The present invention is directed toward a device on which information may be recorded and the confidentiality and privacy of same may be maintained. More specifically, the invention is directed toward a writing tablet whereby the entry may be written, typed or otherwise noted and the writer may then manipulate the tablet so as to cover the portion on which the entry is located. In so doing, the invention assures the privacy and hence, the confidentiality of the information, which has become increasingly necessary, for example, in the medical services profession.
The present invention generally relates to a writing tablet used in various applications where the security or privacy of the information written therein is a concern. In recent years, as society has entered the “information age” there has arisen a compelling need for privacy, confidentiality ands security of the information gathered, especially that of an individual. One example of this issue is the privacy of information divulged by an individual to a medical services provider. Even the name of the patient should be maintained in a confidential manner.
In other contexts, however, privacy is of paramount import. In a government facility, or even a private business, often the visitor log must be kept confidential. In addition, much of the information maintained in these facilities must be maintained at a certain level of security clearance.
Prior devices have attempted to meet the needs of information privacy but have fallen short of the desired mark. U.S. Pat. No. 6,896,028, to Brennan describes a privacy screen often utilized in the medical services industry. Clearly, however, such a device only protects the patient during examination and fails to address the need to maintain the privacy of written or stored information.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,804,787 to Dick and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 2002/0123909 to Salisbury detail systems and devices which may be utilized in various industries to maintain and share records to afford privacy of the information. These systems and devices, however, deal with stored records, typically on a business computer system. They fail to address the rudimentary issue of privacy of information from the moment an individual enters a business or service provider.
A log ion and badge system is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,191,316 to Bolon. This device, is practical only in those circumstances wherein a visitor must wear an identification badge into the premises. Such a system would not be effective in a medical services operation, legal services provider or any other type of business where even the very identity of the individual should be confidential. Moreover, with this system, the used badges must be contained and are often disposed in a common receptacle. This defeats the purpose of privacy, as a curious entity need only peruse the trash to discern exactly who entered, as well as possibly the time and purpose of the visit.
What is needed is a security and privacy tablet wherein the information may be written or noted and then immediately covered to prevent subsequent disclosure, even if inadvertent. An additional feature which would be advantageous would be to maintain the tablet in a manner such that information could be thereafter maintained as confidential but stored in a desired manner, such as on a single entry sheet for any given day.
The present invention addresses and overcomes the need for records and written entries to be maintained in a confidential and private manner. By incorporating a rolling cover with a writing tablet, the present invention permits the user to liberally make notations on the tablet and thereafter cover as much of the information as desired to prevent display to curious eyes. For example, in one preferred embodiment, the invention may reside on the sign in counter of a medical services provider. As each patient signs in, the attendant may view their information and would thereafter roll the cover over the writing tablet so as to cover the entry made by the individual. As such, the service provider maintains a full log of its patients yet each entry is kept private and confidential.
In a typical embodiment of the present invention, it comprises a portable tablet body having a writing surface and a covering means for preserving privacy of those writings from future users. The writing surface may in itself comprise a writing medium upon which written or printed entries may be directly made, such as paper or a whiteboard, or may form a recessed area in which a separate writing medium such as a notepad may be removably retained, and the cover could be an attached rolling accordion device for covering a portion of the writing surface following the entry of a written or printed notation on the surface. By sequentially covering, for example, horizontal lines of the pad upon which new entries of written information are made, others could not discern what has been previously written or printed thereon by the prior user.
The present invention may be made and used in various configurations and sizes consistent with the anticipated use of the invention. The invention may be a full size paper tablet with a covering as described above, or, for example, it may be a small hand held screen on which the user inputs his or her information. It may include paper, a whiteboard, or any other type of surface on which material may be printed or written. It could also include some type of input means, such as a keyboard, with which the user of the invention could type or print the necessary information.
In addition, the present invention meets the need to incorporate a means by which the information may be organized and stored permanently in a desired manner. It may be designed and configured such that the information noted therein may be subsequently cataloged or permanently stored in any number of desired methods. As in the medical services provider example described above, the invention may include a paper medium with a desired layout. Following the close of business each day, the written sheets may be removed by an employee and filed in chronological order, if desired. In that way, the provider would be able to quickly locate and provide confirmation of a visit, or the lack thereof, if these facts were later questioned. This file could also serve as a secondary contact file with a follow up or tickler file for future appointments, mailing of reminders or other subsequent needs.
