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BBC News
Thursday, 7 March, 2002, 12:19 GMT
Chips to keep family healthy
The family that gets chipped together, stays together
A US family has come up with a novel way of tightening family ties,
by getting computer chip implants.
While other families shop or eat together, the Jacobs
intend to have computer chips put under their skin, the first family
to attempt such a thing.
The VeriChips have been developed by a Florida technology
company, Applied Digital Solutions, and are intended, initially, for
medical purposes.
Chip would be implanted under the skin
Father Jeff has had cancer and is now on 10 different
types of medication. His wife Leslie believes the implant will give
the family peace of mind.
"The chip will be able to speak for him if he isn't
able to and will immediately tell doctors his medical history,"
she told the BBC programme Go Digital.
The idea to get the implants came from the Jacobs' 12-year-old
son Derek, who is computer-mad and the youngest person ever to have
become a certified Microsoft systems technologist.
Let's get chipped
He saw an item about the chips on TV and announced he
wanted to be the first child to have one.
"He was so intrigued by the technology," said Mrs Jacobs.
"He nagged us to call the company and because his
whole life is computers and technology we listened to him."
Imagine if each individual had his or her medical information safe and
secure within their own bodies
Keith Bolton, Applied Digital Solutions
The VeriChip is about the size of a grain of rice and
is implanted under the skin.
A scanner would be needed by hospitals and other medics
to read the information on the chip, which would include the patient's
name, contact details and medical history.
Before the family can become chipped, Applied Digital
Solutions has to obtain US Government approval from the Food and Drugs
Administration, (FDA), a process which could take a long time.
Potential life-saver
Until then, the firm is looking to market the chips in
South and Central America where FDA rules do not apply.
Chief technology officer Keith Bolton is confident that
the implants can be a life-saving device.
"Imagine if each individual had his or her medical
information safe and secure within their own bodies," he said.
"It is one big advancement for mankind."
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