The AHA today shared with Congress its concern that the Federal Communications Commission may act Aug. 6 to permit unlicensed devices to operate on the same frequencies as hospitals’ Wireless Medical Telemetry Service. “The AHA requests a postponement of at least three months in the FCC’s consideration of these rules so that interested stakeholders can continue to work on a compromise that will ensure patient safety is not affected by unlicensed devices operating on the same bandwidth hospitals use for patient monitoring,” the association said in a statement submitted for a House Energy and Commerce subcommittee hearing on FCC oversight. The creation of the WMTS in 2000 “was a direct result of concerns raised over how electromagnetic interference with wireless medical telemetry equipment can affect patient safety,” AHA wrote, noting that there are now more than 360,000 WMTS patient monitors in U.S. hospitals. AHA and its American Society for Healthcare Engineering shared their concerns with the FCC in a July 21 letter, included in today’s statement.

Related News Articles

Headline
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Jan. 28 released a proposed rule that would update conditions for coverage for organ procurement organizations…
Headline
The AHA Jan. 28 released its 2026 Advocacy Agenda, containing the association’s key priorities for Congress, the administration, regulatory agencies and courts…
Headline
The Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General Jan. 27 released a bulletin addressing how direct-to-consumer drug programs can sell…
Headline
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Jan. 27 announced 15 drugs under Medicare Parts D and B selected for the third round of price negotiations.…
Headline
A KFF analysis released Jan. 28 found that Medicare Advantage insurers made nearly 53 million prior authorization determinations in 2024, an increase…
Headline
Ji Im, system senior director of community and population health at CommonSpirit Health, explores why seamless navigation, community partnerships and…