Data processing: financial – business practice – management – or co – Automated electrical financial or business practice or... – Health care management
Reexamination Certificate
2000-01-04
2002-06-04
Hafiz, Tariq R. (Department: 2166)
Data processing: financial, business practice, management, or co
Automated electrical financial or business practice or...
Health care management
C340S573100, C340S573300, C340S572100, C340S575000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06401071
ABSTRACT:
TECHNICAL FIELD
The present invention relates to systems and methods for automatically recording information relating to animal injections. More particularly, the present invention relates to a system and method for the combined, coordinated and automatic recordation of animal injection and identification information into a computer database.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
The regular and accurate administration of medicine to animals such as hogs and cattle is critical to the physical health of the animals, the resulting quality of the food products the animals deliver, and the sense of confidence the consumer has in the wholesomeness of those food products. These concerns are equally prevalent in both the cattle and hog industries, so it will be understood and appreciated that the following references to cattle, made for illustrative simplicity, are equally applicable to hogs.
In cattle, vast numbers of different, complex medicinal regimens have been developed and implemented in an effort to generate healthier animals that produce a safe, higher quality and quantity of beef. Because slaughtered beef is valued, in significant part, on its quality characteristics, and because the premium paid for high quality beef is high, those raising cattle for profit remain in search of the optimum medical regimen. Furthermore, pharmaceutical companies almost blindly spend billions of dollars developing individual medicines without the opportunity or resources to conduct a large-scale, extended length individual animal-based field tests. Compounding the problem is the fact that current systems and methods of record keeping among cattle ranchers and pork producers fail to provide the kind and volume of high quantity, high integrity information about the effects of various medicines on individual animals that would alert pharmaceutical developers of the most likely avenues for future successful drug development. Additionally, the growing concerns by consumers over the residual effects of the application of these medical treatments (as they relate to food safety) are not satisfied by any present method or system for medical treatment tracking or accounting.
The life of a head of cattle, from calf to slaughter, is in the range of one to two years (the period is less for hogs). Even in this relatively short period of time, the numbers of medical treatments a particular animal may receive are numerous. Additionally, the numbers of head of cattle a cattleman must raise to be profitable is generally large. Even if a cattleman endeavors to be diligent in the recordation of medicines given to individual cattle in his herd, the logistics of keeping such records make the task nearly impossible. First, animals as big as cattle are generally unappreciative of being stuck with the rather large needles typically used to inject medicines. Outweighed by a factor of three, four or five, the cattleman faces a battle just to deliver the injection. In addition to the physical struggle of man vs. animal, the conditions in many feedlots can be brutally inhospitable, especially in colder months and in the less temperate regions where cattle are typically raised. Finally, many cattle operations operate on tight profit margins, making the cost of additional labor for recording and maintaining recorded data (which may or may not have a positive effect on the price of the end product) prohibitive. Given these impediments, it is nearly impossible for a cattleman to simultaneously and accurately record information relevant to medicines and the animals the medicines are given to.
Numerous advances in the medicine delivery systems have helped cattlemen gain increased control over the historically chaotic task of administering medicines to animals. Notably, U.S. Pat. No. 5,961,494, which is specifically incorporated herein by reference, the inventor of which is also the inventor herein, discloses a marking syringe which, when actuated, simultaneously injects medicine into an animal and places a mark on the skin of the animal in proximity to the location of the injection. This marking syringe (known commercially as the “VAC-MARC”) cleverly reduces what was formerly a clumsy, two-step injecting and marking process into one step—the actuation of the syringe. Nonetheless, a cattleman using the marking syringe taught by the '494 patent and desiring to maintain records of injections would still have to somehow identify the animal and then manually record the fact that that particular animal had been injected.
Beyond the logistics of injecting and marking an animal, proper identification of the animal is also important. In this regard, it is well known to skilled cattlemen that an electronic identification device (EID) such as a bolus, ear tag, ear button or sub-cutaneous implant can be used to electronically identify animals such as cattle. One such boluses are well known in the industry and are produced by companies such as Allflex, USA, 2805 W. 12
th
Street, Dallas, Tex. 75211-0270, (972) 456-3686,
www.allflexusa.com
; Y-Tex Corporation, P.O. Box 1450, Cody, Wyo. 82414,
www.ytex.com
; and MagTrac, 3203 Third Avenue North, Billings, Mont. 59101, (406) 252-6690. Boluses such as those available thorough these channels can be swallowed by the animal and will remain inside the animal for a period of time. The bolus, if active, transmits a signal which can be read by a hand-held bolus reader. If passive, the bolus can be triggered to transmit an identification signal by a trigger signal transmitted by another signal source. Once the trigger signal is recognized by the bolus, the bolus transmits a responsive identification signal. Although such a bolus system can be useful to identify an animal, no current system exists by which a bolus and bolus receiver can be used to assist in the automatic tracking of the administration of medicines to animals.
Accordingly, there is a need for a system and method in which information relating to the administration of medicines to animals can be automatically recorded. There is a further need for a system and method of combining and coordinating the automatic recordation of injection and other medicine administration data with the automatic recordation of animal identification data. A still further need exists for a system and method for accomplishing the aforementioned needs and reliably and automatically recording the resulting information in a location and format in which it can be later used in the improved development of animal food products such as beef.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a novel system for automatic recordation of information relating to administration of medicines to animals.
A preferred embodiment of the invention implements a transmitting syringe for simultaneously injecting and marking an animal while transmitting, responsive to actuation of the transmitting syringe, a first signal containing information relating to the actuation of the transmitting syringe and the resulting injection of the animal. Additionally, an electronic identification device (EID) such as a bolus is attached to the animal for providing a tamperresistant electronic identification of the animal. Additionally, a receiver is implemented to receive both the first signal from the transmitting syringe and the electronic identification of the animal, as provided by the EID.
After receipt of the respective signals by a receiver, the signals are maintained in a computer database for review and analysis.
REFERENCES:
patent: 5251647 (1993-10-01), Velten
patent: 5288291 (1994-02-01), Teoh
patent: 5790047 (1998-08-01), Golan
patent: 5882338 (1999-03-01), Gray
patent: 6236318 (2001-05-01), Yang et al.
patent: 6270455 (2001-08-01), Brown
patent: 6271757 (2001-08-01), Touchton et al.
patent: WO 93/09837 (1993-05-01), None
Betsy Freese, Aug. 1991, Livestock Syringes, Successful Farming, Iowa edition, vol. 89, Issue 8, p. 48.
Agecom, Inc.
Hafiz Tariq R.
Lafferty Wm. Brook
Morgan Robert
Troutman Sanders LLp
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