Edible Microchips to Monitor Drug Taking Habits
January 20th, 2012I wonder if people will tell Siri to remind them to take their digestible sensors?
Via: Independent:
An edible microchip that records the precise details of a patient’s pill regime will be available in Britain by the end of year following a commercial deal that opens the door to an era of digital medicines.
An American biomedical company has signed up with a British healthcare firm to sell digestible sensors, each smaller than a grain of sand, that can trigger the transmission of medical information from a patient’s body to the mobile phone of a relative or carer.
The aim is to develop a suite of “intelligent medicines” that can help patients and their carers keep track of which pills are taken at what time of day, in order to ensure that complex regimes of drugs are given the best possible chance of working effectively.
Ultimately, the plan is for every one of the many pills taken each day by some of the most chronically-ill patients, especially those with mental health problems, to be digitally time-stamped as they are digested within the body.
The healthcare company Lloyds- pharmacy said it intends to sell the edible microchips of Proteus Biomedical of California by the end of the year, as part of a trial to test whether NHS patients would be prepared to pay privately to ensure that they or their relatives take the right medicines at the right time.

Much of what graces the pages here at Cryptogon is the stuff of dystopian dreams.
For this nutjob, it is exactly HERE — on the threshold of the ultimate invasion of personal privacy — that things get nightmarish.
I mean downright f**king SCARY.
Just how long do you think it will be before they’re added to shelf-stocked processed “food” without any consent waiver whatsoever, under the rubrik of “consumer protection” and “product safety”?
While raw food and small-scale home production methods are outlawed. Food, the most radicalizing subject there is, as our host has been quite correctly asserting for some years now…