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."

Tuesday, August 20, 2019

Commentators and Journalists Weigh In On Digital Health And Related Privacy, Safety And Security Matters. Lots Of Interesting Perspectives - August 20, 2019.


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This weekly blog is to explore the larger issues around Digital Health, data security, data privacy and related matters.
I will also try to highlight ADHA Propaganda when I come upon it.
Just so we keep count, the latest Notes from the ADHA Board are dated 6 December, 2018! Secrecy unconstrained! This is really the behavior of a federal public agency gone rogue!
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Big data, social media and your suburb

Aug 16, 2019 — 8.00pm
On August 4th, Kamilla van der Velde took her puppy for a Sunday morning stroll down at Sydney's Balmoral Beach.
Blown away by the beauty of the winter sun glistening over the water, the 46-year-old Danish-Australian took a video, uploaded it to Instagram, and tagged her location.
Like millions of Australians, each time Mrs van der Velde posts about her puppy, morning coffee, or the Danish jewellery brand she works for, she generates a piece of data.
For the past decade, we have heard a lot about how the data economy is poised to supposedly transform whole industries. Marketers have been early and predominant adopters, which explains all those highly targeted ads you see online.
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Why our new “long term national health plan” does not deserve its name

The image above indicates how much Australia’s new “long term national health plan” has to say about a critical health threat confronting us, now and into the future: climate change.
It also indicates what journalists asked about this pressing health issue following Minister Greg Hunt’s presentation to the National Press Club today.
Perhaps they missed the news that “climate change is the greatest health challenge of the 21st century, and threatens all aspects of the society in which we live”.
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NSW government works on AI strategy, ethics framework

State government examines role of AI in policymaking
Rohan Pearce (Computerworld) 13 August, 2019 10:06
The New South Wales government is developing a strategy for the use of artificial intelligence (AI) technology as well as an AI ethics framework.
The state government announced today it will stage a summit dedicated to the ethical implications of AI and how NSW can best employ AI to support policymaking.
“AI has the potential to transform service delivery and make life easier for people, and this summit is an opportunity to learn from some of the country’s top experts,” customer service minister Victor Dominello said in a statement.
“AI is already being used to manage the NSW train fleet, predict the future location of bushfires and predict water pipe failure,” the minister said.
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Australian Digital Health Agency visits our region

Thursday, 15 August 2019  ADHA Propaganda

Today we welcomed the Australian Digital Health Agency to our PHN to learn more about the use of My Health Record on the ground.

Today we welcomed the Australian Digital Health Agency’s CEO Tim Kelsey, Chief Medical Advisor, Clinical Professor Meredith Makeham, and Education and Clinical Use Lead Carey Doolan to our PHN to learn more about the use of My Health Record on the ground.
COORDINARE supported the expansion of My Health Record across the South Eastern NSW region by raising awareness and understanding of this important initiative in our region’s diverse communities.
This visit provided an opportunity for Mr Kelsey, Professor Makeham and Mr Doolan to meet with health consumers, to hear about the real life impact My Health Record is having on their daily lives, and how it could be made more useful for consumers and healthcare providers.
The input from community members was highly valuable, and we thank them for sharing their stories and suggestions of areas for improvement.
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AI is coming to healthcare – and it’s here to help

GP19 keynote speaker Dr Martin Seneviratne talks to newsGP about the hype – and real promise – of artificial intelligence in healthcare.
‘GPs will have a really important translator role to play between machine learning and the broader clinical world,’ according to Dr Martin Seneviratne.
16 Aug 2019
The potential of artificial intelligence (AI) in healthcare has generated a considerable amount of excitement in recent years.

Not all of the hype is necessarily warranted, of course, but there is a real opportunity to improve healthcare if AI is used correctly.

That’s the view of Dr Martin Seneviratne, an Australian doctor turned clinical informatician.

‘There’s a lot of hype around how image-based medical specialties like dermatology and radiology will be overtaken by AI. But we’re far away from that, to be honest,’ Dr Seneviratne told newsGP.
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An interview with Angela Ryan, Chief Clinical Information Officer, Australian Digital Health Agency.

