused companies who strive to make use of it for profit.

Supporting Processes for Innovation
Umekita’s central location in Osaka Prefecture, its ease of access by car and public transportation, and its highly skilled labor force have attracted an increasingly varied residential and commercial mix. Osaka Innovation Hub makes an effort to support the entire commercialization process with services, ranging from in-depth technology seeds research to more deliberate business planning.

Building Worldwide Network for Human and Funding Resources
To deploy business globally, not only does Osaka Innovation Hub concentrate its efforts on building worldwide human capital network through such events as international conventions, it also introduces a variety of its fundamental activities and delivers information about technology, owned by the Osaka-based companies.

An Incubator for Tomorrow’s Leaders Who Make a Difference Globally
Through onsite learning programs to be prepared in Osaka Innovation Hub, entrepreneurs have opportunities to participate in a remarkable range of activities that are related to the latest business topics and state-of-the-art technologies. Accordingly, they can reduce the level of stereotype threat, foster and exercise entrepreneurship, and take part in an international competition.


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FDA Report, Electromagnetic Compatibility(EMC) > Radio Frequency Identification (RFID)

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The FDA is not aware of any adverse events associated with RFID. However, there is concern about the potential hazard of electromagnetic interference (EMI) to electronic medical devices from radio frequency transmitters like RFID. EMI is a degradation of the performance of equipment or systems (such as medical devices) caused by an electromagnetic disturbance.

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New Protocols Will Test Effects of RFID Systems on Medical Devices | Georgia Tech Research Institute

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RF In Hospital

Test Effects of RF on Medical Equipment

Radio frequency identification (RFID) systems are widely used for applications that include inventory management, package tracking, toll collection, passport identification and airport luggage security. More recently, these systems have found their way into medical environments to track patients, equipment assets and staff members.

However, there is currently no published standardized, repeatable methodology by which manufacturers of RFID equipment or medical devices can assess potential issues with electromagnetic interference and evaluate means to mitigate them.

To resolve these concerns, the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI) recently began developing testing protocols for RFID technology in the health care setting. The test protocol development is being overseen by AIM Global, the international trade association representing automatic identification and mobility technology solution providers, and also includes MET Laboratories, a company that provides testing and certification services for medical devices.

“A comprehensive set of test protocols, which are sufficiently precise to permit repeatable results, is required to understand if there is an interaction between various types of RFID systems and active implantable medical devices, electronic medical equipment, in vitro diagnostic equipment and biologics. Only after the protocols are developed will we be able to investigate the cause of any interactions, the result of any interactions, and ways manufacturers might eliminate or mitigate interactions,” said Craig K. Harmon, president and CEO of Q.E.D. Systems and chairman of AIM Global’s RFID Experts Group. This group is overseeing the Health Care Initiative and includes representatives from 40 organizations in the United States, Europe and Asia.

GTRI researchers will test how RFID systems affect the function of implantable and wearable medical devices, such as pacemakers, implantable cardioverter defibrillators, neurostimulators, implantable infusion pumps and cardiac monitors.

“The internal components, firmware and hardware of every company’s devices are different, meaning that each device can respond differently to the same electromagnetic environment. Since there have been various preliminary tests and publications from different organizations indicating that there may or may not be issues with RFID system environments and these devices, it is important to standardize the way to test such devices,” said Ralph Herkert, director of GTRI’s Medical Device Test Center.

Herkert and Gisele Bennett, director of GTRI’s Electro-Optical Systems Laboratory, will evaluate and determine the best method for measuring whether interference takes place as a result of RFID emission in both active and passive RFID technologies covering the spectrum from low-frequency to ultra high-frequency.

The researchers will test whether radio frequency-emitting devices cause any negative effects on the medical devices, and under what conditions these effects might occur. Testing will also determine whether specific medical devices are particularly susceptible to certain radio frequency identification characteristics and if any corrective actions can be taken to mitigate such susceptibility.

Medical device testing is not new for GTRI, which established its Medical Device Test Center more than 14 years ago. The facility was created to enable manufacturers of implantable cardiac pacemakers and defibrillators to work with providers of electronic article surveillance (EAS) systems, used by retailers, libraries and other establishments to prevent theft and track inventory. The center’s original mission was to help manufacturers improve compatibility between implantable medical devices and EAS systems that radiate electromagnetic energy. In 2006, GTRI expanded its operations and facilities to test new types of security and logistical systems (SLS), including RFID.

