Monday, May 23, 2005

Vein Entry Indicator Device (VEID™)

Filed under: Anesthesiology , Emergency Medicine , Medicine , Pediatrics

Vein Entry Indicator Device

VEID™ beeps when the IV needle is ... intravenous! Developed by an Israeli company Vascular Technologies Ltd., the electronic gadget makes a sound within 0.1 seconds of the needle's entrance into the vein's lumen.

Globes [online] reports:

Matalon [Eli Matalon, the company's founder-ed.], a former IDF medic, conceived the idea after realizing how difficult it was to insert a catheter into the vein of a battlefield casualty. Development of the product began in 1998, with the help of a team of eight engineers. Since then, Vascular Technologies has obtained US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval. Matalon says research conducted by his company at the Schneider Children's Medical Center, headed by Dr. Yaakov Katz, found that success rate for inserting a needle and catheter into children rose from 70% to 91%. Among patients with hard-to-find veins, the success rate rose from 26% to 90%.

The device, called Vein Entry Indicator Device (VEID), comprises a pressure sensor, signal processing unit, battery and miniature loudspeaker. It operates by sensing the change in pressure when the needle penetrates a vein. One tenth of a second later, the VEID beeps, completing the procedure. The VEID currently costs $120 per unit, and can be reused about 2,000 times. The cost of a VEID-catheter adaptor is an extra $0.20.

Vascular Technologies has also developed a special catheter that includes a VEID, thereby eliminating the cost of the adaptor. Because of these costs, Vascular Technologies' target market is patients with hard-to-find veins.

More at Vascular Technologies Ltd...

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replies: 4 comments
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I would like to take this opportunity to set the record straight on the upcoming shift to exclusive AMA member access to the American Medical News online edition (known to many of you as www.amednews.com ).

American Medical News is principally designed to be a newspaper offering useful news and information for and about physicians. In meeting that commitment to our readers, we report on a wide variety of topics, certainly among them the policies and activities of the AMA. We at AMNews hope that we have a valuable offering that would be of interest to virtually every practicing physician in America.

That said, the cost of presenting AMNews online is borne almost entirely by AMA members and is offset only somewhat by ad revenue. The decision was made, therefore, that members should benefit from their support by retaining access to the site. In the same spirit of rewarding those who underwrite the publication, paid print subscribers will also be allowed online access.

The target date for this change is June 1. The same access policies will very shortly apply to Avantgo readers of AMNews. Details are available at the AMNews Web site ( www.amednews.com/info ).

This is at odds with the information that appears on this site - www.MedGadget.com - and is attributed to an AMA service representative. I am looking into that matter now, although what I believe must have happened is that online access information for JAMA was given instead of information for AMNews. As for AMNews, there are no immediate plans for a $30 per day pass, nor will content be put up free after six months. I am sorry that there was apparently some confusion in this matter and will see that steps are taken so that accurate information will be provided to the service center to pass along to callers.

I should note that the AMA makes its advocacy and public health messages well known in a variety of ways, including a useful Web site ( www.ama-assn.org ). Those activities certainly will not cease.

One last thing: Those of us who produce AMNews in print and online enormously appreciate the support that AMA member physicians have shown over the years - it has been critical in maintaining the quality and usefulness of this publication. Now is the time to honor that debt in a tangible way.

Benjamin Mindell
Editor
American Medical News
www.amednews.com

ben.mindell@ama-assn.org


Posted by: Benjamin Mindell
on May 18, 2005 06:55 AM GMT

And so another newspaper suffles off to oblivion. I think they undervalue considerably the impact AMNews has on those the AMA would like to educate and influence, not to mention the publicity and awareness it generates for the AMA.


Posted by: Tim Gee
on May 19, 2005 08:09 AM GMT

You are absolutely right in your attitude .I think that a strong medical public response may reverse their decision .Thank you. D A Md


Posted by: d a
on May 20, 2005 09:51 PM GMT

Does the IV cannula meet OSHA guidelines regarding needlestick preventive?


Posted by:
on May 31, 2005 07:37 PM GMT