>>>>that could have been done with targeted legislation
>>
>>woulda, coulda, shoulda.
>>
>>That's exactly the point. All of this could have been done voluntarily or with targeted legislation decades ago, but it wasn't.
>>
>>
>>I did a lot of work on pharma systems about 10 years ago. That sector did a pretty good job - far from perfect but infinitely better than the MD's and hospitals- with the FDA with establishing bar code standards, EDI standards, deployment history, etc.
>>No legislation was necessary. If you want to sell in that market, you have to meet the standards, period.
>>A lot of that came from the manufacturers, who had a lot to gain from improved trace ability for recalls, etc,
>>
>>I was thinking about the pharma systems I worked on while watching the nurses scan my wristband and then the meds they were giving me. Every med, even in some cases a single capsule, is bar coded now.
>
>That was already the case when I had my appendix out in 2009 in the hospital I stayed at.
That's good to hear.
Much more efficient and less vulnerable to error now.
Anyone who does not go overboard- deserves to.
Malcolm Forbes, Sr.