Some hospitals are using sensors on staff badges to track potential exposure to COVID-19 inside their facilities, according to an article on the CNBC website.
If a patient or staffer is diagnosed with the virus, the sensor system can pull up a map that shows who might have been in close proximity.
One of the first hospitals to use the system was Edward-Elmhurst Health in Illinois.
About 3,600 hospital workers at Edward-Elmhurst were equipped with the badge, including doctors, nurses and environmental service staff.
For Methodist Hospital of Southern California using the system is not just about keeping staff safe. Methodist is also working to reassure patients about coming back in.
Beyond infection control, location-based technology is used to tracking staff locations and movement to maintain a safer environment for staff, according to a blog on the Healthcare Facilities Today site.
Gaps in Nurses' Environmental Cleaning Knowledge Grow Amid Rising EVS Pressures
Ground Broken on the Southern Nevada Forensic Facility
Jackson Hospital Falls Victim to Third-Party Cybersecurity Incident
Making Healthcare Lighting Retrofits Work
Stadium Design is Reshaping Healthcare Facilities