This description arrived a day or so
ago:
The 12th Annual HIMSS AsiaPac18 Conference
& Exhibition is coming to Brisbane Australia!
The event
will gather 1,500+ of the brightest in health and health IT across APAC and the
globe: healthcare providers, C-suite leaders, government officials and solution
providers. Attend and learn from the best practices, case studies and
expert insights on the latest in digital health and information technology.
Themed
Healthcare Anytime, Anywhere, HIMSS AsiaPac18 has something for
everyone! We look forward to welcoming you in Brisbane this
November.
Curious I
wondered when and found:
Seems it is
happening 5-8 November with the main days being 6 and 7 November.
I wonder did
they notice the second day was the First Tuesday in November (Melbourne Cup
Day)?
The programme
for the 2 main days stuck me as rather lacking much local content and being
rather military of all things on Tuesday.
Then I looked
at the sponsors:
Top of the
tree I found:
Thought Leader Sponsor:
The Australian Digital Health Agency
The
Australian Digital Health Agency was established in July 2016 to improve health
outcomes for all Australians with a focus on engagement, innovation and
clinical quality and safety. It is responsible for national systems – including
My Health Record – and for implementing Australia’s National Digital Health
Strategy in collaboration with partners across the community. The Strategy will
put consumers at the centre of their health and care and empower more choice,
control and transparency. By the end of 2018, all Australians will have a My
Health Record, which contains a secure mobile summary of their health
information that can be shared with care professionals – unless they choose to
opt out.
For more
information please visit www.digitalhealth.gov.au
I am also not sure I could handle a presentation from the Consumer Health Forum titled 'Healthcare Transparency and Co-Creation with Consumers". Rather too Orwellian for me...
Here is the conference link:
Here is the conference link:
Well that did
it for me, especially with an expired security certificate and especially with
the cost being over $1000 for the two days: Pass
The HINZ one
for less money sounds like more fun:
HiNZ conference growth shows digital health has hit the mainstream
5 October,
2018
eHealthNews.nz
editor Rebecca McBeth
Clinicians
are the biggest driver in the growth of the HiNZ Conference, with the 2018
event expected to be the biggest yet, says HiNZ chief executive Kim Mundell.
Around 1000
delegates are expected at this year’s HiNZ Conference, running from Wednesday
21 November to Friday 23 November.
The event,
held at Wellington’s TSB Arena and Shed 6, will also boast its largest ever
exhibition hall, with 93 booths.
Mundell says
the growth of the conference year on year shows that digital health has moved
out of the early adopter stage and into the mainstream.
Clinicians in
particular are fuelling the growth in delegate numbers, she says.
“It’s no
longer a niche subject that you have a few clinicians engage with – it’s now
mainstream and part of everyday healthcare.”
Twelve
international keynote speakers from the UK, US, Brazil, Hong Kong and Australia
will speak on topics ranging from digitising patient records to artificial
intelligence in healthcare and the role of smartphones in cancer research.
Keynote
speaker Richard Corbridge was the former CIO of the Irish Health Service
Executive and was named in 2017 as the “most disruptive tech or digital leader”
in the European Union by Sir Richard Branson and Steve Wozniak.
He says an
electronic health record is the key to efficiency and transparency and the only
way a healthcare system can be integrated.
“Ireland was
the first country in Europe to present a business case for a digital health
system that included not just the traditional IT cost but also the cost of
business change – the cost of ensuring not just the technology was procured,
but that the cost of ensuring benefit gained was figured into the project,” he
says.
“The citizens
of New Zealand deserve a modern healthcare system that is built upon
information. The ability to return information about patients to them to aid
with their own health and wellness should be a modern expectation of the health
system.”
Fellow
UK-based keynote Lesley Holdsworth is the Scottish Government’s clinical lead
for digital health and care and has been named both Scottish Digital Impact
Leader of the Year and UK Digital Team Leader in 2018.
She is
driving digitisation of Scotland’s patient records and benchmarking it against
global frontrunners and says New Zealanders should embrace their medical records
going digital, not fear it.
“There are
many benefits to us all as both patients and citizens of having EHRs. These
include ensuring that information about us is accurate, up to date and can be
easily shared with both us and those who need to have this information,”
Holdsworth says.
The HiNZ
conference also includes a one-day eHealth Nursing and an eAllied Health event.
Here is the
link:
As they say,
you pay your money and take your chance…
David.
These words from ADHA amuse me . “innovation and clinical quality and safety” “consumers at the centre of their health and care and empower more choice, control and transparency”
ReplyDeleteSo how is an incomplete and unreliable Government database on your health address clinical quality and safety?
How does forcing everyone to use a central Government database of incomplete and stagnant records of people’s health give me more choice or control? And where is there any reasonable evidence the ADHA is transparent?