<<http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/15/health/15drug.html?ei=5006&en=9dde73a73ae20a7e&ex=1101186000&partner=ALTAVISTA1&pagewanted=print&position=>>

Tiny Antennas to Keep Tabs on U.S. Drugs By GARDINER HARRIS
 
The Food and Drug Administration and several major drug makers are expected to 
announce initiatives today that will put tiny radio antennas on the labels of 
millions of medicine bottles to combat counterfeiting and fraud. 

Among the medicines that will soon be tagged are Viagra, one of the most 
counterfeited drugs in the world, and OxyContin, a pain-control narcotic that 
has become one of the most abused medicines in the United States. The tagged 
bottles - for now, only the large ones from which druggists get the pills to 
fill prescriptions - will start going to distributors this week, officials 
said. 

Experts do not expect the technology to stop there. The adoption by the drug 
industry, they said in interviews, could be the leading edge of a change that 
will rid grocery stores of checkout lines, find lost luggage in airports, 
streamline warehousing and add a weapon in the battle against cargo theft. 

"It's basically a bar code that barks," said one expert, Robin Koh, director of 
applications research at the Auto-ID Labs of the Massachusetts Institute of 
Technology. The technology, Mr. Koh said, could "make supply chains more 
efficient and more secure." 

...
Wal-Mart and the Department of Defense have already mandated that their top 100 
suppliers put the antennas on delivery pallets beginning in January. Radio tags 
on vehicles and passports could become a central tool in government efforts to 
create a database to track visitors to the United States. And companies are 
rushing to supply scanners, computer chips and other elements of the technology.

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