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."

Saturday, March 16, 2019

This Should Be Very Worthwhile Viewing To Discover If The ADHA Gets It Or Not - Assuming You Can Work Out How To Register!


I spotted this yesterday.

Consultation Launch and Vision and Principles Workshop - ADHA

When?

MON 18 MAR 2019

What Time?

10:00 AM - 11:45 AM AEDT

Where?

ONLINE

Already registered? Login below:
Access commences 30 mins prior to the start time
Event has not started yet. Please see event date and time for details.


Sharing the right health information at the right time is critical to high quality, sustainable health and care. Australia's National Digital Health Strategy – Safe, seamless and secure: evolving health and care to meet the needs of modern Australia – highlights the importance of connected health services and calls for the definition of standards to support interoperability that will support clinicians, patients and citizens make the best health and care decisions.

The national interoperability consultation – Better connections: Your health, your say – launches on 18 March 2019 and we would be honoured if you would join us for this important milestone.
About the speakers
Dr Steve Hambleton
Former president of the Australian Medical Association (2011-2014), Dr Hambleton is also the Foundation President of the AMAQ Foundation, the charity arm of the AMA’s Queensland Branch. He was appointed an independent director of the Queensland Aboriginal and Islander Health Council (QAIHC) in 2018.
Dr Hambleton has been the AMA representative on various national committees and taskforces including Chair of the AMA Taskforce on Indigenous Health. He was the Chair of the Australian Government Primary Health Care Advisory Group; is a member of the Australian Government Health Care Homes Implementation Advisory Group; and the Deputy Chair of the Australian Government Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) Review Taskforce.
Dr Hambleton is a member of the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care’s Australian Atlas of Healthcare Variation Advisory Group. He is Deputy Chair of the Australian Digital Health Agency Expansion Program and Co-Sponsor of the clinical programs.
Dr Hambleton is also a director of AVANT Mutual Group Limited, the largest Medical Indemnity Insurer in Australia and the Australasian Medical Publishing Company which publishes the Medical Journal of Australia (MJA).
He is a specialist General Practitioner working in Brisbane.

Grahame Grieve
Grahame Grieve is an Australian-grown, internationally renowned, clinical informatics expert.He is the principal author of the rapidly emerging FHIR standard.
Grahame operates a consulting company, Health Intersections, which works globally with national programs, vendor consortiums, individual vendors, and standards bodies about healthcare data exchange.
He is a fellow of the Australian College of Healthcare Informatics and a Member of the Australian Association of Clinical Biochemists.

Dr Harry Nespolon, President Royal Australian College of General Practitioners
Last year, thirty years after beginning as a GP, Dr Nespolon was elected president of the RACGP. He has worked for the AMA, as a RACGP examiner, and has been a representative on the Code of Conduct Committee for Medicines Australia for more than a decade.
Dr Nespolon was formerly Chair of GP Synergy, the largest GP regional training organisation in Australia, providing training across New South Wales. He has also worked as a management consultant for large financial, insurance and telecommunications projects.
In additional to his medical degree, Dr Nespolan has degrees in   economics and law, as well as an MBA and a Master of Health Law.

Emma Hossack
Emma Hossack is the CEO of the Medical Software Industry Association, of which she was most recently the President.
Prior to taking on the MSIA CEO role, Emma was the CEO of Extensia, a leading Australian supplier of software solutions and technologies for the health care sector. Emma was also the CEO of BarWeb, which provides information technology services to major Queensland law firms and members of the Queensland Bar as well as commercial clients in Australia and the Asia-Pacific region.
Before acquiring Extensia, Emma practiced as a commercial lawyer and completed a Masters of Law with a focus on medico/legal and privacy/ ethical issues in 2007.
Based in Brisbane, Emma’s other interests and positions include Past-President of the Australian and New Zealand International Association of Privacy Professionals, Chair Strategy and Grown ANZ, Director of ScriptWise, member of the Health Informatics Society Australia and representative on various government reference groups including the Commonwealth Department of Human Services Stakeholders Consultative and Compliance Groups.
Here is the link:

If what we see is endless advocacy for the myHR we can draw one conclusion. If a more nuanced and reflective approach then maybe another conclusion is possible.


I hope this is recorded as it really is a time trying not to be noticed!


I do wonder how you actually register - any clues please comment!


I wonder is it a secret?

David.

15 comments:

Anonymous said...

Goodness knows where you spotted it, I can't seem to locate it anywhere, nothing on the ADHA website. Perhaps it's a special camouflage session for invisible non-attendees attending The Digital Health Agency Medicinal Marijuana Farm in Nimbin.

Bernard Robertson-Dunn said...