The present invention may include further privacy and security precautions, depending on the need for these advanced security levels. For example, the rolling cover could be fully automated such that upon completion of a written entry or based on a time sequence, the cover automatically advances to cover the entries. Whether manual or motorized, the cover mechanism may include a means by which reverse movement of the cover is restricted by some type of locking device. If desired, there would be a release button to disengage the locking means, for example, if a medical provider required access to an entry later in the day of the visit. This release may be as simple as a release button, or it may require insertion of a key, for the utmost restriction and security.
Finally, it is contemplated that any of the numerous outer surfaces of the hand held implement are well suited for and may be utilized for the imprinting of graphical or advertising material for the purposes of advertising or promotion.
These and other aspects of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The accompanying FIGS. depict embodiments of the present invention, and features and components thereof. With regard to means for fastening, mounting, attaching or connecting the components of the present invention to form the apparatus as a whole, unless specifically described otherwise, such means are intended to at least encompass conventional fasteners such as machine screws, machine threads, snap rings, hose clamps such as screw clamps and the like, rivets, nuts and bolts, toggles, pins and the like. Components may also be connected by friction fitting, snap fitting, adhesives, or by welding or deformation, if appropriate. Unless specifically otherwise disclosed or taught, materials for making components of the present invention are selected from appropriate materials such as metal, metallic alloys, natural or synthetic fibers, plastics and the like, and appropriate manufacturing or production methods including casting, extruding, injection molding and machining may be used.
Any references to front and back, right and left, medial and lateral, top and bottom, upper and lower, superior and inferior, and horizontal and vertical are intended for convenience of description, not to limit the present invention or its components to any one positional or spacial orientation.
The present invention involves a device for the writing or entry of information onto an information surface with the ability to thereafter cover the information so as to maintain confidentiality, security and privacy of the information. In a rudimentary embodiment, the present invention includes a coverable writing surface as shown in the included figures.
Referring to
The writing surface 3 in the preferred embodiment is to the bottom of a rectangular recessed area defined on the tablet body 1 which is sized and configured to removably retain therein an ordinary paper writing pad of standard size. As such, its replacement would be quite economical and future storage of the information on the pad could easily be accomplished, for example in a chronological file. In order to facilitate the removal of any notepad on the writing surface 3, the writing surface in this embodiment may further define a depression 3c at a lower marginal edge 3b thereof so that a user may insert her or his finger into the depression 3c and easily remove the notepad placed thereupon. The type of the writing surface 3 need not be so limited however. It may also be any surface or medium on which one may directly input, write, print or otherwise locate or enter information For example, the writing surface 3 may be a whiteboard material or it may be or incorporate a digital or electronic means such as a screen and/or keyboard. The concept of information privacy is equally applicable to these and many other types of configuration for the writing surfaces 3.
Referring now to
As shown in
Although not shown in the accompanying figures, the present invention may also include further features for enhanced security and privacy. For example, while the unit shown in the drawings would typically be manually operated, it is well suited to motorized or automated movement of the cover 2. To achieve such operation, a small motor would generally be placed in the area of the curved track 5 so as to drive the cover 2 over the writing surface 3 and return the cover 2 to its original position when desired. This motor may utilize a common component such as a sprocket to drive the cover 2.
Similarly, the rolling cover 2 and tablet body 1 may further include a locking means to prevent an unauthorized reversal of the cover 2. This locking means could be as simple as a push button, or it may include a key insertion requirement for the utmost security and restricted access to reversal.
The preferred embodiment may further include a means by which the covering of the writing surface 3 is automated. This movement may be timed or it may rely upon a relay or sensor associated with the equipment. For example, a pen and a docking station for the pen may be included with the enclosure 1. As the individual completes their entry of information and returns the pen to the docking station, a relay or sensor would be tripped to commence movement of the cover a specified distance so as to cover the newly written entry. Similarly, if a stylus point were used to make the entry, the writing surface 3 could include a sensing material to detect the completion of an entry, the absence of stylus pressure or the return of the stylus to a predetermined position, whereby the cover 2 movement would be commenced.
Regardless of the specific embodiment, the invention could typically also include additional features for user convenience, the desired privacy level or improved performance. The aforementioned are but a few examples of such additional features and by no means described for the purpose of limiting the contemplated scope of the invention to same.
Finally, it is contemplated that any of the numerous generally planar surfaces of the present invention are well suited for and may be utilized for the imprinting of graphical or advertising material 8 for the purposes of advertising or promotion. One of these surfaces would be the substantially planar surface 6 formed on the ridge 5b, as shown in
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060277804 A1 | Dec 2006 | US |