Patents by Inventor John J. Sacco

John J. Sacco has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 8114063
    Abstract: A hand-held RFID scanner appliance is employed to capture and display status of urinary catheters in hospital patients. The patients are provided with RFID wrist bracelets, and catheters are provided with RFID tags, each with a unique identification code. When the nurse performs a catheter insertion, the nurse scans the patient wrist bracelet with the appliance, then scans a selected catheter. After the catheter is successfully inserted, the catheter is scanned a second time. This creates a time stamp, and a data entry is recorded with the patient identity, presence of catheter, and time of insertion. The appliance is synchronized to the hospital server, and the catheterization status of the hospital patients is displayed for the medical practitioners. This process aids in preventing hospital-acquired urinary tract infections.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 7, 2008
    Date of Patent: February 14, 2012
    Inventors: John J. Sacco, Brett B. Greenky
  • Publication number: 20090315684
    Abstract: A hand-held scanner appliance is employed to capture and display status of various types of catheter devices that have been inserted in hospital patients. The nurse scans his or her staff ID coded device, then scans the patient's ID wrist bracelets, and scans a catheter-unique identification coded tag on the catheter device. When the nurse performs a catheter insertion, and the catheter is scanned, a data entry is recorded with the patient identity, presence of catheter, and time of insertion. An intelligent rules engine computes the target removal time for the catheter device, which is also displayed. An alert for each catheterization occurs prior to the target removal time. The appliance is synchronized to the hospital server, and the catheterization status of the hospital patients is displayed for the medical practitioner. This process aids in preventing hospital-acquired infections.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 5, 2009
    Publication date: December 24, 2009
    Inventors: John J. Sacco, Brett B. Greenky
  • Publication number: 20090281523
    Abstract: A hand-held RFID scanner appliance is employed to capture and display status of urinary catheters in hospital patients. The patients are provided with RFID wrist bracelets, and catheters are provided with RFID tags, each with a unique identification code. When the nurse performs a catheter insertion, the nurse scans the patient wrist bracelet with the appliance, then scans a selected catheter. After the catheter is successfully inserted, the catheter is scanned a second time. This creates a time stamp, and a data entry is recorded with the patient identity, presence of catheter, and time of insertion. The appliance is synchronized to the hospital server, and the catheterization status of the hospital patients is displayed for the medical practitioners. This process aids in preventing hospital-acquired urinary tract infections.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 7, 2008
    Publication date: November 12, 2009
    Inventors: John J. Sacco, Brett B. Greenky
  • Patent number: 5061248
    Abstract: A needle shield that can be clamped about the line of a flow path used to administer IV fluids to a patient immediately beneath an insertion port to protect a health care worker from receiving acccidental needle wounds.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 4, 1990
    Date of Patent: October 29, 1991
    Inventor: John J. Sacco
  • Patent number: 5059173
    Abstract: The gravity flow fluid path for administering IV fluids to a patient is disclosed in which multiple IV fluids can be delivered at different flow rates to the patient without having to replace the administration set up.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 28, 1990
    Date of Patent: October 22, 1991
    Inventor: John J. Sacco