- The Federal Drug Administration has ruled that an implantable
microchip used for ID purposes is not a regulated device, paving the way
for the chip's immediate sale in the United States, the manufacturer announced
today.
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- For the past several weeks, Applied Digital Solutions
has worked to get its VeriChip -- a biochip containing personal data that
is similar to devices used to identify lost pets -- classified as a non-regulated
device. On Thursday, the company's wish was granted.
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- "They inquired about the use of the product for
non-medical, identification purposes," said FDA spokeswoman Sharon
Snider. "If it's a non-medical use, the FDA doesn't regulate it."
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- Because the VeriChip won't be subject to the agency's
rigorous safety tests, ADS will be able to launch the product over the
next three months, said ADS president Scott Silverman, first in the company's
headquarters of Palm Beach County, Florida, and then nationwide.
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- In the United States, the VeriChip has been marketed
as a medical aid which would allow hospital workers to access patients'
health records with a simple wave of the wand, or reader. While the FDA
has not approved storing medical information on the chip, the device's
ID could be cross-referenced with a computer database holding the patient's
records.
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- In South America, the device has been bundled with a
GPS-unit and sold to potential kidnapping victims. (The company is developing
a separate implantable GPS product for kidnapping targets that should be
completed in a year, Silverman said.) The company hasn't decided yet if
it will sell or freely distribute the scanner needed to read the chip's
125-kHz signal to hospitals. The scanner is expected to cost between $1,000
and $3,000.
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- ADS has been inundated with inquiries from teenagers
and other technophiles who are impatient to get the device.
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- "We'll start the rollout with people who want it
for medical concerns and Generation Y people who want to get chipped because
they think it's cool," Silverman said.
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- ADS plans to charge $200 for the chip (insertion would
be free at certified clinics) and an annual $40 service fee for maintaining
the users' database. The chip, which is slightly larger than a grain of
rice, is inserted under local anesthesia during a quick outpatient procedure.
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- The VeriChip has fanned the fear among certain Christians
who believe it may be the dreaded "Mark of the Beast" described
in Biblical lore.
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- Privacy advocates are also concerned about the chip's
involuntary implantation or the possibility of using the technology to
track government dissidents in the future.
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- Among the first people to receive the VeriChip will be
a Palm Beach County family called the Jacobs. The Jacobs family -- Leslie,
Jeffrey, and their son Derek -ñ are interested in the chip for a
variety of health, security and technolust reasons.
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- Jeffrey Jacobs, the father, suffers from multiple degenerative
diseases and needs 10 medications a day to control pain and other problems.
He believes the chip could save his life during an emergency if he were
unable to communicate with health workers. His 12-year-old son fantasizes
about the merging of man and machine. And Jacobs' wife, Leslie, believes
the chip could become a tamper-proof way to identify people in an increasingly
insecure world.
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- "We are so thrilled to be part of this," Leslie
Jacobs said, scoffing at privacy and religious concerns. "When they
find out what this is really about, and that it can save people's lives,
they'll change their minds."
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