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Alzheimer's Patients Lining Up for Microchip Implants
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Pastor Dale Morgan  
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 More options Aug 31 2007, 2:16 am
From: Pastor Dale Morgan <dgrmor...@telus.net>
Date: Thu, 30 Aug 2007 23:16:27 -0700
Local: Fri, Aug 31 2007 2:16 am
Subject: Alzheimer's Patients Lining Up for Microchip Implants
*Big Brother and The Mark of The Beast

Alzheimer's Patients Lining Up for Microchip Implants*

The VeriChip Provides Medical Information About Patients, but Privacy
Advocates Are Wary

Aug. 30, 2007 —

For families of the nearly 5 million Americans currently living with
Alzheimer's disease, keeping their loved ones safe is a major concern.

In response to such concerns, a Florida-based company has developed an
FDA-approved microchip that can be implanted in an Alzheimer's patient's
arm, allowing critical medical details to be accessed instantly.

Up to 200 Alzheimer's patients living near Palm Beach, Fla., will be
implanted with the VeriChip for free in the next week.

The chip, which is about the size of a grain of rice, contains a
16-digit identification number which is scanned at a hospital. Once the
number is placed in a database, it can provide crucial medical information.

People are already lining up for the VeriChip, but it's already stirred
up controversy.

Is Big Brother Watching?

David and Ida Frankel have been married an unbelievable 73 years. Seven
years ago, Ida was diagnosed with Alzheimer's.

"She was being very forgetful, repeating questions over and over again,"
David said.

Ida was one of the first patients at an Alzheimer's center in Florida to
be implanted with a VeriChip.

"When an Alzheimer's patient gets lost, once their arm is scanned, it
would identify who they are and that they are an Alzheimer's patient,"
said Scott Silverman, the CEO of VeriChip.

Silverman stressed that the VeriChip is not a GPS device; it only
provides code for a database.

Some privacy groups argue that the VeriChip, which uses the same
technology as devices that track wayward pets, strips Alzheimer's
patients of their dignity.

"I don't think that because it's useful in animals is a reason why we
should do it in human beings," said Katherine Albrecht, the founder of
AntiChip.com. "There is a distinction between an animal and a human being."

Copyright © 2007 ABC News Internet Ventures


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