Quote Of The Year

Timeless Quotes - Sadly The Late Paul Shetler - "Its not Your Health Record it's a Government Record Of Your Health Information"

or

H. L. Mencken - "For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong."

Friday, December 14, 2012

System Selection Processes Need To Work Well To Reduce The Risk of Health IT Implementation.

The following appeared a little while ago:

Picking the Right Partner for an HIT Adventure

NOV 1, 2012
Health care provider organizations buying an information system go through a long process to select the right vendor, but oftentimes a single incident can make a difference in sealing the deal-or killing it.
For Kerry Noble, CEO at Pemiscot Memorial Health Systems in Hayti, Mo., his confidence in a particular electronic health records vendor went way up when Ramsey Evans, CEO of Prognosis Health Information Systems, wrote in the contract that he'd refund the cost of the software if the hospital did not attest to EHR meaningful use within 120 days of go-live. Noble then went to a local bank and got financing to cover the costs of implementation through attestation-with Prognosis' guarantee as collateral. The first meaningful use incentive payment exceeded the cost of the EHR by about $500,000, Noble says.
At 48-bed Sabine Medical Center in Many, La., the willingness of one vendor to make promises-and put them in writing-helped close the deal when the center purchased its first emergency department information system, says Karen Ford, R.N., chief nursing officer. Cost is-and always will be-a big part in the vendor selection process Ford says. But in this case, veEDIS Clinical Systems of Plantation, Fla., promised specific levels of 24x7 on-site, peer-to-peer support by nurses, physicians, and technicians for the first two weeks after go-live. "That is a big deal when you're trying to transition an emergency room," Ford says.
In many I.T. purchases, the final decision really comes down to cost, and at the end of the process there's typically not huge differences between the final candidates. But there are moments in the vendor selection process when the light goes on for an organization that a vendor isn't the right one. In particular, site visits to existing clients of the vendors provide valuable insight if done right, says Paul Burke, director of revenue cycle technology at IMA Consulting in Chadds Ford, Pa. He specializes in vendor selection for financial and enterprise resource planning applications.
Burke advises I.T. decision-makers to insist on a site visit to a hospital with a similar environment and network infrastructure, the same core information system and as close to the same integration package as their facility, Burke advises. If buying contract management software, you don't want to be steered to a McKesson hospital when you are using Siemens.
Bring super-users on the site visit as they know the troublesome day-to-day issues that users of your current software have. The super-users can find common ground with peers and get assurances on how they rectified similar issues. Also, start negotiations before the site visits to keep the sales cycle from going any longer than necessary, but only giving vendors information you think they need at that point, he suggests.
A great deal more is found here:
Most useful is the last section of the article covering a game plan for system selection in a hospital. Reading this section through it really seemed to cover most of the bases. A must read for those in the market for new or replacement systems.
David.

Thursday, December 13, 2012

It Looks Like Patient Portals Are Not Exactly Proven So Far. Did We Jump The Gun On An Unproven Approach?

The following came up a few days ago.

Monday, November 26, 2012

The Impact of Electronic Patient Portals on Patient Care: A Systematic Review of Controlled Trials

From the report: "Modern information technology is changing and provides new challenges to health care. The emergence of the Internet and the electronic health record (EHR) has brought new opportunities for patients to play a more active role in his/her care. Although in many countries patients have the right to access their clinical information, access to clinical records electronically is not common. Patient portals consist of provider-tethered applications that allow patients to electronically access health information that are documented and managed by a health care institution. Although patient portals are already being implemented, it is still unclear in which ways these technologies can influence patient care." Read more
Here is the abstract.

The Impact of Electronic Patient Portals on Patient Care: A Systematic Review of Controlled Trials

Elske Ammenwerth1, PhD; Petra Schnell-Inderst2,3, PhD; Alexander Hoerbst4, PhD
1Institute of Health Informatics, UMIT - University for Health Sciences, Medical Informatics and Technology, Hall in Tyrol, Austria
2Institute of Public Health, Medical Decision Making and Health Technology Assessment, UMIT - University for Health Sciences, Medical Informatics and Technology, Hall in Tyrol, Austria
3Oncotyrol Center for Personalized Cancer Medicine, Innsbruck, Austria
4Research Division for eHealth and Telemedicine, UMIT - University for Health Sciences, Medical Informatics and Technology, Hall in Tyrol, Austria
Corresponding Author:
Alexander Hoerbst, PhD

Research Division for eHealth and Telemedicine
UMIT - University for Health Sciences, Medical Informatics and Technology
Eduard-Wallnoefer-Zentrum 1
Hall in Tyrol, 6060
Austria

ABSTRACT

Background: Modern information technology is changing and provides new challenges to health care. The emergence of the Internet and the electronic health record (EHR) has brought new opportunities for patients to play a more active role in his/her care. Although in many countries patients have the right to access their clinical information, access to clinical records electronically is not common. Patient portals consist of provider-tethered applications that allow patients to electronically access health information that are documented and managed by a health care institution. Although patient portals are already being implemented, it is still unclear in which ways these technologies can influence patient care.
Objective: To systematically review the available evidence on the impact of electronic patient portals on patient care.
Methods: A systematic search was conducted using PubMed and other sources to identify controlled experimental or quasi-experimental studies on the impact of patient portals that were published between 1990 and 2011. A total of 1,306 references from all the publication hits were screened, and 13 papers were retrieved for full text analysis.
Results: We identified 5 papers presenting 4 distinct studies. There were no statistically significant changes between intervention and control group in the 2 randomized controlled trials investigating the effect of patient portals on health outcomes. Significant changes in the patient portal group, compared to a control group, could be observed for the following parameters: quicker decrease in office visit rates and slower increase in telephone contacts; increase in number of messages sent; changes of the medication regimen; and better adherence to treatment.
Conclusions: The number of available controlled studies with regard to patient portals is low. Even when patient portals are often discussed as a way to empower patients and improve quality of care, there is insufficient evidence to support this assumption.
(J Med Internet Res 2012;14(6):e162)
doi:10.2196/jmir.2238
---- End Extract.
I think we need to wait for some more evidence but given the restricted functionality of the NEHRS / PCEHR I hardly expect to see useful proof of value soon!
David.

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Good Heavens - It Seems NEHTA Is Hiring Again - And What Are They Seeking? Policy Advice!

This advertisement appeared a few days ago.