Creating better health for all Australians through digital health

August 15, 2019 08:27 PM
With more than a decade of experience as a registered nurse, Angela Ryan combines her clinical experience with her knowledge in health informatics towards the practical, meaningful and integrated use of digital health tools in Australia. In this interview with Healthcare IT News, she shares more on her role as the Chief Clinical Information Officer (CCIO), at the Australian Digital Health Agency (ADHA) and talks about why the My Health Record is a key pillar in Australia’s National Digital Health Strategy.
Could you tell us more about your role as CCIO of ADHA and your background in healthcare?
In my role as Chief Clinical Information Officer at the Australian Digital Health Agency, I work collaboratively across the health system to develop and maintain strong relationships with key stakeholders in the community to promote adoption and meaningful clinical use of digital health services and technologies, to deliver benefit to all Australians. A key priority is ensuring strong clinical engagement with the National Digital Health Strategy and associated programs and services – including the My Health Record system – and clinical input and assurance into the design, development and delivery of digital health systems. The role provides clinical leadership for the implementation, advancement and optimisation of digital systems nationally.
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Breathe Easy – How My Health Record Can Help Better Manage Patients with Asthma

This webinar will offer health care providers information on how My Health Record can assist in the care of patients with asthma.
Learn how My Health Record can be useful in managing patients with asthma and how it can be of assistance to other health care providers involved in their care.
There will be an opportunity for Q&A during this session. ADHA Propaganda
Venue: Webinar
Date/Time: Part day | Tue 3 Sep 2019, 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm (1hr)
Event Organiser: Australian Digital Health Agency
Email: Click here
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I dream of (data) genie – power, pace and paradox

14 August 2019
With ACCC chair Rod Sims declaring that the “[data] genie is out of the bottle,” and with CDR and Open Banking on the horizon, how will brands respond to shifting consumer preferences and data ethics? Jane Headon has the breakdown.
Ever dreamed of having your very own genie? You’ve probably been inspired by Aladdin, or a certain ’70s sitcom about an astronaut and a magical bottle. Either way, a genie gives you power, whenever you care to call on it. When Consumer Data Rights (CDR) was introduced in July 2018, ACCC chair Rod Sims acknowledged the megatrend that is big data and its value to businesses and individuals, observing that “the genie is out of the bottle, now we have to decide what to do with it”. 
What are these data rights, and is this genie good or bad? And now – one year on – what have we decided about the direction of Australian consumer data and the issues of trust, privacy and transparency that surround it?

CDR shifts the balance of power

We have just seen the CDR law passed in Australia – a bipartisan-supported reform which heralds the start of a seismic shift in power dynamics between businesses and consumers. Essentially, CDR paves the wave for consumers in selected industries to take control of their own data. The financial services industry will be the first manifestation of CDR, via a regime known as ‘Open Banking’. As an example, customers will be able to take their mortgage data and offer it to other financial services providers to compare and easily switch to better services and deals.
The broad intent of Open Banking is to unlock innovation, disrupting the concentration of data (and therefore power) within large organisations, such as our big four bank oligopoly, and to lower entry barriers for a broader set of competitors, such as smaller banks and fintechs. By allowing the opportunities to flow more broadly across a vibrant financial services ecosystem, consumers will benefit from competition, choice and convenient switching. It is anticipated that over time, other industries such as energy and telecommunications will adopt CDR, further opening up the competitive landscape in Australia. 
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Digital Health Literacy

Empowering your community to manage their own health futures  ADHA Propaganda

The Australian Library and Information Association (ALIA), the ALIA Australian Public Library Alliance (APLA), and ALIA Health Libraries Australia (HLA) have secured $1 million in funding for libraries from the Australian Digital Health Agency to run train the trainer programs.
ALIA, APLA, and HLA have partnered with the Australian Digital Health Agency to deliver a train the trainer program from September 2019 to June 2020 to support library staff to respond to queries about government digital health programs. This nationwide initiative will provide training to library staff on how users can navigate and understand the new Federal Government digital health initiatives, such as My Health Record.
Key benefits for libraries:
  • Free professional development for staff.
  • Grant funding to backfill staff time and contribute towards attendance costs.
  • A reportable and measurable way of aligning with council’s health and wellbeing strategies.
  • Improved health information service for library patrons.
  • New and enhanced relationships with local healthcare providers.
  • Successful library services will be encouraged to invite staff from neighbouring council library services, health libraries and key community health organisations to participate.
We know that people use public libraries as trusted sources of health and wellness information. With the recent focus on My Health Record, libraries can expect increased demand from consumers, not only for information about healthy living, health conditions, treatment plans, therapies and medicines, but also for help accessing digital resources.
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Tuesday, 13 August 2019 22:50

Regulatory imbalance between traditional media, digital platforms says ACCC chief