To test the effects of RFID systems on medical devices, the researchers simulate real-world conditions by placing a medical device in a tank of saline solution that simulates the electrical characteristics of body tissue and fluid. The medical device is then exposed to different RFID technologies. Several tests are performed with the device placed in different orientations to represent how people typically interact with the emissions.

“We think the testing procedure for RFID systems will be similar to the EAS system procedure, but there are a few more challenges with the RFID systems because a person doesn’t always pass through a portal,” noted Bennett, who is also a member of AIM Global’s RFID Experts Group. “Medical devices can be affected by active tags with stronger signals or RFID systems reading passive tag signals.”

The test protocols developed by GTRI will be submitted to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for concurrence, after which a worldwide certification program will be launched and other testing facilities will be invited to participate.

Funding to develop these test guidelines is currently being provided by GTRI, but the researchers are actively looking for external funding.

“We have more than 35 years of experience at GTRI testing medical device interference and we think that testing the effects of RFID on medical devices is an important area to pursue,” added Bennett.

via New Protocols Will Test Effects of RFID Systems on Medical Devices | Georgia Tech Research Institute.

 

 

 


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10 Myths about Hospital Inventory Management

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Inventory management solutions have historically been overpriced, without delivering the functionality needed by hospitals to eliminate the most significant problems

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Xterprise Blog : 7 Things Your Boss Wants to Know About RFID

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While you may have already been sold on the benefits of Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology for greater efficiency and cost savings, now you need to sell it your boss.

Maybe your boss still prefers manual inventory tracking or what has worked for your company in the past.  Whatever the case, with strong ownership and RFID supply chain knowledge, you can show your boss the top 7 reasons why the world’s most successful retailers are tracking their inventory with RFID systems:

1. Do we really need RFID?

Without an accurate, up-to-the-minute view of current stock levels, retailers find themselves with bloated inventory levels in back stocks and numerous out-of-stock situations on the sales floor.  A recent retail survey of 5,000 consumers from the United States, United Kingdom, France and Germany suggests retailers really need RFID, especially with the pressure for omni-channel retail solutions.

2. Can RFID help in retail shrinkage?

The mere presence of RFID has a significant impact on shrink.  Real-world applications of RFID in the supply chain demonstrate that the increased accountability provided by this technology results in a reduction in shrink, particularly with regard to losses due to internal theft. In fact, after implementing Xterprise’s Clarity RFID solution for item-level tracking, global specialty apparel retailer American Apparel reported a reduction of more than 50 percent in shrink.

3. Can we eliminate third-party inventory audits?

Implementing RFID tracking provides company executives with greater assurance that reported inventory is both timely and accurate. With inventory accuracy at or above 98 percent, management can eliminate third-party audits with confidence. After all, it doesn’t make sense to pay a third-party firm to conduct manual audits once or twice yearly when store associates can quickly get a more accurate count with RFID whenever needed.

4. What’s the return on investment for RFID in Retail, and where does it come from?

The bottom line for retailers is sales, so when American Apparel saw a sales lift ranging from 3% to over 10% after RFID was fully implemented, the return on investment was proven. Sales lift for American Apparel came primarily through better inventory management—i.e., more timely replenishment and the reduction of out-of-stocks.  Some other surprising benefits contributing to the positive ROI included the aforementioned reduction in internal shrink as well as reduced inventory levels in backstock, leading to more efficient space utilization and higher SKU density on the sales floor.

5. How much will our current operations and infrastructure be disrupted?

Firstly, deploying a solution like Xterprise’s Clarity™ doesn’t require you to implement all-new back-end systems to start reaping the benefits of item-level RFID.  Good RFID software should integrate with existing systems to extend their usefulness to the item-level realm, enhancing them and making them better—not replacing them.

The disruption from tagging product with RFID can be minimized by selecting a tag provider that can partner with you to ensure the right kind of tag is shipped to (and from) the optimal location for tags to be placed on your inventory with minimal cost.  There are a plethora of viable solutions and it can get quite complex, so selecting the right tag provider is crucial to success; when you do have the right supplier, however, RFID tagging is not much different than regular tagging.

