Life With Big Brother........
Big Brother Barcodes for babies in new UK hospital system
A UK hospital is giving babies barcoded wristbands rather than
hand-written bracelets to combat illegible handwriting.
Published: 3:22PM BST 23 Apr 2010
The Telegraph UK
Kettering General Hospital in Northamptonshire is introducing the new
system which simultaneously prints a barcoded wristband and a barcoded
sticky label for a heel prick test within an hour of birth.
The heel prick labels are then added to the back of the red baby record
book, which parents take home with them, and the wrist band is attached
to the baby's wrist or ankle.
The hospital said the National Patient Safety Agency had been calling
for standardised wristbands to be used throughout the NHS and the UK
Newborn Screening Programme asked all maternity units to produce
barcoded blood spot cards by April 1 this year.
A spokesman said the new system means Kettering General has introduced
both methods for its labour ward.
He said the hospital was not the first to use barcoded bands for
babies, but may be one of the first to combine this with heel prick
testing labels.
The new method allows hospital staff to have a lot of information about
the baby, including name, NHS number, date of birth, sex and mother's
name - whereas previously basic information would have been
hand-written on the wrist band, which could be less reliable.
Secondly, a baby has its routine heel prick screening test at about
five days after birth and normally a midwife would hand-write a form
along with blood taken for the test and send it to a regional
laboratory.
It is hoped the new system will reduce possible errors which could come
with a hand-written system.
Information technology project manager at Kettering General Hospital,
Paula Lilburn, said: ''The main reason for the introduction of barcoded
wristbands and barcoded heel prick blood spot labels is to improve
safety in hospitals.
''Our new system produces the baby wristband and it also produces a
heel prick label which then goes in the back of the red baby book which
mums and dads take home with them.
''The labels are used by community midwives around day five after birth
to identify the heel prick blood sample.
''They send off the blood test and the label together to a regional
screening laboratory to be tested for conditions like sickle cell
disease and cystic fibrosis.
''Again the previous alternative was for the form to be hand-written -
with the consequent problem of deciphering handwriting.
''The new system is quicker and safer because if the barcoded
information can be quickly read by the computers without the
possibility of human transcription errors.''
The hospital said that, in other places where barcoding has been
introduced, such as Great Ormond Street Children's Hospital, it had
reduced the time taken to enter a baby's information by 400 per cent.