After their child goes missing, parents frantically post missing-person notices, share updates on social media, and call the police. The police collect DNA samples for comparison, but the results can take days or even longer. Every agonizing minute is torture for the family.

Is there a way to identify a child and locate their parents in just a few seconds?
The answer is: footprints. They form between the 10th and 15th weeks of fetal development, remain unchanged throughout a person’s life, and serve as a child’s “ID card.”

Xin Qihang’s solution provides protection from the moment of birth. After a newborn arrives, a nurse uses the FAP60 fingerprint and palmprint scanner to capture the infant’s footprint in 0.25 seconds and generate an electronic record. At the same time, the parents’ fingerprints are captured and linked to the infant’s footprint to create a “family identity record,” which is encrypted and stored in the public security database to accompany the child throughout their life.

If a child goes missing, the police collect their fingerprints at the scene and upload them to the system—within seconds, the system compares the data against the database; if a match is found, the parents are notified immediately. From “days” to “seconds,” technology ensures that reunions no longer take forever.
The FAP60 uses glass-based infrared liveness detection with 1600×1500 ultra-high-definition imaging. It can recognize both dry and wet fingers, as well as cracked or dirty ones, and cannot be fooled by fake fingerprints. Certified by the Ministry of Public Security, ensuring secure and reliable data.
Every child deserves a “Fingerprint Home Pass.” From “Bringing Children Home” to “Instant Return via Fingerprint”—Xin Qihang transforms days of searching into seconds of reunion.
