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Advantages of the HIBC Standard

It is the established and prevalent standard for healthcare product identification

The HIBC Standard was developed and is maintained by a consortium of expert, voluntary participants from all segments of the healthcare supply information channel, including healthcare facilities. This assures that the healthcare facility is enabled - not restricted - by the standard.
Although other bar code formats, such as the Uniform Product Code (U.P.C.) are found on healthcare products which are also sold in retail environments, they have limited usefulness within institutional environments.

It is designed to allow you to use your own product identifiers

The HIBC Standard accommodates virtually all types of product catalog identifiers because it allows both alphanumeric and variable length formats. Your records and systems are based on the identifiers that you have assigned to your items. As a consequence, if you already have an established internal identification scheme, you will most likely be able to use it within the HIBC Standard format with no required changes.

Bar code standards should not require you to abbreviate or convert your product/catalog identifiers. Abbreviation or conversion in your system will require costly data processing and programming time, as well as the costs of changing and updating labels, files, forms, catalogs, documentation and internal procedures.
Furthermore, errors made anywhere along the supply information channel during these conversion processes could not only be costly but dangerous as well. This is especially true in the event of necessary product tracking or recalls of healthcare products subject to regulation, accountability and government oversight.

There are several important characteristics of the HIBC Standard that allow you to control your own labels:

  • Alphanumeric capability - The HIBC Standard accommodates bar codes that can contain both letters and numbers. Since many product catalog identifiers include letters, conformance to an all numeric standard, such as the Uniform Product Code, requires that letters be converted to numbers.
  • Variable length of the product identification field - Healthcare product manufacturers have identifier systems that vary in line length. The HIBC Standard accommodates identifiers that can contain as many as 13 characters in any alpha or numeric combination, while other standards strictly limit product identifiers to exactly five all numeric characters. Furthermore, the HIBC 13 character length accommodates the use of meaningful sub fields within product identifiers.
  • Smaller symbol than a similar mass market bar code - For many years, the alphanumeric, multi length identifiers which are common in the healthcare industry could not be used in the retail environment, where Uniform Product Codes are prevalent. Recognizing the shortcomings of the restrictive format, EAN has developed a method for accommodating healthcare. However, the method requires 25% more label space than its HIBC counterpart and still requires a unique, all numeric code assigned to each item.

It is the only complete bar code solution for the entire supply chain

The HIBC Standard describes not only how to use bar codes to identify healthcare products, but also anything else a provider may choose to identify. Examples include patients, patient records, specimens, employees, implantables, procedures, assets, and purchase orders.
Other bar code standards provide no support for these specific healthcare applications. And since all HIBC bar codes were created to be compatible with each other, they form an integrated identification solution for the industry.

It incorporates all package sizes

The HIBC Standard describes how to bar code your products in all their packaging configurations, from the largest levels of packaging down to the smallest unit of use and unit dose packages. The HIBC Small Package Symbol is an innovation which has no counterpart in any other labeling standard. It allows the provider to capture information at the bedside, thereby increasing its value and usefulness within healthcare facilities.

As you will see from the following examples, using the HIBC bar code standard at all packaging levels requires less decision making and less technical support than other standards. That is because the HIBC bar code data structure remains consistent, regardless of the size of the package being labeled.
Mass market bar codes require you to use different types of formats, depending on packaging characteristics. These "adjustments" create additional overhead in your information system, because it must interpret each type.

Another benefit to using the consistent HIBC format is that even after bar codes are replaced with Optical Character Recognition (OCR), you will not have to change your data or go through a costly change in your system.

It is a consistent data format through each packaging level

The HIBC bar code data format is identical for both outer cases and Stock Keeping Units (SKUs). From one level of packaging to the next, the data elements begin and end at the same character positions, and either of two alphanumeric bar code symbologies, Code 39 or Code 128 can be used without the need to change any of the data.
By contrast, other market bar code standards require a change in symbologies at each packaging level. Depending on the characteristics of the package, you may not be able to use the same symbology on every packaging level.

If you plan to use a UPC bar code, you must evaluate packaging characteristics and market preferences to determine which of three symbologies is appropriate for each packaging level of your product. Depending on these factors, you may not be able to use the same symbology on every packaging level. And since each symbology has a slightly different data format, you and your customers' systems must be programmed to accept either identifier as representing the same item.