6. How do we get started with item-level RFID in our stores and supply chain?

Retailers can quickly and efficiently deploy tagging programs with bundled solutions, including RFID tags, software, hardware and associated services.  An RFID inventory management solution such as Clarity™ enables retailers to utilize existing mobile devices and the power of cloud computing to reduce costs and set-up time while leveraging existing infrastructure and hardware.   Very often we see retailers capture significant value using little more than two handheld readers per store to begin addressing inventory accuracy.

7. Will our employees want to use the RFID retail inventory management system?

Implementing an item-level RFID system makes employees’ lives easier and more productive, freeing them up to engage with customers by eliminating the tedious and mundane task of manual inventory counting. In addition, the stress of not knowing where an item is located, or whether it is even in stock, can be eliminated. This results in a motivated, happy workforce ready to focus on customer service – an added bonus in addition to the other benefits of reducing out-of-stocks and overall inventory levels, improving omnichannel fulfillment reliability, and reducing shrink due to theft and loss.

via Xterprise Blog : 7 Things Your Boss Wants to Know About RFID.


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Hospitals are finding ROI from RFID

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Just a few years ago, discussion of the use of radio-frequency identification in healthcare was usually limited to drug manufacturers and wholesalers, who use RFID as a way to track drug products through the supply chain or to combat counterfeit drugs.

[See also: RFID & RTLS can save lives]

Nowadays, RFID technology is being used by more and more hospitals to improve safety and efficiency.

At University of Michigan Hospitals and Health Centers in Ann Arbor, hospital pharmacists are using RFID to help them manage drug kits through the use of an automated pharmacy stocking system.

[See also: RFID adoption poised for ‘huge’ growth]

By utilizing cloud-based software and an RFID scanning station from Washington, DC-based Kit Check, pharmacy technicians inventory dozens of medications in seconds that are in pharmacy kits including crash carts and anesthesia trays. Previously technicians and pharmacists would inspect each kit vial individually, a process that can take up to ten times longer.

When medication trays are returned to the pharmacy from the operating room or emergency room, all the RFID-tagged meds in the drug kit – there can be as many as 198 – are scanned and a few seconds later the system tells the pharmacy technician which drugs were used and which ones are going to expire. With this information at their fingertips, the tech knows what to replenish and if the tray has been replenished correctly while at the same time generating all the regulatory paper work.

John Clark, director of pharmacy services at the University of Michigan Hospitals and Health Centers said that the technology not only allows the hospital to refill a kit that much faster, it also basically eliminate the errors that can happen related to incorrect or expired drugs that are in the kits.

“Kit Check helps to simplify the ability to manage drug boxes that are used for emergencies in the hospital,” said Clark, who noted that prior to Kit Check, a time-consuming manual process was used. The process is made more efficient, said Clark, by not having to constantly count everything and making sure that everything is where it’s supposed to be.

Mark Neuenschwander, a Bellevue, Wash.-based expert and consultant on bar code enabled medication dispensing, preparation, and administration, said that RFID readers are significant because they can quickly reveal what remains in the kit and what has been removed.

“The time savings justify the cost of the chips and the chip reading storage devices,” he said.

In just three months since its implementation, Clark said that the hospital is already seen a return on investment that has been measured by a reduction of waste.

The demand for this type of technology appears to be growing. At the end of 2012, Kit Check had two hospital customers; that number grew to 43 at the end of 2013, and now exceeds 100.

“Over time I think we’re going to have more and more medications RFID tagged by manufacturers,” said Kevin MacDonald, co-founder and CEO of Kit Check.

“We can help hospitals decrease the amount of medications that they need to have on hand and reduce waste in terms of expiration,” he added. “That decreases inventory cost. Users also can also increase charge capture and decrease both overtime labor and general labor that’s required to process kits manually.”

Niche market for RIFD

At the University of California San Diego Medical Center, RFID is helping to monitor plasma and specialty products more efficiently.

Using the Cubixx consignment service from Frisco, Texas-based ASD Healthcare, a division of Amerisource Bergen, healthcare professionals are able to provide life-saving products such as the antihemophilic blood factor products and rattlesnake anti-venom.

Products have RFID tags that allow Cubixx to monitor inventory 24/7 and replenish stock to bring it back to an established par level. “The system is set up so that you will always have products in stock to service critical patient needs at any time,” said purchasing manager Danielle Kulischak.

