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5 Reasons To Use A Visitor Hospital Badge for your Hospital Visitor Identification

Last updated: March 27, 2026
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Hospital visitor management is essential for today’s facilities. The concept behind utilizing visitor management software is the desire to keep patients, employees, visitors, and the facility itself safe from harm. Hospitals should know who is entering and exiting their facility to protect from liability if an incident occurs. The hospital setting provides some unique reasons why using visitor hospital badges and a visitor management system is more critical for security than other types of industries.

1. Hospitals are filled with vulnerable people

It makes perfect sense that the majority of people in hospitals aren’t at their best. Obviously, patients are in the facility because there is something medically wrong. The people who are visiting the patients are feeling empathy for their friend or loved one, distracted from their regular daily life, and perhaps are even under stress because of the patient’s stay. Plus, hospital employees are some of the most stressed and tired workers in any industry with pressure to take care of sick patients and work long hours. All of these groups of people in hospitals have other things on their minds besides their personal safety. The vulnerability of all types of people in the hospital makes it important that these people are kept safe at all times and documenting visitors is a good first step in security.

2. Increased security confidence

Using visitor hospital badges allows hospitals to know who is in the facility. If an unknown person is walking down a hallway and they are wearing a visitor badge, hospital employees know that person has been registered and is allowed to be there. The visitor badge is a great visual alert. To improve that visual alert, many hospitals are using expiring visitor badges that change color overnight to prevent badge reuse. The visitor hospital badge looks like a regular badge while the visitor is in the facility. However, by the next day, a bright pink “VOID” shows on the badge, meaning the visitor should be questioned about their presence in the building.

expiring visitor badges

When a hospital’s policy is to have employees and visitors wear hospital badges, anyone who isn’t is recognized as an unauthorized visitor and stopped before they get too far.

3. Identify various types of visitors

With a little planning, hospitals can utilize their visitor badges to identify the specific type of visitor any given person is. Much like the badge being a visual alert (mentioned above), the badge can convey other specifics, like the type of visitor the person is. Hospitals can consider these types of commonly used titles for badges:

  • Visitor
  • Vendor
  • Contractor
  • Outpatient
  • Volunteer
  • Clergy

Security personnel (or any vigilant hospital employee) can know at a glance and question if a volunteer is found in the boiler room or a vendor is found in the emergency room. On the occasion a visitor is in scrubs, a visitor badge will also help identify the visitor as opposed to mistaking them for a hospital employee.

When a hospital has a visitor identification policy with visitor badges that specify where a visitor is allowed to go (such as the Maternity floor or ICU), then the visitor has much less freedom to go in areas of the facility where they don’t belong.

4. Hospitals usually have multiple points of entry

In the past, hospitals were single buildings. Having to manage security for a single building was a lot easier that the current hospital facility model. Today, bustling hospitals are more like college campuses than single-building operations. Each part of these campuses comes with its own entrances and exits, creating a variety of opportunities for people with negative intentions to enter the facility. Occasionally, these multiple campus buildings are connected by walkways and/or tunnels, and hospitals can’t afford to have even one unguarded point of entry. With so many people coming and going, visitor identification is key. Multiple entries means multiple threats, so staffing each door with a visitor management system and requiring visitors wear visitor badges are great processes for decreasing vulnerabilities.

5. Hospitals are reliant on successfully welcoming guests

If a business decides one day that it isn’t accepting visitors anymore, it’s not likely to create a stir. However, if a hospital decided that guests were no longer welcome, it may have trouble getting patients. The hospital reputation will decline (especially in this age of social media) and most likely will cease to be in business in the near future. You can’t have a hospital without having visitors. Since visitors are a necessary element of any hospital setting, using a visitor hospital badge to identify everyone makes good business sense (and security sense too).

hospital visitor management, hospital visitor management system

THRESHOLD provides “security you can see,” with badge products that show who is authorized to be in your facility — and who is not. Self-expiring visitor badges change color overnight, so they can’t be reused. With our support, you will ensure that the only people who cross your threshold are those that belong there.

Picture of Paul Kazlauskas

Paul Kazlauskas

Paul joined Threshold in 2001 after graduating from Bryant University. After a few years in the Sales Department, Paul transitioned to the Marketing Team in 2005. Over the years, Paul has worked on developing & launching new products, been the designer of customer communication emails, and launched numerous web sites for the Threshold product line. Since 2011, Paul Kazlauskas has been deeply involved in the security and visitor management industry, writing extensively about emerging technologies, market trends, and best practices that shape the field. In addition to his editorial experience, he actively represents his organization at major security trade shows and in-person events, where he connects with industry leaders, explores innovative solutions, and strengthens relationships with customers. His work reflects a hands-on understanding of both the business and technical sides of the industry, earned through years of direct engagement and thought leadership within the security community. A native of Connecticut, Paul enjoys outdoor activities like kayaking, golfing & hiking, as well as spending time with his son and coaching his soccer and baseball teams.
Picture of Paul Kazlauskas

