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Canada embraces GS1 standards for barcoding drugs

Canada embraces GS1 standards for barcoding drugs

By:  Jennifer Kavur  On: 04 Feb 2010 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Now that 34 organizations across the county have agreed to adopt global GS1 barcoding standards, the Canadian Bar Code Project is one step closer towards reducing medication errors and streamlining the pharmaceutical process by automating the identification of all commercial drugs on the Canadian market. WITH VIDEO

“The goal is to have data accuracy and product integrity all the same throughout the whole process, where they are not re-labeling and changing the number,” she said.

The Joint Technical Statement provides a framework for building the software and technical systems needed to automate the identification of pharmaceuticals, said Ian Sheppard, project lead for the Canadian Pharmaceutical Bar Code Project, ISMP Canada.

“It’s a technical document, but it’s very exciting. Now the interesting systems can be built around the standard,” he said.

The Bar Code Project allows for different types of application identifier (AI) standards, Sheppard noted. “One is a one-dimensional barcode, one is a two-dimensional barcode and we’ve not excluded the use of RFID chips,” he said.

“There are so many different barcodes and readers out there that by standardizing, we can begin to focus in,” he said.

Hospitals should consider where packing is headed in the future and invest in camera-ready readers that can read two-dimensional barcodes instead of linear barcode scanners, Duval suggested. Two-dimensional barcodes are well suited for pharmacy products due to their small size and ability to carry more data, she noted.

Sheppard envisions barcodes accessing other databases, such as regulatory databases like Health Canada, in the future. “Your imagination is the limit of what that scan of the code can do,” he said.

The barcodes could eventually provide clinical data, blackbox warnings, reports on adverse effects, allergy information, high resolution images or outpatient education material, he said.

“These might not exist today, but by having the code and being able to use relational databases … it really opens the field for ingenious software developers,” he said. 

Follow me on Twitter @jenniferkavur.

 










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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2008 to 2010.
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