According to ASD, placing RFID tags on all products allows Cubixx to invoice customers only when they use the product and customers determine their own quantities that ASD Healthcare remotely tracks. In addition, Cubixx automatically verifies expiration dates and other pertinent information on each product unit.

Specialty products are often problematic. They’re expensive hard to track and respective customers don’t like holding the inventory.

In addition, said Chris Flori, vice president of business innovation at ASD Healthcare, there is no reverse distribution on biologics so if it expires you can’t send it back like you can a wholesale drug product like a prescription drug or and over-the-counter medication.

“If you buy it, you own it,” said Flori. “You can’t make any mistakes. We settled on RFID as a means by which to give us confidence around maintaining a consignment inventory in these hospitals.”

RIFD technology, according to Kulischak, has benefited the medical center in in terms of cost savings, efficiency, and patient safety.

“We had a one time inventory reduction when we switched to consignment service,” she said. “The products are invoiced when it is used. The inventory is tracked remotely by RFID technology.”

As far as Cubixx’s impact on patient care, Kulischak said that the hospital is able to respond to any unanticipated admission or emergency needs safely and cost-effectively.

Prior to introducing Cubixx, the medical center had a large inventory of plasma and specialty products on hand. “There was waste associated with expired unused products. It was difficult and costly to maintain a large inventory of these expensive and critical medications,” said Kulischak.

ASD Healthcare’s Flori said the company’s hospital customers using Cubixx have seen a windfall due to elimination of expired goods, access to a broader range of products not restricted by manufacturer’s inventory, access to restricted distribution products, and the elimination of capital deployment in inventory.

This type of inventory, he noted, can be very difficult to track due to its product identifiers and presence in both the commercial and 340B space.

“Because hospitals do not buy inventory unless they use it, Cubixx essentially frees up dollars previously ‘trapped in inventory’ specifically for items that are historically slow moving or episodic in utilization,” said Flori. “The guess work is eliminated with regard to how to hold and of what products.”

In addition to providing the consignment inventory, ASD also manages it around-the-clock, according to Flori. Using Cubixx technology directly reduces staff time that was previously needed to manage such an expensive, delicate and complex inventory.

“As the excursions take place from the respective refrigerators or ambient boxes we replenish in an automated fashion. We have found a nice sweet spot between the amount of product we keep there the number of orders they get, because they really don’t do anything but go to the refrigerator and pull the product out.”

Flori pointed out that Cubixx gives hospitals the ability to maintain a very expensive, very rare drug stock with no expense.

In September, ASD announced that it had exceeded 400 billion scans on Cubixx. According to the company, that translates to almost 150 million scans read and reported every day.

Proponents of RFID contend that its application in the hospitals will continue its growth spurt.

“We feel fundamentally that you improve safety in hospitals not only in error reduction but because things are at the right place at the right time, said Aldo Zini, president and CEO of Aethon Inc., based in Pittsburgh.

Aethon produces MedEx, a real-time medication delivery tracking software system that controls the medication delivery process and provides real-time status information to pharmacy and nursing.  Zini said that this technology is important to hospitals because it addresses the issues related to late, missing or divergent medication deliveries in both centralized and decentralized pharmacies and can be used with pneumatic tubes, manual courier and TUG, Aethon’s autonomous mobile robot.

The RFID reader in the TUG detects the presence of passive RFID tags. Tags are associated with a specific order and are typically affixed to high-value medications or IV mixtures. To load the product into the TUG, pharmacy technicians identify themselves at the security pad of the TUG robot.

The correct drawer opens and they place a RFID labeled item inside which registers the presence of the inventory.  The user confirms this action using the keypad on the TUG as well.  At the receiving end, when the appropriate nurse logs in, a receipt transaction is registered when the item is removed from the drawer.

“The value proposition is centered on reducing costs, that’s paramount today in hospitals.  We replace the menial task of labor that clinicians don’t want to do or shouldn’t do,” said Zini.

“You don’t want nurses and other clinicians having to push carts and run errands and move things around,” he added. “Picking up infectious waste or moving large carts of linens, those are things that robots should be doing.”

via Hospitals are finding ROI from RFID | Healthcare IT News.