Senior Policy Advisor

NEHTA - Sydney Area, Australia

Job Description

The Policy team at NEHTA are vital in developing and delivering consistent national policy frameworks which support eHealth into the future. The Policy team provide specialist advice on governance issues and key to the role is to engage with jurisdictional representatives, consumers and healthcare providers.
As Senior Policy Advisor you will provide specialist policy advice to key stakeholders internally and externally.  In this busy role you will work closely with other quality assurance teams, as well as product developers and implementation support teams and assist with a variety of ehealth projects and initiatives.
To be successful in the role you will have experience in the health sector, in policy and/or operational roles.  You will have experience in identification of risks and issues and have the ability to develop sound, implementable recommendations for action.   You will possess superior communication skills and must have experience developing policy briefings and recommendations, and research reports for senior audiences. 
If you are a team player, self-motivated, enjoy working in a close team, and have a passion for health reform then this role will be well suited to you.
NEHTA’s goal is to attract high performing, experienced individuals looking to be involved in a unique and exciting venture. We are committed to providing a work environment where people enjoy what they do and are motivated to achieve.
For further information regarding the position and NEHTA please visit our careers page at www.nehta.gov.au and apply online.

Desired Skills & Experience

1. Critical analysis of strategic & operational policy;
2. Identification of potential risks & the development of mitigation strategies;
3. systemic approaches to national & jurisdictional projects;
4. Sound understanding of the business drivers of government; and
5. Understanding of the application of strategic policy to operations
6. Understanding of risk management and public sector governance.
7. Effective priority management & problem solving skills
8. Effective communication and working relationships with colleagues and stakeholders.

Company Description

The National E-Health Transition Authority Limited (NEHTA) was established by the Australian, State and Territory governments to develop better ways of electronically collecting and securely exchanging health information.  NEHTA is the lead organisation supporting the national vision for e-health in Australia. 
You can read all about it here:
So we have a paragon of Governance failure wanting to do better. All I can say that any action in isolation on Leadership and Governance from NEHTA merely reflects how clueless they are.
What is needed is a ‘root and branch’ review of Governance of e-Health in Australia and the design of a practical, workable and sensible approaches to moving forward. The faux consultation, government secrecy and lack of industry clinical consultation just has to end.
My suspicion is that it will take a change of Government and DoHA leadership to see the required level of change.
David.

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

CIO Magazine Provides Some Gartner Comment On E-Health Trends. PHRs Not Favoured.

The following appeared a little while ago:

Big Data, EHR Driving Healthcare IT Innovation

– Brian Eastwood, CIO
December 05, 2012 
Healthcare IT adoption in the United States today is largely defined by requirements to demonstrate the meaningful use of electronic heath record software by 2014.
Gartner says that EHR adoption is a "trigger" for data analytics, improved care management and other innovations. However, these initiatives will take time, the analyst firm notes in a recent report, "Hype Cycle for Healthcare Provider Applications and Systems."

Big Data Benefits Depend on EHR Systems Evolution

This type of innovation is not necessarily unique to the healthcare industry, says Vi Shaffer, a Gartner analyst and the hype cycle report's primary author. Retailers, for example, are also placing an increased emphasis on customer engagement and data processing technology. The difference, she says, is both the complexity of the data—think of an intensive care unit (ICU), where information about patient vital signs, drug dosages and even room temperature is constantly updated and sent to the computer at the nurses' station—and the fact that, until recently, all this information was only on paper.
----- Lots omitted including key trends to embrace

4 Healthcare IT Trends to Avoid

The following types of applications, however, may not be worth a healthcare CIO's immediate attention:
  • Patient decision aids and personal health management tools. These appear largely in the form of interactive apps that educate patients or help them make care decisions, such as seeking treatment or undergoing surgery for a particular ailment. However, Gartner says their effectiveness is questionable and adoption remains low.
  • Personal health records. The concept is attractive, as it gives patients ownership of their data, but poor usability and vendor disinterest have hindered adoption. Only with a government mandate, as is the case in Australia, does PHR adoption seem to catch on, Gartner says. Patient portals, which connect patients directly to their caregivers, are more popular.
  • The patient-centered medical home. There's been much discussion of making this a reality, especially in light of the accountable care organization model touted by healthcare reform and examples such as the "granny pod," but information exchange challenges and a reimbursement model unfavorable to insurers hinder adoption.
  • Patient self-serve kiosks. While these can streamline patient registration and payment collection, the ROI isn't there, Gartner says. Most organizations are better off focusing on meaningful use or the conversion to the ICD-10 code set, which must be done by Oct. 1, 2014.
.....
Read the full article here:
I especially found number 2 of the items to avoid interesting. Two points:
1. I am not sure Gartner is up to date on just how much adoption the PCEHR has achieved.
2. Again we have clear suggestions that the PCEHR is not what the patients want.
They are right however to have things like the PCEHR and PHRs as an avoid right now!
Oh well!
David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 148 – Results – 11th December, 2012.

The question was:

Will 2013 Be A Better Year For e-Health Than 2012 Has Been?

For Sure 16% (9)
Possibly 13% (7)
Neutral 9% (5)
Probably Not 38% (21)
Definitely Not 20% (11)
I Have No Idea 4% (2)
Total votes: 55
Very interesting.  Only a limited amount of optimism seem to be about at present.
Again, many thanks to those that voted!
David.

Monday, December 10, 2012

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 10th December, 2012.

Here are a few I have come across the last week or so.
Note: Each link is followed by a title and a few paragraphs. For the full article click on the link above title of the article. Note also that full access to some links may require site registration or subscription payment.

General Comment

This is the last week of the year for blog. We presently plan to have a restful Christmas and to just watch and wait to see what comes in 2013. Of course major breaking news will be covered where relevant.
Have a good break! After this week the blog will be back mid to late January.
-----

Top political issues of 2012

27th Nov 2012
We count down the major political issues of the year that was.
(See other 8 topics on the site)
2. Medicare Locals
AFTER the government’s budget decision to axe Practice Incentive Program payments for after-hours care and instead hand administration of after-hours funding over to individual Medicare Locals, peak GP groups complained the measure would jeopardise successful existing roster arrangements.
With the change due to come into effect from July next year, MO understands at least two metropolitan MLs plan to use the exact same modelling as Medicare to determine how much to give practices for after-hours service delivery.
However with the arrangements ultimately decided by each individual ML, questions remain over how existing services will be maintained or matched nationwide.
1. E-health
AFTER a controversy-marred build-up, the federal government’s Personally Controlled e-Health Records system launched on 1 July with little fanfare or functionality.
After much lobbying by peak doctors’ groups, the government finally agreed to allow GPs working on establishing the electronic records to bill Medicare for their time. However, with just 17,152 patient records established – as of 16 November – the impact of the initiative is yet to reach anything approaching the system’s 500,000 sign-up capacity.
Meanwhile, the government’s decision to limit rebates for telehealth consultations to locations deemed remote enough has been slammed by a number of now ineligible GPs, who have argued the scheme would provide significant benefit to their less well-off patients.
-----

