News | September 1, 2015

Wireless System Protects Valuable Medical Inventory Stored In Freezers And Coolers

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The WSG30 system from Sensaphone, a leader in monitoring technology, provides low-cost 24/7 remote monitoring of freezers and coolers that contain pharmaceutical products, medical specimens and research material. It is ideal for pharmacies, research labs, blood and tissue banks, hospitals, healthcare clinics, and biopharmaceutical companies.

The WSG30 system is a web-based monitoring system that uses wireless sensors to detect problems such as temperature changes (from -109 °F to 115 °F), humidity fluctuations, water leaks and power outages. It is ideal for locations where hard-wiring sensors is difficult or cost prohibitive. A single WSG30 unit can support up to 30 wireless sensors. When the WSG30 system detects a problem, it instantly sends alerts to up to 32 people by email, text message, SNMP or Modbus, enabling personnel can take the corrective action required to save critical inventory.

A new educational product video is available to watch here(http://www.sensaphone.com/products/sensaphone-wsg30-monitoring-system/videos.php).

“The WSG30 system helps lab, pharmacy and medical personnel maintain operational efficiency, uphold quality assurance and meet regulatory compliance,” said Dave DeFusco, vice president of engineering at Sensaphone.

Users of the WSG30 system can make programming changes, access status conditions and review data logs online through any web-enabled device. The system can log up to 67,000 records.

About Sensaphone
Sensaphone offers a comprehensive line of remote monitoring products that safeguard valuable assets by tracking critical environmental data such as temperature, humidity and power failures. Sensaphone products provide alerts and proactive monitoring data to homeowners and facility managers in many areas including telecommunications, oil and gas, water and wastewater, HVACR, agriculture, healthcare, data centers and greenhouses. More than 400,000 Sensaphone systems are in use today around the world, and they continue to be manufactured in the USA. For more information, visit www.sensaphone.com.

Source: Sensaphone