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Japanese City Tags Elderly Dementia Sufferers With Barcodes (japantimes.co.jp)

"The Japanese city of Iruma has introduced scannable adhesive barcodes to tag fingernails of senior citizens with dementia who are prone to getting lost as a way to help concerned families find missing loved ones," writes HughPickens.com, citing this article from Japan Times: The adhesive QR-coded seals for nails -- part of a free service launched last month and a first in the country -- measure just 1 cm (0.4 inches) in size. "Being able to attach the seals on nails is a great advantage," says a city worker. "There are already ID stickers for clothes or shoes but dementia patients are not always wearing those items." If an elderly person becomes disorientated, police will find the local city hall, its telephone number and the wearer's ID all embedded in the QR code. Japan is grappling with a rapidly aging population, with senior citizens expected to make up a whopping 40 percent of the population around 2060.
The article describes Japan as "a country where 4.8 million people aged 75 or older hold a license... Last month, police started offering discounts for noodles at local restaurants to elderly citizens who agreed to hand in their driving licenses."

6 of 115 comments (clear)

  1. How noble by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 3, Funny

    "Last month, police started offering discounts for noodles at local restaurants to elderly citizens who agreed to hand in their driving licenses."

    Yeah, they're banking on most of the elderly forgetting about the discount...

    --
    #DeleteChrome
  2. Re:Won't be allowed in America by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Funny

    "And the second beast required all people small and great, rich and poor, free and slave, to receive a mark on their right hand...."

    An obvious way to avoid this end-of-days prophecy would be to put these barcodes on the left hand.

  3. Re:Wut? by ASDFnz · · Score: 3, Funny

    >The adhesive QR-coded seals for nails
    Wut?

    THE ADHESIVE QR-CODED SEALS FOR NAILS

  4. Re:Won't be allowed in America by rworne · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Somehow I'd knew it'd come to this.

    This type of article is exactly what you'd expect from The Drudge Report, and /. seems to be a bit late with the news (it was on Drudge last week).

    Quite simply:

    Japan does not have the same cultural baggage about this you'd find in the west. There's no huge population that had the whole Bible and "Mark of the Beast" drummed into their heads. There's no conspiracy theorists. No persecution of Jews - even though they were an ally of Nazi Germany.

    In WWII, for all the things the Japanese did during the war, they did not share the Nazi's attitude towards Jews. Chiune Sugihara saved many European Jews during the war by giving them visas allowing them to escape Europe via Siberia. The government and the military pretty much ignored the orders to round up and exterminate Jews coming from Germany, with the one exception of a ghetto being built in Shanghai. The Japanese did not run any extermination campaigns and pretty much left Jews in their sphere of influence alone during the war.

    Because of this, the marking of individuals does not carry the same knee-jerk gut reaction there as it would here, and people in Japan would liken it to how Americans see the commonplace medical alert bracelets.

    --
    I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
  5. Compulsory barcoding isn't the American Way by golodh · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Damn right ! Compulsory tagging of demented old biddies is something they could only think if in Japan.

    In the US we'd never do anything like that. We're Christians ! We have Morals !

    Instead people will be told that, to better serve them and to keep medical costs down, all medicare recipients will be offered a chance to enroll in a programme that offers them expedited ambulance transport in case of accidents (they're easier to locate), emergency treatment in hospitals (because their medical data can be found more easily) plus waiver of the upcoming 1000$ a month service surcharge ... provided they consent to have an RFID chip implanted with their SSN.

    Those who elect not to participate in the programme will not be eligible for expedited ambulance transport, will experience a light delay upon admission until their medical data has been found and their insurance status clarified, and will be asked to pay the service surcharge.

    Net participation in the chipping program will therefore be 99%, of which 100% will be voluntary, you see?

    That's how you do things !

  6. 'seal' is the Japanese word for 'sticker' by darkitecture · · Score: 3, Informative

    "seal" is the Japanese word for "sticker" - it is a foreign loan word from English - it comes from the seal (sticker) that is usually found on an item you purchase. If you buy an item that comes in a box, it usually has a round adhesive sticker or similar that 'seals' the box, showing you it hasn't been opened before.