AMA wants tight e-health software deadline extended

4th Dec 2012
THE AMA has called for a delay in changes to the e-health Practice Incentive Program (PIP) ahead of a February deadline for practices to have their software up to date.
By 1 February, all practices wanting to claim the e-PIP will have to have verified their software's compliance, a deadline the AMA said was too narrow for many.
NeHTA last week confirmed an online application process for practices to apply for Department of Human Services National Authentication Service for Health – known as HPI-O certificates and which provide validation that a practice's software is compliant with the requirements – would not include the newly expanded terms and conditions until 10 December.
-----

Getting ready for the PIP eHealth incentive and PCEHR

30/11/2012
The AMA has developed a PIP eHealth and PCEHR checklist to assist members and their practices to prepare for the Practice Incentives Program (PIP) eHealth incentives and the Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record (PCEHR).
------

New app helps you locate a doctor wherever you are

A summer holiday with a child who falls ill can make even the most relaxed parent groan. But a new website and smartphone app now shows you the way to the nearest GP or after-hours pharmacy with just a few taps on a screen.
6 December 2012
A summer holiday with a child who falls ill can make even the most relaxed parent groan. But a new website and smartphone app now shows you the way to the nearest GP or after-hours pharmacy with just a few taps on a screen.
Health Minister Tanya Plibersek today launched a $4.9 million internet directory which shows the addresses, opening times and phone numbers of GP clinics, pharmacies, emergency departments and hospitals in towns and cities across Australia.
Ms Plibersek said the National Health Services Directory was a free service developed to provide patients accurate information about local health services wherever they are, whenever they want.
-----

Health services go mobile

The Federal Government has launched a smartphone app that enables users to find doctors, pharmacies, hospitals and emergency departments Australia-wide
A new website and smartphone application enables users to find their nearest doctor, after-hours pharmacy, hospital and emergency department in towns and cities across Australia, federal health minister Tanya Pilbersek announced yesterday.
The government spent $4.9 million developing the National Health Services Directory at www.nhsd.com.au, which enables users to search for the addresses, phone numbers and opening times of health services, particularly when they are in an unfamiliar area.
The public can use a web-connected PC or download the app onto an Apple iPhone or Android device. Once a location is entered into the directory, services are listed and their locations can be viewed on Google Maps, making them easy to find.
-----

Now Qld Health bungles e-health program

blog It shouldn’t come as much of a surprise, given the ongoing billion dollar disaster that is Queensland Health’s payroll systems overhaul, but news has emerged that the department is also suffering problems with its electronic health program, with the first two tranches of the initiative being at least two years late. The news comes care of a report published last week by the state’s long-suffering Auditor-General (PDF), who, it must be said, has seen this kind of thing many times before. Some sample paragraphs:
“The eHealth Program was to be implemented in two tranches of work, over a four year period commencing in 2007-08, at an initial cost of $401 million.
The implementation of the specialist clinical and administrative systems (Tranche 1) is over two years behind schedule because of unforeseen problems with procurement, contract establishment, systems testing, and recruitment and retention of staff. Half of the Tranche 1 systems have been fully implemented, and significant progress made on the remainder. The balance of work is due to be completed by June 2013.
-----

GP visits rise with e-health access

4 December, 2012 Paul Smith
Giving patients online access to their medical records significantly increases visits they make to doctors and EDs, as well as increasing their hospitalisation rates, a major study finds.
It is not clear whether increased visits improved overall health outcomes but the study — published in the Journal of the American Medical Association — raises questions as to whether Australia's billion-dollar personally controlled electronic health record system will trigger increased demand on health resources, including GP services.
Researchers tracked more than 80,000 patients both with and without online access to their health records, which included test results, immunisation records, medications, medical problems and care plans.
-----

Patients at risk from lacking e-health regulation

7th Dec 2012
LEADING e-health experts have called for greater regulation for e-health systems and software in Australia, warning that incidences of IT-related patient harm are growing as hospitals and GPs adopt more electronic health practices.
Director of the Centre for Health Informatics at University of NSW Professor Enrico Coiera told MO the recent accidental deletion of 10-year-old Ezekiel Howard’s electronically stored heart scans and similar scans on other patients’ hearts at Nepean Hospital happened often in Australia.
The centre has been analysing accidents involving patient health information technology in the US, and has begun to collate data from Australian hospitals and general practices which it hopes to publish early next year.
-----

Meds compliance boost via new portal

3 December, 2012 Chris Brooker
Plans to develop the first ever consumer-facing portal that integrates a range of medicine compliance services and allows patients to easily find the program best suited to them have been revealed to industry stakeholders.
The service, called freepatientsupport.com, allows patients to search, select and connect with support programs that can help them maximise the health benefits from their medications by facilitating compliance.
The program was developed by health entrepreneur Michael Clayton, who has been involved in developing consumer health communications for a number of years.
He is set to launch the program in the light of international research that shows non-adherence is a leading cause of preventable morbidity, mortality, and healthcare costs. Avoidable hospital admissions due to non-compliance are also estimated to cost the Australian health system $660 million per year.
-----

FHIR Webinar – reference and additional answers

Posted on December 7, 2012 by Grahame Grieve
This week I did a webinar on FHIR for HL7. They’ve posted the recording of it (2012 December 4 Ambassador Webinar: Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) (70.26 MB)), along with my slides (PDF version of the slides here).
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Power is just a heartbeat away

Date December 3, 2012

Roger Highfield

Scientists have found ways to generate electricity from the body's rhythms that could provide a vital source of energy.
Turning the human body into a power station sounds like a zany plot from the Matrix movies, but scientists are starting to take seriously the idea that one way to stem climate change might be to harvest tiny amounts of energy in the form of the body's heat, movement, metabolism and vibrations.
In one form of the technology, experts are turning to piezoelectricity, which means "electricity resulting from pressure". In a piezoelectric material, small amounts of power are generated when it is pushed out of shape. As an extraordinary example of what's now possible with these materials, the heart itself could be used to power an artificial pacemaker. Though these devices require only tiny amounts of power — one millionth of a watt — their batteries typically run out after a few years. But as Dr Amin Karami at the University of Michigan says, a pacemaker that harvests the energy of the heartbeat itself might operate for a lifetime. In a recent address to the American Heart Association in Los Angeles, he pointed out that a sliver of a piezoelectric ceramic one hundredth of an inch thick, powered by vibrations in the chest cavity, is able to generate almost 10 times the power required to operate a pacemaker.
-----