The head of Australia’s competition regulatory authority, Rod Sims, says disruption and dislocation in media markets - and a regulatory imbalance between traditional media and digital platforms - should concern all Australians.
Speaking at the Melbourne Press Club on Tuesday, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) Chair was reflecting on the recommendations in the final report of the ACCC’s Digital Platforms Inquiry released last month, cautioning that “while digital innovations have the potential to transform societies for the better, there are also forms of innovation that can be harmful”.
A number of the Inquiry’s 23 recommendations were directly focused on media and journalism, including the establishment of a new platform-neutral regulatory framework to ensure effective and consistent regulatory oversight of all entities involved in content production or delivery in Australia.
“There is an imbalance in the current regulatory treatment of content delivered via traditional broadcasting compared to content delivered via digital platforms, and that needs to be addressed,” Sims said.
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Penalties for privacy related breaches reach new heights

Australia August 8 2019
The amount of data created each day is growing at an increasing rate. Forget about gigabytes and terabytes, it’s reported that the digital universe currently sits at around 4.4 zetabytes. This is expected to reach 44 zetabytes by 2020. While this presents a number of opportunities for entities, it also carries several risks, most notably in relation to privacy.
Globally, regulators are flexing their muscles and imposing higher fines for privacy breaches than ever before. While these fines send a strong message to the market, it remains to be seen whether alone, they will be sufficient to compel entities to make any meaningful change to their data practices. In this article, we cover some of the most recent enforcement actions by the US, UK and Australian privacy regulators.
United States
On 12 July, the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) announced that Facebook Inc. (Facebook) would be required to pay US$5 billion to settle charges that Facebook violated a 2012 FTC order in which Facebook agreed to obtain the consent of users before sharing their data beyond their privacy settings. This penalty represents the largest of its kind ever imposed and is more than 21 times that imposed earlier this month by the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) on British Airways.
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Mandatory production of documents in the My Health Record system

12Aug 2019
The My Health Records Act 2012 (Cth) (the Act) limits when and how health information included in a My Health Record can be collected, used and disclosed.  Unauthorised collection, use or disclosure of My Health Record information is both a contravention of the Act and an interference with privacy.
Section 69 of the Act states that the Australian Digital Health Agency can only be required to disclose health information from a patient’s My Health Record to a court, coroner or other body except in very limited circumstances, including where the patient gives their consent.
The Agency has recently advised that, where patient consent has not been provided, it will apply to have any legal request (subpoena) set aside.
This information relates to My Health Records and does not concern health information held outside of the My Health Record system. More information on My Health Record can be obtained from the websites of the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (www.oaic.gov.au) and the Australian Digital Health Agency (www.myhealthrecord.gov.au), including:
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Legal holes and cavalier companies make a joke of data human rights

Paul Smith Technology Editor
Aug 13, 2019 — 12.00am
There are many reasons to get angry and think about chucking your smartphone into the bin when watching the Netflix documentary The Great Hack, which examines the Cambridge Analytica (CA) and Facebook scandal.
But perhaps the most worrying is the near certainty that it was just the tip of an incredibly dangerous iceberg, that most of us - certainly in Australia - are sailing around every day, without anything remotely resembling a life jacket.
In the CA scandal, tens of millions of Facebook users had their personal data harvested and used without their knowledge, in order to target key voters in political campaigns like Brexit and the last US presidential election.
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My Health Record Storybooks launched

June 11th, 2019 ADHA Propaganda
Categories: Media Releases
The Aboriginal Health & Medical Research Council of New South Wales (AH&MRC) are proud to launch our My Health Record Storybooks which were designed alongside the Australian Digital Health Agency.
My Health Record is an online summary of your health information. Right now, your health information is in different places, My Health Record helps you keep track of your health information, securely in one place.

My Health Record

My Health Record Storybook – Youth

My Health Record Storybook – Parents/Carers

My Health Record Storybook – Adults

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The safety of computerised prescribing in hospitals

·         Melissa T Baysari, Magdalena Z Raban
  • Aust Prescr 2019;42:136-8
  • 1 August 2019
  • DOI: 10.18773/austprescr.2019.037

SUMMARY

The implementation of computerised prescribing can result in large reductions in prescribing error rates. The flow-on effects to patient outcomes are not well studied.
The reduction in errors is dependent on prescribers becoming proficient in using the electronic prescribing system. All potential safety benefits are therefore not expected to be achieved immediately.
Electronic prescribing systems introduce new types of errors, most frequently errors in selection. Some of these errors can be prevented if the system is well designed.
Computerised decision support embedded in electronic prescribing systems has enormous potential to improve medication safety. However, current support systems have a limited capacity to provide context-relevant advice to prescribers.
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eHealth – Making it helpful and practical

Timothy Bowen Senior Solicitor – Advocacy, Claims & Education August 2019

eHealth has become an increasingly significant part of healthcare.

