Most Americans use biometrics daily. Fingerprint, face, or iris recognition technology unlocks our smartphones. Iris or facial scans quickly move people through airport security and past customs agents. Biometrics are common in many office buildings, enhancing or replacing traditional access control. Numerous surveys show most respondents becoming comfortable using the various biometric technologies, often preferring them to other solutions.

For those unfamiliar with biometrics, the term refers to measurements of unique physical or behavioral characteristics such as the ridges on a person’s fingertips, the makeup of a person’s face or patterns in the iris, the colored ring around the pupil. While many other physical and behavioral characteristics serve as biometrics, fingerprint, face, and iris technologies are used most often. One thing all biometrics have in common is that they are always on the bodies employees, eliminating the need to carry a card or remember a PIN.

Let’s look at some ways medical centers use biometrics.

Biometrics Bolster Security

Most hospitals are open 24/7 and have hundreds to thousands of patients and visitors enter and leave each day. To control them from roaming in areas where they don’t belong, most medical centers limit public entries to the main entrance, emergency department, and specialty clinics.

Employee entries require access control readers. However, many hospitals still use the 50-year-old Wiegand access protocol that offers no encryption between readers and the control panel, making it easy for hackers to capture the signal and create a cloned card. Any hospital using a Wiegand-based access system should upgrade immediately to current technology or add biometric readers for two-factor authentication (TFA). Touchless readers, including iris and facial, are the best choice during a pandemic, when everyone is trying to reduce the spread of disease.

Many major medical centers have areas that most visitors and employees can’t visit. These areas, such as nuclear medicine and research laboratories, require TFA for entry. Pharmacies, nurseries, intensive care units and data centers where private patient information is stored often use biometric readers. A second reader at any entrance may create a brief inconvenience, but it more than pays for itself by keeping people, data, and valuable materials well protected. Biometrics also help hospitals comply with Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) requirements.

Asset protection is another concern for medical facilities as thieves target medications, supplies, and high-value equipment. Biometric readers help protect critical areas. And with biometrics, there is no doubt about who entered a room.

Also, with mergers and acquisitions common within the industry, it’s not unusual to find multiple access control systems used across a large metropolitan healthcare system. Doctors, nurses and other clinicians requiring access to multiple sites may carry a half dozen or more badges. A standard biometric system provides hands-free access to all facilities.

Patient Misidentification Is Reduced and Records Can Be Consolidated

A pressing problem for hospitals is patient misidentification. Providing the wrong treatments or procedures may cause harm. The current method of having patients recite their names and birthdates while nurses and physicians compare them to a wrist-worn bracelet or chart doesn’t always work. In one survey, 64% of medical professionals said patient misidentification happens frequently. Patients with the same name and birthdate are not uncommon. Also, clerical errors during the registration process lead to potential mistakes. This widespread problem recently led the Joint Commission to declare the issue a top patient safety goal for medical centers.

Nationwide records deployment using patients’ biometrics will benefit from technological innovation, including new smartphones, tablets, commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) cameras, and small hand-held scanners.

Biometrics will routinely match patients to records when all facilities across the country have access to the necessary technology and hardware. Concerns include broadband access, network connectivity, initial costs, and hardware and software updates. For many smaller healthcare organizations and stand-alone physician practices, the price may be too great. Further, limited broadband access could make rural communities unable to implement the necessary software. Ultimately, government regulations and funding may be required.

Convenience Is a Key Benefit

Biometrics built into patient-owned devices – computers, smartphones, or tablets – enable early authenticated registration for healthcare visits. Pre-registering patients speeds the check-in process while reducing clerical time and errors. Making the healthcare process more convenient leads to better patient retention.

Since the pandemic, patient smartphones have played a vital role in remote visits with medical professionals. The practice, known as telehealth, enables medical staff to meet with patients in the safety of their homes. The biometrics included in smartphones provide a secure log-in method for all participants. Using biometrics, providers access patient records without the need for passwords, tokens, cards, and PINs.

Biometrics Helps Fight Insurance Fraud

Fraud is a significant concern for virtually every healthcare facility. Patients provide false information, including using another person’s insurance card to obtain medical services, prescriptions, or other benefits. Confirming a person’s identity using biometric technology eliminates fraud. Stopping fraudulent claims creates savings from lower insurance premiums and reduced penalties.

Other fraud-related savings result from biometric-based time and attendance platforms. Touchless platforms quickly authenticate workers’ identities at distances up to 24 inches while eliminating the ability of employees to clock in for each other in a costly payroll fraud known as buddy punching. Biometric time clocks also eliminate or reduce a hospital’s costs associated with managing payroll systems using barcodes, magnetic swipe or proximity cards and PINs.

Patient Privacy Is Better Protected

Biometrics help protect patient privacy. Patients knowingly opt-in as they register their biometric data. Patients choose which organizations have access to their records and for what purposes. Biometric templates are encrypted, so anyone hacking into a system would gain useless strings of code offering no access to patient information.

Biometrics helped make way for the secure development of electronic health records, a patient’s real-time, cloud-based medical history. Only patients and their authorized medical teams may view the records using biometrics.

Biometrics Help Healthcare Facilities Manage Controlled Substances

A relatively new federal law (2021) to combat the abuse of opioid prescription process requires physicians to send pharmacies digital, not paper, prescriptions for controlled substances and comply with the federal Drug Enforcement Administration’s rules and standards. The DEA requires two-factor authentication to authenticate the prescriber’s identity. Prescribers enter a random code generated by an available fob and then a biometric reader authenticates the person’s identity and permission to prescribe.

Also, biometrics added to moveable medication carts ensures only authorized staff has access, eliminating the value of borrowed or stolen access cards or shared PINs.

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