Lack of EHR standards a massive fail: report

The failure of successive governments to implement standardised GP electronic health records (EHR) has been slammed by the principal investigators of the nation’s largest study into general practice activity.
In their introduction to General Practice Activity in Australia 2011–12 released this week, Associate Professors Helena Britt and Graeme Miller decried the need to rely on paper-based information for what they claim is the “only continuous, national, representative study of GP activity in the world that links management actions with morbidity.”
The study, which aims to provide the information necessary for the general practice profession to assess its strengths and weaknesses and see changes in practice over time, is the latest of the Bettering the Evaluation and Care of Health annual studies published by Sydney University Press.
-----

Decade of change for general practitioners

Australia’s general practitioner (GP) workforce is ageing rapidly, managing more problems per patient and increasingly making use of information technology.
It’s also a profession with a much higher proportion of females and those with a better work-life balance, according to a decade-long nationwide study.
Produced by the University of Sydney’s Family Medicine Research Centre, the report on changes to the GP workforce and the patients they treat is based on information from nearly one million actual patient encounters collected from 9,800 doctors.
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Project will determine if an elderly person's normal routine is being maintained

  • by: Jennifer Foreshew
  • From: The Australian
  • December 04, 2012 12:00AM
AN Australian project could deliver a low-cost and unobtrusive system to enable the elderly to live independently in their homes for longer.
University of Adelaide researchers are adapting radio-frequency identification and sensor technologies to automatically identify and monitor human activity, without the need to wear or turn anything on or off.
The project, which aims to develop novel sensor systems, will determine if an individual's normal routine is being maintained so that timely assistance can be provided if it is needed.
The team are developing a system using a network of sensors attached to objects that an elderly person interacts with in the home, such as cups or an oven. Software will then be used to interpret the collected data to detect what they are doing.
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NEHTA eHealth Employment Opportunity for Medical Students – Applications Closing Soon!

AMSA has partnered with NEHTA for an exciting opportunity for medical students. Applications close this Friday 7th of December, so get in quick!
Help get GP practices get ready for eHealth incentives!
The National eHealth Transition Authority (NEHTA) is urgently looking for medical students in Melbourne to be part of a 1 week pilot project to assist General Practices get ready for eHealth.
-----

Robots to start work at hospital

3rd Dec 2012
NSW Health Minister Jillian Skinner announced on Sunday RNS would become the first hospital in Australia to use the robots - automated guided vehicles (AGVs) - to transport food, linen and other supplies around its new acute services building.
Every day the AGVs will deliver and collect about 3600 meal trays, hundreds of clean and dirty linen items and other waste from around the hospital.
"Not only will they assist staff to do their jobs more efficiently without the risk of painful injuries, they will reduce accidental cross-contamination of goods during transport," Ms Skinner said.
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National Product Catalogue passes quarter of a million milestone

4 December 2012. NEHTA’s National Product Catalogue (NPC) has topped a quarter of a million Global Trade Item Numbers (GTINs) and is continuing to grow strongly.
With more suppliers coming on board and more Global Trade Item Numbers (GTINs) added, the number of GTINs now totals 276,121 from more than 390 suppliers.  This equates to an 80% increase in the past two years.
The unique identification and bar coding of healthcare products and services can improve patient safety and NEHTA has worked successfully with GS1 Australia and all stakeholders to operationalise and enhance the National Product Catalogue and NEHTA eProcurement solution.
-----

Mandatory data breach notification urged after privacy law passage

The Australian privacy commissioner and the ACCAN differ on trigger for notification.
The Australian privacy commissioner and a consumer group supported mandatory data breach notifications, in comments submitted today to the Attorney General.
Last week, Parliament passed a bill containing several amendments to privacy law. Among other things, the law gives Privacy Commissioner Timothy Pilgrim more powers, including the right to seek civil penalties for serious privacy breaches.
However, the privacy legislation did not include a more controversial provision requiring companies to notify customers in the case of a data breach. The proposal involves some tough issues, including what constitutes a breach and how soon after a breach a company should alert customers.
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Australia’s NBN: Come Hell or High Water

Kevin Morgan1
Are there projects of such self-evident value that they ought to be exempt from even the most rudimentary cost–benefit analysis? Seemingly so, according to the former Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner, as long as it’s the National Broadband Network (NBN). In May 2009, a month after Kevin Rudd had announced the $43 billion project, when asked about the absence of a cost–benefit analysis (CBA), Tanner said: ‘We had to make the clear decision that said this is the outcome we are going to achieve come hell or high water because it is of fundamental importance to the future of the Australian economy’ (quoted in Martin 2010).
A year later, Tanner remained unmoved by Opposition calls for a CBA and he dismissed such analysis as subjective because ‘cost–benefit analyses of the orthodox kind are basically captives to the assumptions you feed in’ (Martin 2010).
-----

Voyager streaks from the limit of knowledge to the universal unknown

Date December 6, 2012

Nicky Phillips

Science Reporter

WHEN the Voyager 1 spacecraft launched from the fields of Cape Canaveral in late 1977 en route to Jupiter, Saturn and their moons, the probe's planetary tour was expected to last just five years.
Three decades and three months later the pioneering craft has reached the edge of the solar system, having completed its original mission as well as fly-bys of Uranus and Neptune.
Sometime in the coming months - no one is quite sure of the exact timing - Voyager 1 will cross the boundary where the sun's magnetic influence ends and the cooler regions of interstellar space begin, a place no man-made object has reached.
-----
Enjoy!
David.

Sunday, December 09, 2012

NEHTA Responds To Questions On Notice From The Recent Senate Estimates Committee. A Few Interesting Tit-bits.

