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Welcome to Call to Decision
Do Chip Implants Protect or Violate Privacy?
Added: May 18th, 2007 3:00
PM
Care
Facility Will Electronically Tag Alzheimer's Patients
Despite Protests
By JOSEPH BROWNSTEIN
ABC News Medical Unit
May 18, 2007—
A Florida adult-care facility is going ahead with plans to
implant identity chips into patients with Alzheimer's
disease who are in its care, despite protests that it is a
form of branding.
Alzheimer's Community Care in West Palm Beach will implant a
radio frequency identification chip into Alzheimer's
patients with the consent of their families or the patients
themselves if they are deemed competent.
The chip, which is slightly larger than a grain of rice, is
implanted under the skin of the right forearm. Each chip
will contain a unique 16-digit number that, when scanned in
an emergency room, will link to the patient's medical
records.
Mary Barnes, the president and CEO of Alzheimer's Community
Care, said the RFID chips, manufactured by VeriChip Corp.,
provided the best means of giving medical personnel access
to a patient's medical history, since people with
Alzheimer's often cannot relay that information themselves.
"Our patients are the most fragile and vulnerable of
any population," Barnes said.
While the RFID implants have been approved by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration, VeriChip is testing the
effectiveness of the chips in a real-world situation to see
if Alzheimer's patients with the chip receive "quicker
and better treatment" than those without, said VeriChip
CEO Scott Silverman.
Safety and Consent Questions
Opponents of the chip program say it raises serious ethical
considerations.
"This whole medical trial & really raises some
pretty important issues about informed consent," said
Katherine Albrecht, the founder of the advocacy group
Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and
Numbering.
Albrecht is concerned that Alzheimer's patients are being
enrolled in what she considers a potentially risky study
without their consent.
When the FDA approved VeriChip's product, it mentioned
potential problems, including electromagnetic interference,
failure of the chip to function properly and adverse bodily
reactions.
The FDA approval letter did not specify the severity or
likelihood of these risks.
"Any medical device approved by the FDA has potential
risk factors listed in the approval letter. VeriChip is no
different," said Silverman, who had an RFID chip
implanted in his arm in 2002 -- more than two years before
the FDA first approved the chips -- and has experienced none
of the potential problems.
The FDA did not reply to requests for comment.
But Albrecht sees VeriChip as a risk without reward.
"There are other technologies that are far less
invasive and can achieve the same goal," she said.
Albrecht promotes the MedicAlert bracelet as the ideal way
to solve the problem of Alzheimer's patients who cannot
relay their medical information reliably. MedicAlert
bracelets bear a recognizable medical symbol on the outside
and have the patient's medical conditions listed on the
back.
While Barnes worries that the MedicAlert bracelet could
break off or be removed by the patient, Albrecht believes it
is just as likely that an RFID chip would fail or the system
that holds patients' electronic records could crash.
An Issue of Ethics?
Bioethicists don't share all of Albrecht's concerns.
Jason Karlawish of the University of Pennsylvania said that
existing safeguards protect Alzheimer's patients and others
in a similar situation from being exploited for research
studies.
In this case, he said, there appears to be minimal risk, and
the research is for the direct benefit of the patient.
"There is a well-worked-out guide to conduct ethics for
what is and isn't permissible," Karlawish said, calling
Albrecht's objection to families' consenting on behalf of
the Alzheimer's patients "simply not correct."
Jeffrey Spike of Florida State University agreed, pointing
out that families are regularly called upon to make
life-or-death decisions for loved ones who are mentally
incapacitated.
But he worries because the chip program has not yet been
evaluated by a review board. Such a board, Spike said, would
need to look at potential risks -- both physical and
psychological -- and let prospective participants know their
right to withdraw by having their chip removed or
deactivated.
"If this has not been reviewed by [a review board],
then it's natural to be suspicious that it has been
carefully thought out," said Spike.
Barnes said a review board will be assembled in the next few
weeks, to be headed by Andrew Passeri, a board member of
Alzheimer's Community Care and the former president and CEO
of Staten Island University Hospital in New York.
Under the current schedule, Barnes said, the board hopes to
begin the program in August.
But while it examines the potential hazards of a chip
program, Barnes believes that in the ideal situation,
consent would not be an issue.
She said families should start coming for services and
resources in the early stages of Alzheimer's, when patients
are still competent and can take part in planning their
care.
Then patient consent for something like this would be
unimpeachable -- it would be their own.
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