Territorians to be barcoded

dannybananny

Jedi Council Member
TERRITORY victims in large-scale accidents or catastrophes will soon be barcoded at the scene before being sent to hospital.

Experts say it is only a matter of months before Territory emergency services adapt the revolutionary barcode card technology.

And the rest of Australia is expected to soon follow suit.

The technology is designed for major catastrophes which involve more than 10 victims.

These could range from traffic accidents to terrorist attacks and natural disasters, such as earthquakes.

Royal Darwin Hospital director of disaster preparedness Dr Ian Norton said it would put the Territory at the forefront of major emergency responses in Australia.

"It's the holy grail of disaster management," he said.

"It's information we've never had before."

The technology, designed by Darwin-based company Combined Communication Solutions, was trialled for the first time yesterday at an urban "search and rescue exercise" involving nearly 80 mock patients in Yarrawonga.

It allows the tracking of patients from the incident scene to the hospital in real time.

Patients are separated into critical, semi-critical, walking-wounded and dead categories before being equipped with a barcoded triage card.

A hand-held scanner then sends the information to a website via 3G technology.

Dr Norton said further details, including the patient's medical history, nationality and nature of injuries, could be added to the code.

"The medical teams can record all that information, even take a photo of the patient, tag it all together and send it back to the website and the guys in emergency know everything about the patients before they even arrive," he said.

"As soon as that scan happens, the hospital would know how many patients they would have to treat and how severe they are, and they would have emptied out the beds appropriately."

The technology has cost the National Critical Care and Trauma Response Centre about $65,000 so far.

Emergency services personnel from interstate kept a close eye on computer screens to assess the system during its first test run yesterday.

http://www.ntnews.com.au/article/2010/05/13/147041_ntnews.html
 
Thanks dannybananny we've got that one here: http://www.sott.net/articles/show/208485-Aussies-to-be-Barcoded-at-Catastrophes

Has rather ominous implications that one. :shock:
 
is this a biologically implanted code? if so, how? vaccine? like we do with pet animals? is written consent required?!
it sounds like what Nazis did....
 
Scary.. I'm from Darwin. I actually applied for a job at, and did a few days work experience at the company mentioned in that article, years ago. (I didn't get the job)

This is all subjective, but it seems to me like the NT is often used as an "experimental" area, for testing stuff out on before the rest of Australia.. perhaps since it's a "territory" rather than a proper "state", and its remoteness. There's a massive military presence there.. plus Pine Gap. There's also a "housing crisis" there now, with lots of people/families having to live in tents and cars, like what's going on in the US (though not as bad I bet.. much smaller population).

Weird thing, the police uniform there is an army-ish green colour, rather than blue like everywhere else in Australia. When I still lived there, the only experience I ever had with the police, just a couple months before I left, was when I and the other people from the band I was in were hanging around outside a small music venue one night, waiting to go in and play our set.. These two MASSIVE creepy looking police guys with cold eyes came up and stood next to us, really close, pointing mobile phones at us (I assume they were filming us!?)...very intimidating. They didn't say anything, we didn't either. It felt weird and unreal. I guess they film people on phones and send it to someone to check against a database of criminals or something?

I know that doesn't really have anything to do with the article, other than being in the same location..just thought I'd mention it.
 
Odd, just had a quick search for info on police using cellphone cameras.. all I could find was this, from Febraury 26th (a good 2 years after what I saw).. I don't know if it's at all related..

_http://blog.taragana.com/index.php/archive/police-at-la-port-to-carry-cell-phone-cameras-to-increase-surveillance-at-massive-complex/
 
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