Supplementary Senate Estimates were held Oct 17-19, 2012. The deadline for a response to the Questions that were placed on notice was December 7, 2012.
Here is the link to the answers provided by NETA
Here is what we were told:

ANSWERS TO ESTIMATES QUESTIONS ON NOTICE

National e-Health Transition Authority (NeHTA)
Budget Estimates 2012-13 October
OUTCOME 10.2: e-Health
Question: 1
Topic: Budget
Senator Boyce asked:
What is the complete budget for NEHTA for 2012/2013?
Answer.
In regard to the COAG work program, NEHTA’s members have agreed to provide funding to NEHTA for 2012-13 of $66.85m. NEHTA also has carried over COAG funds of $28.40m. In addition to this, DOHA has funded NEHTA $4.5m to perform some ongoing operational support services. NEHTA expects to earn interest on its invested funds of approximately $3m.
In regard to the PCEHR Managing Agent responsibilities, as contracted to DOHA, NEHTA has approximately $63.14m in carried forward funds against future commitments.
Question: 6
Topic: IBM Contract
Senator Boyce asked:
It has been announced that the contract signed with IBM to complete the NASH as now been terminated. Did that contract contain penalty provisions for non-delivery? How much money has IBM already been paid? What percentage of the contract price will be lost or written off as a result of the contract termination.
Answer.
The subject matter of the contract termination between IBM, NEHTA is currently under legal process and privilege applies.
Question: 7
Topic: NASH
Senator Boyce asked:
At the time the IBM contract was signed it was claimed by both NEHTA and DOHA that no one internally had the capacity to build a secure NASH but now with the termination of the IBM contract the work is now being done internally. It’s claimed that this ‘internal capability’ was not realised at the time. This sounds at the very least to be a costly error of judgement. Could you provide all internal documents that go to the reasons why IBM was chosen and why in your initial assessment your own internal teams lacked the capacity to build the NASH?
Answer.
The documentation related to IBM, and the other unsuccessful bidders as requested is commercial-in-confidence and NEHTA is unable to provide it due to legal and commercial sensitivities.
It is now over 2 years since the NASH tender was released and both technology and the market have moved significantly over this time. This has provided NEHTA further opportunity to provide greater value add to the market with a fit for purpose product.
Question: 8
Topic: NASH
Senator Boyce asked:
What has changed in regard to their capacity from the time the IBM contract was signed and now? Can you please provide documentary proof to support your response?
Answer.
The failure by IBM to deliver provided NEHTA with the opportunity to re-examine what was currently available.
Industry capabilities were not fully established when the contract was first let, but have been built and enhanced locally into secure, capable services in the meantime. The DHS solution has been able to leverage off the capability, together with their considerable technical capacity to offer a NASH solution.
Question: 9
Topic: NASH
Senator Boyce asked:
When will the NASH now be delivered?
Answer.
A NASH certificate is available for healthcare organisations and individuals to support access to the Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record (eHealth Record) system and healthcare organisational certificates for Secure Message Delivery (SMD) via a compliant SMD product will be available now.
Further NASH functionality will progressively become available as required.
Question: 20
Topic: Hire Cars
Senator Boyce asked:
Could NEHTA provide details of total expenditure on hire cars in the last 12 months for all staff, contractors and clients?
Answer.
Expenditure on hire cars is not differentiated within NEHTA’s book of accounts and is consolidated into ground transport costs. All ground transport costs have been incurred in accordance with the relevant NEHTA travel and expenditure policies and procedural guidelines. NEHTA’s policies allow for Hire Cars to be used from time to time where the circumstances dictate. Such circumstances include where other forms of ground transport are unreliable, where cost differences are minimal or productivity or confidentiality considerations apply.
Question: 21
Topic: Hire Cars
Senator Boyce asked:
Could NEHTA provide details of all hire car expenses occurring in Sydney for NEHTA staff in the last 12 months? That should include cost per trip, pick-up and set down details, dates of travel and passenger identification.
Answer
Refer to answer 20
----- End Responses.
Budget.
So what we learn is that in 2012/13 NEHTA plans to spend of the order of $66.85m + $24.8m + $4.5m + $3.0m = $99.15m in operational funding.
This compares with $146M last year according to the recently released annual report.
PCEHR Outgoings are seen as being $63.14M for the year.
This is way down from the expenditure on the PCEHR to June 30, 2012 which was close to $500M over 2 years.
This is all consistent with a loss of close to ½ of NEHTA’s total headcount since June 30, 2012.
NASH.
NEHTA seems to be saying that in two years technology has changed so NASH has had to be re-done and IBM has still not had resolution of the discussions.
I wonder what this radically new technology approach is? Suggestions welcome. Prima face it sounds like nonsense to me...
Hire Cars.
Good stonewalling effort!
Related but different we have an interesting report from the Department of Human Services.
Here is the direct link:
The topic is DHS Computer Outages. It seems there were 137 ICT Reliability Outages in the year to September 30, 2012. No wonder there are the odd problems with the HI Service.
Any comments on all this welcome.
David.

Saturday, December 08, 2012

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links - 8th December, 2012.

Note: Each link is followed by a title and few paragraphs. For the full article click on the link above title of the article. Note also that full access to some links may require site registration or subscription payment.
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Health reform to spur waves of data

By Mary Mosquera, Senior Editor
Created 11/30/2012
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services will have to manage and analyze double the volume of Medicare data and triple the terabytes of Medicaid data after health reform is fully in place. 
By 2015, the waves of Medicare claims data will explode from 370 terabytes to 700 terabytes. For Medicaid, 30 terabytes of data will multiply to 100 terabytes, according to a CMS official.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services will have to manage and analyze double the volume of Medicare data and triple the terabytes of Medicaid data after health reform is fully in place. 
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Privacy law falls short in age of proliferating medical devices

November 30, 2012 | By Susan D. Hall
Who owns the data produced from cardiac monitoring devices? The devices are proliferating as vendors make them ever smaller, improving patient comfort and care for heart disorders.
But the devices apparently fall outside U.S. privacy law, according to a Wall Street Journal article detailing how a Tennessee defibrillator patient has been unable to get access to the data from vendor Medtronic. The vendor says its clients are physicians and hospitals, and giving information to patients would require regulatory approval. Yet Medtronic is among the companies trying to monetize the data from cardiac monitors. Medtronic executive Ken Riff, at a July industry event, called these kinds of data "the currency of the future," the Journal reports.
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Federal EHR regs driving docs out of private practice, says new report

By Mike Miliard, Managing Editor
Created 11/30/2012
Independent physicians are a vanishing breed, due in large part to government regulations requiring the adoption of health IT and the meaningful use of electronic health records, according to a new report from Accenture.
The report finds that 61 percent of those surveyed will seek employment rather than open a private practice, with the majority citing the government regulations as the cause.
The number of doctors in private practice has dropped from 57 percent in 2000 to just 39 percent in 2012, according to Accenture, which forecasts a further 3 percent downtick by the end of 2013.
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Using the body to power batteries

November 30, 2012 | By Susan D. Hall
Research demonstrating that energy produced in the inner ear could be used to power sensors is but one example of new study on using the body's own power sources to charge medical devices, according to a story published this week in the Wall Street Journal.
Researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard Medical School demonstrated in guinea pigs that they could power sensors for about five hours without inhibiting the animals' ability to hear.
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KLAS shines light on MRI, imaging, PACS

