Every year, hospitals worldwide face the critical challenge of
ensuring newborn safety. Infant abduction and moth-er-infant
mismatches can have devastating impacts on families and severely
damage a hospital's reputation.
Over 50% of infantabductions occur withinhospital
settings.
Even in 2024, a17-day-oldbaby boy was abducted froma
maternity ward in a hospitalin Paris.
It takes only 4 seconds for anabductor to escape a
roomwith an infant.
Take your infant security to the next level with Ocamar
By using RFlD/Bluetooth technology, Ocamar's infant security system
ofers lightweight and comfywearable tags for mothers and babies. The
system automatically detects unauthorized movements ormismatching,
ensures zone safety while providing nurses with seamless flexibility
to focus on patientcare.
Prevent Infant Abduction
Access control systems at wardentrances detect
unauthorizedremoval attempts, triggeringalarms and notifying
staff instantly.
Real-time Location Track
The system captures themovements ofinfants andmothers in
real-time with3Dmaps within seconds.
Prevent mother-infant mismatch
Smart tags immediately alert staffwhen infant and mother tag
datado not match, ensuring timelyintervention.
7 key Timely Alerts
Instant alerts are triagered forvarioussecurity risks
likeunauthorized leave, tagtampering.mismatches and more.
Explore How Ocamar Responds Instantly
Alarm devices are installed at each entrance and exit to accurately
determine whether the infant is beingcarried out of or into the ward
area, avoiding false alarms and ensuring system reliability.
7 key Timely Alerts
Mother-Infant Mismatch
Tag Damage
Low Battery
Tag Loose
Leave Timeout
Unauthorized Leave
Signal Lost
Unified Architecture, Single Deployment, Scalable Expansion
An easy-to-deploy, cost-effective solution designed for seamless
integration.Instead of traditional feeders, this system use Ethernet
cables to provide a hassle-free experiencefor hospital.
Installed on the hospital server, the infant Security System lets
nurses view the status of mothers, infants, and tags from the nurse
station's computer terminal.