HealthE-LivingNews  |  Subscribe  |  Sample Issue  |  Submit Article  |  Articles Directory  |  Health Care









Portable Medical Records Can Save Lives In An Emergency
by Roy Whittington

San Diego, California November 2, 2006, Vital Record Corporation announces a computer application named ViRecTM, which records medical history onto a thumb-sized storage device and onto a standard cell phone.  As many as 98,000 people die each year due to medical errors. A study given in “The Journal of the American Medical Association” (5/2005) indicates the death rate has changed little.  To help reduce medical errors, the ViRec portable medical records application provides direct access to a person’s medical information, such as  identification information, prescription and non-prescription medications, doctors and care givers, insurance carriers, and family history.

When the storage device is plugged into a computer, the medical information is automatically displayed using the computer’s installed Internet browser application. In an emergency, medical personnel have immediate access to the medical information simply by browsing the various pages containing the medical data. Alternatively, the medical history can be stored on a cell phone and subsequently displayed using simple key selection available on the phone.

For ease of recording the medical information, web page format is used.  The data is written to the portable storage device for viewing with a standard Internet browser.  The option of including a digital photograph of the owner is provided in the Identification category of the medical data.

The unique portable storage unit is a “plug and play” device.  When it is plugged into a computer, the ViRec application automatically starts with a button selection for launching the Internet browser with the initial Identification page of the medical information.  As with standard web page format, selections are made with buttons to select and view the various pages of medical data.

With the “plug and play” feature, emergency medical personnel do not need special application training since a standard web browser is used for viewing the medical information.

The small storage unit contains the ViRec application and controls, as well as all the medical information.  Thus, all components of ViRec are self contained in the portable device.

Although a web browser is used to record and view the medical information, no internet connection is required.  The medical information is kept private and secure and not vulnerable to access on the public, untrusted Internet.  Additionally, the medical data stored on the device is encrypted and cannot be read using any other application.

Moreover, no external power is needed to maintain the contents of the storage unit.  Because the unit is small, it can be carried, worn around the neck, or placed on a key chain.

An added function of the ViRec application is the transmission of medical information from the storage unit to a standard cell phone. A temporary Internet connection is required to send the medical data in encrypted form to the Vital Record Corporation server before placement on the cell phone.

The installed application manager software of the cell phone is used to retrieve the medical data from the company’s server, including a special ViRec application for displaying the data.  The medical data is automatically removed from the server once it has been successfully stored on the cell phone.

To use this added function, the cell phone must have Internet access capability to retrieve the medical data.  The cell phone must also support Java applications known as Midlets.

For additional information on ViRec Emergency Medical Records, visit www.vitalRecord.net.

Contact:
Roy Whittington, Director
Vital Record Corporation
13139 Roundup Ave.
San Diego, CA 92129
858-538-9091
roy_whittington@vitalrecord.net
http://www.vitalrecord.net






Health Care News

Industry Plans National Attack on Proposed Health Care Cuts (New York Times)
Hospitals and a health care workers’ union in New York plan to mount an advertising campaign to defeat spending cuts proposed by President Bush.
Sanofi-Aventis profit down 5% on Plavix, health-care reform (Market Watch)
LONDON (MarketWatch) -- French drug maker Sanofi-Aventis on Tuesday reported a 5% profit decline, as a variety of problems, from copycat versions of blood-thinner Plavix to safety concerns over antibiotic Ketek and health-care reform in Germany, weighed on the bottom line.
Mike: U.S. health care system on sick list (New York Daily News)
WASHINGTON - Mayor Bloomberg took on the nation's ailing health care system yesterday, saying all Americans should be "embarrassed" because it is so ineffective.
Veterans health care gaps in budget draw ire (Contra Costa Times)
The Bush administration plans to cut funding for veterans' health care two years from now -- even as badly wounded troops returning from Iraq could overwhelm the system.
White House at odds with states on health care fix (Houston Chronicle)
Governors and state legislators are transforming the nation's health care system, putting affordable health insurance within reach of millions of Americans in hopes of reversing the steady rise in the number of uninsured.
Mercy center fills big gaps in health care coverage (Rochester Democrat and Chronicle)
The extent of need among the disabled and working poor shows need for universal health care
CHRIS LESTER COMMENTARY: Ideas for a health care cure (Kansas City Star)
Last week, Wal-Mart CEO H. Lee Scott and Service Employees International Union president Andy Stern stood side by side and called for affordable health care coverage for all Americans by 2012.



Healthy & Free!



 • Privacy • Disclaimer • Contact Us •