By Bernie Monegain, Contributing Editor
With reports on MRI, PACS and CT released this week at the Radiological Society of North America’s annual meeting, research firm KLAS provides insight into three imaging markets.
MRI
The introduction of new technology into the MRI landscape has changed the face of the market segment over the last year, KLAS analysts say. Although MRI satisfaction scores tend to cluster together, the differences are in the details.
Philips, which was in last place in the 2011 KLAS MRI report with its Achieva 1.5T MR, takes first place this year with its newly ranked Ingenia 1.5T MR scanner, receiving an overall score of 92.2 (out of 100). Siemens' MAGNETOM Aera 1.5T also appears in the KLAS report for the first time and is ranked fourth out of the five vendors, earning an overall KLAS performance score of 87.
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Monday, November 26, 2012

The Impact of Electronic Patient Portals on Patient Care: A Systematic Review of Controlled Trials

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Probe finds U.S. e-health program lacks oversight

Inspector general says physician and hospital self-reporting rule is ineffective

Lucas Mearian
November 29, 2012 (Computerworld)
Federal investigators Thursday released a report charging that the Medicare electronic medical records (EMR) program lacks effective fiscal oversight.
The report, issued by the Inspector General's office of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), states that the Medicare EMR program may be paying incentives to health care providers and hospitals that do not fully meet the quality standards known as "meaningful use".
The report stated that the program's self-reporting format lacks audit oversight requirements so it's impossible to prove whether reports from physicians and hospitals are accurate.
The U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) oversees the federal EHR program, including the incentive payments. The "incentive money" CMS pays to healthcare professionals and hospitals that have deployed EMRs and have met meaningful use criteria is funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.
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After all the time and money invested, will e-health ever deliver on its promise?

PAUL CHRISTOPHER WEBSTER
Published Thursday, Nov. 29, 2012 05:25PM EST
After Helmut Braun’s wife died, he turned to the Internet to find someone else to play cards with. Before long, like so many Canadian seniors these days, he’d become something of a keyboard wizard. But when Braun had a heart attack last November, the 85-year-old former barber figured he’d played his last online ace. As he lay in frightening pain in an ambulance, the last thing he could have guessed was that he would soon become a cyber-pioneer.
But that’s what happened in the long-term palliative care ward at Baycrest Health Sciences Centre in north Toronto. One day early last summer, a nurse named Maria De Leon popped a computer tablet onto his lap and asked him if he’d mind tapping in answers to 10 basic questions, including the degree of pain that he was feeling, his appetite, his mood and his energy level. Braun still has a lot of zest despite his badly damaged heart, and he was only too happy to get back online, especially if it spared Baycrest staff from filling out the questionnaire on paper. “I’m always happy to save some trees,” he joked.
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Patients want 'granular' privacy control of electronic health info

November 28, 2012 | By Marla Durben Hirsch
Patients want strict control over the health information contained in providers' electronic health records, according to a new study in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association.
The study, conducted by researchers at Clemson and Indiana Universities, interviewed 30 patients whose health information was stored in EHRs. They found that sharing preferences varied by the type of information to be shared and the recipient. Not surprisingly, patients were more willing to share less sensitive information with healthcare providers. However, no one wanted to share all of their records unconditionally.
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4 reasons to go virtual

By Benjamin Harris, New Media Producer, Healthcare IT News
Created 11/29/2012
First there was the migration to the cloud, now it's a push for virtualization. Gone (or soon to be gone) are the days where every nurse, doctor, and healthcare professional is chained to a desktop PC upon which they rely for access to their software and information.
Virtualization and the cloud are not necessarily the same thing. The latter is a remote data warehouse that stores information. The former entails running an application on one computer through a browser on another machine, which could be hundreds of miles away. Imagine accessing a bulky and power-intensive application that normally requires a PC on a tablet. This is just one of many elements of flexibility that virtualization can provide.
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BYOT: The Lines Between Work and Personal Technology are Blurring

NOV 29, 2012 12:58pm ET
Bring-your-own-technology (BYOT) is no longer driven by do-it-yourselfers choosing their own devices for work — instead, a rapidly growing population of workers across industries and regions is embracing a wide spectrum of bring your own “fill-in-the-blank.” BYOT now spans hardware, platforms, and apps, plus cloud services like storage and collaboration.
Just how big is this trend? According to Forrester's Forrsights Workforce Employee Survey, Q4 2011, of nearly 10,000 workers worldwide, 53% bring their own technology for work. The rapid growth of mobile BYOT devices within business is reminiscent of Web adoption during the mid-1990s. After early handwringing and resistance, followed by rapid growth and innovation, the Web emerged as an indispensable tool. No one thinks twice now about using the Web for work. BYOT will follow a similar pattern.
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Lancashire clinicians access GP data

28 November 2012   Rebecca Todd
Urgent care doctors and pharmacists at East Lancashire Hospitals NHS Trust are accessing key information from the patient records of 91 GP practices using EMIS Web.
A&E clinicians and hospital pharmacists can access a core set of information - including active problems, medications and health status - through a secure, read-only view of the patient’s GP record via EMIS Web access points at hospital terminals.
Users within the trust calculate that since going live in April, the service has saved them hundreds of phone calls and faxes a month to GP practices to check patients’ medical details.
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3 steps to HIPAA security in the cloud

By David S. Linthicum, Founder and CTO, Blue Mountain Labs
The default response for those charged with HIPAA security is to say ‘no’ to cloud computing. Why? Clouds are not under direct control, they are not typically up on existing and emerging healthcare regulations, and, most importantly, they are new and scary.
There is a clear need, however, to rethink the role of cloud computing by those charged with HIPAA security. The efficiencies that can be gained by leveraging public, private, and hybrid clouds are just too compelling.   
The trick is to understand the existing requirements, and then understand how the emerging use of cloud computing could provide compliant and secure HIPAA solutions. In many cases, leveraging cloud computing will improve upon the best practices and technology that exist today.   
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Report Finds E-Prescribing Among Physicians Increased 41%

Written by Kathleen Roney | November 28, 2012
E-prescribing among physicians increased approximately 41 percent across the United States between December 2008 and June 2012, according to a data brief from ONC.
In December 2008, 7 percent of physicians in the United States were e-prescribing using an electronic health record. By June 2012, 48 percent of physicians were e-prescribing using an EHR.
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Experienced, educated workers flock to health IT retraining programs

November 29, 2012 | By Julie Bird
One constant in various provisions of the Affordable Care Act being implemented over the next few years is that most will require expanding the nation's skilled health IT force, notes Bloomberg News.
The opportunities are attracting IT workers from other fields into healthcare-specific training programs, as well as experienced healthcare workers learning information-technology skills, according to the article. President Barack Obama's re-election is further fueling the retraining boom, Bloomberg says, by all-but guaranteeing the overhaul will become reality.
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Health IT requires more federal innovation faster, DoD official says