Paul Kazlauskas

Paul joined Threshold in 2001 after graduating from Bryant University. After a few years in the Sales Department, Paul transitioned to the Marketing Team in 2005. Over the years, Paul has worked on developing & launching new products, been the designer of customer communication emails, and launched numerous web sites for the Threshold product line. Since 2011, Paul Kazlauskas has been deeply involved in the security and visitor management industry, writing extensively about emerging technologies, market trends, and best practices that shape the field. In addition to his editorial experience, he actively represents his organization at major security trade shows and in-person events, where he connects with industry leaders, explores innovative solutions, and strengthens relationships with customers. His work reflects a hands-on understanding of both the business and technical sides of the industry, earned through years of direct engagement and thought leadership within the security community. A native of Connecticut, Paul enjoys outdoor activities like kayaking, golfing & hiking, as well as spending time with his son and coaching his soccer and baseball teams.

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Sheryl Kantor

Financial Analyst

Sheryl joined Threshold in April 2025. She earned her Bachelor’s degree in Accounting from Central CT State University in 2001 and went on to build a career spanning more than 20 years in regulated private water utilities. While Threshold operates in a very different industry, Sheryl brings extensive financial expertise and a strong foundation in regulatory environments. In her role, she is responsible for all accounting functions at Threshold, including the preparation of monthly financial statements, corporate reporting, cost analysis and the development of annual budgets. She also oversees the finance department, ensuring accuracy, efficiency, and strategic financial management across the organization.

Sheryl enjoys spending quality time with her sons and her dog, Ozzy. She has a passion for cooking and baking, and loves attending country music concerts whenever she gets the chance. In her free time, she’s happiest outdoors – whether that’s hiking scenic trails or relaxing by a cozy fire.

Stacy Keefer

Production Manager

Stacy Keefer is a results-driven operations and production professional with over 25 years of experience improving workflows, managing production schedules, and supporting business growth. She is known for streamlining processes, coordinating with vendors, and delivering projects efficiently and on spec. Stacy brings a practical, hands-on approach to solving operational challenges and driving performance across teams.

When not working, she can be found fishing, hiking, or enjoying a round of disc golf.

Aris DiGiulio

Senior Product Manager

Aris DiGiulio joined Threshold as Senior Product Manager in 2024, bringing more than a decade of diverse experience in brand management, new product development, consulting and entrepreneurship. In this role, Aris leads the Product team in all innovation efforts while supervising management of the existing product portfolio. He also directs the support and development team for eVisitor, Threshold’s successful proprietary visitor management software used by organizations to streamline access management.

With prior experience at large global organizations including Diageo, Schick and Kobrand Corporation, Aris is focused on driving innovation while maintaining a high level of product quality and customer support that defines the Threshold organization. This has resulted in multiple new products and software enhancements that have delivered solutions and improved experiences for businesses, visitors, contractors and employees.

Aris earned his bachelor’s degree from Stony Brook University and an MBA from Fordham University’s Gabelli School of Business. He resides in Fairfield, Connecticut and enjoys spending time with his wife and two daughters.

Noel Turner

Director of Sales and Marketing

Noel Turner is a seasoned veteran in the visitor management marketplace. She is currently the Director of Sales and Marketing for Threshold Visitor Systems, an Avery Products Company. Her employment there spans twenty years, the last eight in her current position.

Her degree in communications and her industry experience have served her well in leadership roles with the ASIS and ISDA (Identification Security Dealers Association), leading national trade organizations in the security marketplace. She’s an industry expert in bringing together businesses, which collectively and efficiently solve the end user’s visitor security issues and problems with the appropriate level of sophistication, technology and cost.

In her free time, Noel loves to go camping and spend time with her dog.

Suzanne Corcoran

General Manager

Suzanne Corcoran joined Threshold in 2001 after a career in network radio sales and promotion. Starting in Sales, she quickly became part of a new Product Development team, using her marketing and project management skills to help create and launch the original Visitor Badge product line.

Over the years, she has added various management responsibilities from Production to Finance, leading to her current role as General Manager. Suzanne and the Threshold leadership team are dedicated to growth via new product development, enhanced web and digital marketing, high quality propriety products and superior service to customers and partners alike, all while fostering a collaborative and rewarding workplace culture.

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The Red Flag feature has been improved! Now you can set your system to not print a badge for any visitor record that has been previously marked with a Red Flag. The attendant will be prompted to redirect the visitor according to your security protocol.

Special New Feature: Red Flag, No Badge

Flag alertsIt’s easy and free to activate this feature. Simply call us and ask for “Red Flag, No Badge” to be turned on. Once it’s on, the above pop-up will come up when a red flagged visitor comes back. No badge will print and the attendant will need to follow the facility’s policy for handling red flagged visitors.

The flags and notes only show to the desk attendant, not the visitor. 

Please contact eVisitor Support with any questions on how to use Flags in your system. 

If you have seen a special offer in our advertising, mailings, or emails, this is the area to enter the Promo Code to receive that offer. After you’ve entered the Promo Code, click “Update cart” for the code to take effect. If you have any questions, please call 1-800-243-1969.