"Sharing the right health information at the right time is critical to high quality, sustainable health and care."

Therein lies the problem. Nobody has defined what "the right health information" is.

The current approach of Digital Health is to gather as much data as possible, throw it into health record systems and hope that doctors can make sense of it. Australia makes it even worse by having two sets of systems - clinical systems and myhr.

It will be up to GPs to decide if all this data collection and dumping is of any use to them. At the moment, the consensus round the world is that it all comes at too much cost and too little benefit. Australia's solution is unique in that it is the worst possible solution.

The real problem is twofold - defining what the "right health information" is and then creating a system that effectively and efficiently manages that data.

The ADHA is doing neither.

IMHO, the future is not a single record keeping system but an interconnected ecosystem of specialist systems.

Anonymous said...

... and the Guru is?

Anonymous said...

You must have some pretty strong AI working for you David, I can’t search online for it. I work at ADHA and this is news to me.

Anonymous said...

Looks like it is a closed shop by special invitation. So it will be the usual entrance criteria - Praise Tim and his gang of four , sing the MHR marching song very loud and take hot crumpet from behind without blubbing.

For something obviously so important this seems to be going off with a whimper, wonder how running a bath works for this lot?

Anonymous said...

It is being promoted as a 'workshop' so it may well be "a closed shop by special invitation."

Even so, I very much doubt that would be the case because given all the promotion leading to opt-out and the absolute need to be seen to be transparent, inclusive and open, as well as the scrutiny now underway with the ANAO Audit, it would be folly in the extreme not to make the session widely available over the web for all interested parties to observe and learn from.

Also, if I, as a health informatics 'expert', were invited to participate and I found it to be a closed session, under the contentious circumstances now prevailing around the My Health Record I would decline / withdraw from participating as a speaker.

Finally, if The Medical Republic, Australian Doctor, Medical Observer, PulseIT and other interested reporters like Sue Dunlevy, are not permitted to observe / participate I think it would be reasonable to say the ANAO would take a very dim view of this in its Audit Report (assuming of course they are aware it is scheduled).

In fact, given that the Audit is now underway it is more than reasonable to expect the ANAO Auditors would be invited to observe / participate. Perhaps they have been. Perhaps that is what this 'Workshop' is all about - a sales pitch to the ANAO!

Methinks we will learn soon enough.

Dr David G More MB PhD said...

Stranger and stranger. At least one of the participants was a little startled to find the session was an apparent webinar.

David.

Bernard Robertson-Dunn said...

This is only a launch. The real work will get done elsewhere and at some other time.

Note that this project is in response to "calls for the definition of standards to support interoperability"

In other words it is only a tiny part of the full problem. It would be nice if they knew what the full requirements for interoperability are, but they've never done things in the right order before, why should we expect them to do so now?

If they had done things in the right order they would have solved the interoperability problem before releasing the PCEHR - which NEHTA said needed to happen as part of the critical supporting infrastructure. You know, like NASH.

They didn't do it then and they may well not be able to do it now.

Anonymous said...

Just seems all very muddled and half arsed. Launching Monday and this is all there is leading up to it? Who from ADHA is taking on interoperability? Standards by them selves won’t deliver interoperability. Anyone received an invite? There are subtle differences between webinars and webcasts.

At least they are using Redback, someone had a stroke of genius.

Andrew McIntyre said...

"definition of standards to support interoperability"
That's an interesting take. I would have thought that the whole purpose of standards was to enable inter-operability. If you actually have compliance with standards then inter-operability is possible at whatever level of detail the standards and testing covered.

Currently the best analogy I can think of is that everyone was given a picture of a 3 pin plug and they all went off an built plugs and sockets, but there were no engineering drawings or wiring diagrams or testing. Trying to plug things together either doesn't work or causes fires to break out. I don't think anyone is any position of influence in the ADHA has any idea about the concept of engineering drawings or wiring diagrams. I mean that's geeky techo stuff that managers don't need to know about, right?

Anonymous said...

@8:03 AM My deep concern is that the people listed to speak have allowed themselves to be seduced into promoting and perpetuating misguided myths and misinformation to give the ADHA and the My Health Record some semblance of credibility in order for them all to remain relevant.

Anonymous said...

Just one more crack at the fruit machine, might get lucky and get a win this time and things will change for the better.

Anonymous said...

There are plenty who are less than deserving suckling the public purse, I am happy enough to see a few remaining value-adds pickup a cheque or two. We all have to eat, sleep and be weary.

Anonymous said...

from here https://login.redbackconferencing.com.au/landers/page/3840b6, very funny when you click on 'join webcast'!!

Anonymous said...

Having watched and listened all I can say is - wow, I'm speechless. What a con