November 29, 2012 | By Susan D. Hall
Federal agencies must pick up the pace of healthcare IT to respond to a rapidly evolving landscape, Dave Wennergren, assistant deputy chief management officer at the Department of Defense, told federal leaders this week at the "Digital Innovation in Healthcare" forum in McLean, Va.
While he cited innovation taking place in data security, mobility and sharing, he said the years-long process of putting big projects together takes too long to respond quickly to changing conditions, reports Federal Computer Week.
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OCR: No fail-safe for de-identifying patient info

November 29, 2012 | By Dan Bowman
Neither the expert determination method nor the safe harbor method of de-identifying patient data are 100 percent effective, according to new guidance released this week by the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services' Office for Civil Rights. While both methods can lower the risk of re-identifying data to miniscule levels, neither are completely secure, OCR officials write.
"There is a possibility that de-identified data could be linked back to the identity of the patient to which it corresponds," the guidance says.
For the expert determination method, a person deemed an expert--a.k.a, someone "with appropriate knowledge of and experience with generally accepted statistical and scientific principles for rendering information not individually identifiable"--uses their expertise to measure the risk of re-identification for certain sets of data. In a blog post written this week by FierceHealthIT Advisory Board member David Harlow, Harlow says it's worth noting that OCR says that expert determinations should only be valid for a finite amount of time.
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Thursday, November 29, 2012

Neurological Institute Expands Telehealth Network

by Alice Daniel, iHealthBeat Contributing Reporter
SACRAMENTO -- There are days when Medical Director of Neurology at Mercy Health Alan Shatzel needs only his laptop and his expertise to diagnose stroke patients. The robot does the rest. 
With access to the Mercy Telehealth Network, Shatzel can diagnose in real time stroke patients in emergency departments in the Central Valley and Northern California from Bakersfield to Redding. By connecting electronically with a robot in the ED, he can zoom in next to the patient, listen, ask questions and perform a sort of virtual examination. His face appears on the robot's computer screen.
"That's the beauty of telemedicine," Shatzel said. "It breaks down those barriers and allows specialists clustered in metropolitan areas to reach needs in rural areas." 
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Electronic Medical Records Drive Physicians to Stay, Go

Joe Cantlupe, for HealthLeaders Media , November 29, 2012

After 25 years of using paper records, Winfield Young, MD, recently dove into electronic medical records for his Virginia Beach, VA, pediatric practice. "Today is the first day of training. I'm tickled pink," Young told me recently.
Young wants to maintain his freestanding practice and not be employed by a hospital. With an EMR, he envisions the possibility of increasing his income, and definitely more efficiency. "We see the importance of better documentation of diagnosis, and it's going to be easier to track," he says.
Independent primary care physicians often think they don't have the time, money, or resources to implement EMR, even with government subsidies. Still, they know they need to adapt to the changing environment. Patients are demanding more transparency and the government is incentivizing the shift. A growing number of physicians seem to figure they have no choice. To survive, they must opt for EMR, though they know the journey may not be easy.
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Programs preview mainstreaming of personalized medicine

Researchers say a data-driven approach is less than a few years away for specialists and less than a decade away for primary care physicians.

By Pamela Lewis Dolan, amednews staff. Posted Nov. 26, 2012.
As health information technology adoption inches closer to a saturation point, it is expected to help accelerate the use of what is known as personalized medicine.
Some large health care organizations recently launched large, multimillion-dollar personalized medicine initiatives that will allow physicians and researchers to combine patient data — including genomic, claims and financial data as well as clinical data collected by physicians — with other sources of data and to apply intensive analytics to develop treatment plans tailored to each patient. The goal is to improve outcomes and control costs by reducing overdiagnosis and ineffective treatments.
Personalized medicine allows physicians to prescribe treatments based on a patient’s genetic makeup and disease profile and the effectiveness of therapies for other patients with similar characteristics. Projects are using this approach to better match patients with complex diseases to the best therapies, eliminating the trial-and-error process that often has resulted in ineffective treatments, particularly in the use of pharmaceuticals.
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New Federal Guidance on De-Identifying Patient Information

NOV 27, 2012 12:00pm ET
The HHS Office for Civil Rights has issued lengthy and detailed guidance on two methods for de-identifying protected health information under the HIPAA privacy rule.
More than two dozen frequently asked questions explain the two methods--Expert Determination and Safe Harbor--that satisfy the privacy rule’s standards for de-identification. “This guidance is intended to assist covered entities to understand what is de-identification, the general process by which de-identified information is created, and the options available for performing de-identification,” according to OCR.
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GPSoC to mandate open APIs

27 November 2012   Rebecca Todd
The new GP Systems of Choice contract could force all GP system suppliers to open their Application Programme Interfaces to third party suppliers.
The idea would coincide with the Government ICT strategy, which states: “The opening up of APIs is part of the government’s overall approach to open ICT and user centred digital services."
Intellect head of healthcare Jon Lindberg said he understands the idea is being discussed internally with the GPSoC team and board.
He hoped it would help open up the market and allow “quick and innovative solutions” to be developed and added on as demand and requirements develop.
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Automated calls, letters boost med adherence

November 27, 2012 | By Susan D. Hall
Automated phone calls and letters to patients who did not fill prescriptions increased their rate of compliance, according to a study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine. But an accompanying commentary points out that the overall improvement was only marginal.
The researchers, from Kaiser Permanente Southern California, selected 2,606 patients to undergo the intervention and 2,610 for a control group who got no reminders. Patients were randomly assigned to the groups from a larger population of patients prescribed cholesterol-lowering statins who did not fill their prescriptions within two weeks.
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Prediction model combines Google Flu Trends, weather forecasting techniques

November 27, 2012 | By Susan D. Hall
A model using data from Google Flu Trends and weather forecasting techniques could predict the peak of flu outbreaks in specific areas more than seven weeks in advance, according to researchers from Columbia University and the National Center for Atmospheric Research.
Their work was published Monday at Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Previously, researchers in Pakistan asserted that while Google Flu Trends serves as a good "baseline indicator" of epidemic trends, it could become an effective early warning system through application of "sophisticated statistical analysis."
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Health information exchange: Significant market growth ahead

November 27, 2012 | By Julie Bird
U.S. healthcare providers will "significantly ratchet up their participation" in health information exchanges (HIE) over the next 18 to 24 months, consulting firm Frost & Sullivan finds in a new market analysis.
The Supreme Court's ruling upholding the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act, as well as President Barack Obama's re-election, are fueling the growth, according to the report, "U.S. Health Information Exchange Market: A Comprehensive Guide to Market Dynamics, Technology Vendors and Future Trends."
Additional factors driving market growth include the Stage 2 Meaningful Use requirement for more HIE participation, and technical standards for interoperability, according to an announcement detailing the findings.
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Cloud Technology Overturns IT Assumptions

Scott Mace, for HealthLeaders Media , November 27, 2012

I'm here to say that healthcare should be thankful it has come late to part of the technology party.
Why? Because healthcare doesn't have to play by the so-called rules that existed a few years ago. Healthcare can challenge the assumptions that drove decisions a short while ago and take advantage of cloud computing technology that overturns the conventional wisdom—and price structure—of IT services.
Want an example? Recently, I spoke to Qualsight, a healthcare provider you probably haven't heard of, even though it serves more than 75 million health plan members.
Chicago-based Qualsight launched eight years ago to connect independent ophthalmologists to healthcare plan sponsors to provide their members laser vision correction services. Today, the ophthalmologists operating out of 800 locations let Qualsight boast of being the nation's largest Lasik services manager.
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From hackers to hurricanes: 6 crucial steps to securing your data

By Benjamin Harris, New Media Producer, Healthcare IT News
Created 11/26/2012
From hurricanes to hackers, there's a lot that can go wrong with your data. If a major storm takes out power to a cloud provider's sole computer center, a hospital's entire cloud-based system could go offline, hamstringing doctors indefinitely. Should a hacker decide to hit a data warehouse, the integrity of an entire healthcare network's IT could be compromised.
With so much riding on unfettered and highly secure access to healthcare data of every kind – from prescription information to scheduling to payroll – keeping that data ironclad is more important than ever.
Kurt Hagerman, compliance director for Dallas-based cloud firm FireHost, talks about six key points that should be second nature to anybody concerned with securing their data from natural disasters or malicious cyber marauders.
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Electronic health data security among HHS top management challenges

November 26, 2012 | By Susan D. Hall
The Department of Health and Human Services should play a more active role in educating physicians about protecting patient data in electronic health records, according to a report from the HHS Office of Inspector General.
That recommendation was just one of those contained in the OIG's annual report of the top management challenges facing the agency. Addressing the importance of protecting the security of health information systems, it noted that electronic records allow for a centralized repository of patient data, but such systems "can also be used to fabricate information, generating improper payments and corrupting patients' records with inaccurate and potentially dangerous information."
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Genetics-based personalized medicine gets big data boost

November 26, 2012 | By Julie Bird
With the help of big data that shows the effectiveness of various treatment regimens on different kinds of patients, personalized medicine can "better match patients with complex diseases to the best therapies, eliminating the trial-and-error process that often has resulted in ineffective treatments, particularly in the use of pharmaceuticals," according to an article in amednews.com.
The power to conduct that level of analysis now rests with many healthcare systems, Jon Duke, M.D., investigator and innovation officer for the Regenstrief Institute in Indianapolis, told the publication. The University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, for example, recently announced a five-year, $100 million project launching a data warehouse for personalized medicine.
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Surveillance shows potential in detecting HIT system failures

November 26, 2012 | By Susan D. Hall
An Australian study finds potential value in applying a syndromic surveillance system to health IT systems to detect early system failures.
Such surveillance typically is used in public health to monitor the spread of infectious diseases. The system was used in research at the University of New South Wales in Sydney to monitor four factors in a tertiary hospital laboratory: total number of records being created, the number of records with missing results, average serum potassium results, and total duplicated tests on a patient.
The researchers, led by Dr. Mei-Sing Ong, wanted to detect HIT system failures causing: data loss at the record level, data loss at the field level, erroneous data, and unintended duplication of data, according to a paper published at the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association. Statistical models were used to detect system failures using simulated outages lasting 24 hours, with error rates from 1 percent to 35 percent.
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'You too can YouTube' says London GP

13 November 2012   Rebecca Todd
A London practice is using YouTube to share health messages with patients including a video about ear wax removal that has had more than 100,000 hits.
Dr Shanker Vijayadeva presented a session at EHI Live 2012 entitled ‘You too can YouTube.’
He is a GP at the Hillview Surgery in Greenford where he first started YouTubing in 2010.
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Revolutionary road

The government has promised a telehealth revolution; but there has been little sign of one at the events that Lis Evenstad has attended recently.
20 November 2012
“I’d like to remind people this isn’t about a minority sport; this is about how we use most of the money in the NHS,” Stephen Johnson, deputy director and head of long term conditions at the Department of Health told the Telehealth 2012 conference.
Johnson is, of course, right that most of the NHS budget goes on dealing with long term conditions, and that some of that money might be saved if people could be kept out of expensive hospitals and dealt with in the community or their own homes.
But in the absence of real evidence that telehealth can deliver on its promises, the ‘telehealth revolution’ that the industry and government have promised feels as far off as ever.
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Study: Belief in Health IT ROI Comes from Organizational Support

November 21, 2012
Deloitte and the American Medical Informatics Association (AMIA) recently conducted a study and found that for providers, life sciences companies, and payers there is clear correlation between return on investment (ROI) from clinical IT systems and high organizational support from health informatics. The organizations where respondents didn’t buy into the idea that health IT leads to significant ROI didn’t have as strong organizational support, alignment, and executive sponsorship as those that did.
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Monday, November 26, 2012

Health Care System To Benefit From Recent HIE Progress

by Brian Ahier
The stars seem to be aligned for rapid progress in health information exchange. We are fast approaching a point in the development of the Health Internet where ubiquitous exchange of health data to improve care coordination and health care quality and ultimately lower costs might be possible. We still face some problems, and standards and policies must be aligned, but there is some great synergy in play that will help drive this vision forward. There are a variety of different initiatives which are coalescing, but there is also a great deal of work still left to do.
HIE Efforts Under Way
The Nationwide Health Information Network Exchange (now called the eHealth Exchange) has successfully transitioned to an independently sustainable public-private partnership. This new organization, called HealtheWay, includes four federal agencies -- CMS, the Department of Defense, the Social Security Administration and the Department of Veterans Affairs -- as well as at least 21 non-federal entities that all share patient records for episodes of care. The ability to provide a platform for national exchange is critical to the success of efforts to reach the triple aim of improving the experience of care, boosting the health of populations and reducing per capita costs of health care. By ensuring that clinicians have the right information at the right place at the right time, we can finally begin to make progress in achieving these goals.
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Enjoy!
David.