Starting with electronic records and emails, moving onto video consultations and secure messaging, and into apps and artificial intelligence, eHealth is ever evolving.
It is often seen as a way of making healthcare better, safer and more efficient.
It can do all those things, but only if done right.  This is where important issues of usability, practicality, clinical usefulness and reasonable expectations come into play.
This is why MIGA advocates on eHealth, most recently in the Australian Digital Health Agency’s consultation on a national health interoperability roadmap.  We have argued for augmenting and connecting existing eHealth systems to improve their operation, usefulness and uptake, and recognising the central role of doctors and other health professionals in eHealth design and development.
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How much private pathology is making it into the MHR?

  August 9, 2019    

Pathology giants, Sullivan Nicolaides (SNP), are now routinely uploading diagnostic test reports to patients’ My Health Record (MHR). The size and scale of the SNP set up marks an important new, and long promised, information source for the centralised patient record.

Pathology giant, Sullivan Nicolaides (SNP), are now routinely uploading diagnostic test reports to patients’ My Health Record (MHR). The size and scale of the SNP set up marks an important new, and long promised, information source for the centralised patient record.
But it’s still hard to tell just how much private pathology is actually making it into the MHR.
According to SNP’s MHR-opt-out pilot site in North Queensland, workflow from pathology request-to-report upload is functioning seamlessly.
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Rushed PIP QI scheme could create data and governance mayhem

  August 9, 2019    

Although well intentioned, the new PIP QI regime exposes a federal government that is underestimating the massive damage that could be done to the well being of their frontline healthcare troops in general practice and to trust in the system by a hastily cobbled together idea to move faster towards outcomes based care

The formal launch of the Federal Department of Health’s (DoH) new Quality Improvement Practice Incentive Program (PIP QI) regime on August 1 was accompanied by some strongly worded protests from senior thinkers in the GP sector and even some in  the digital health sector, but  it has  otherwise passed with little fanfare around the digital health world.
Some of the questions raised which are obvious and concerning include:
  • If the Australian Digital Health Agency (ADHA) has spent a fortune on a governance framework for secondary use of patient data for the My Health Record (MHR), why is none of that work in play in rolling out this secondary use scheme, given both schemes ultimately roll up to the Federal DoH?
  • Without a well defined regime in play, who is ultimately responsible for ensuring governance in a system which exposes patient data (non identified) to the relative competence of all 31 Primary Health Networks (PHNs) in the country, which have huge variance in their performance and management capabilities?
  • Who is responsible for overseeing any compliance from private data extraction suppliers, who are separately contracted by each PHN, and who are largely non transparent to the system because of commercial in confidence restrictions?
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Trust, data and the demonising of a health tech company

  August 12, 2019    

HealthEngine has made bad mistakes and mishandled its response to its patient data handling crisis, but the timing of the ACCC action against the company and the tone of its attack feel very convenient

Less than a year ago the health practice appointments platform Health Engine was a market leader and a market darling, by a fair margin. Having completed a funding round with a large global VC for $27m, and with strong growth in all its numbers it was by any measure the most successful health tech start up in the country.
Last week the ACCC launched a very pointed and very public attack on the group, as part of its follow up to a series of revelations almost a year before about how the company treated data it was collecting from patients, for reviews of practices, and for use by upstream services providers, primarily, health insurers.
Following the revelations last year Health Engine didn’t exactly cover themselves in PR crisis management glory. CEO, Dr Marcus Tan is bright, talented, driven, and by all accounts, not the Mark Zuckerberg of Australian digital health tech. But he did play some Facebook-like cards following the initial crisis last year. Caught off guard, he initially denied some of the allegations being made against the company, which later proved to be true. He then set about apologising in a manner that any PR professional could have told him was not the way to go. It was drip feed admissions and never a rip the band off approach.
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Digital access divide grows in disadvantaged communities

August 12, 2019
The internet at Wally Douglass's house is slow.

Key points

  • There are 28 suburbs and towns in Tasmania where more than 20 per cent of homes do not have internet access
  • Welfare groups say the internet is an now essential service, because an increasing number of government services are going online
  • The State Government promised a digital inclusion strategy last year, but it is yet to be released
He uses communal computers at places such as the Bridgewater Community Centre to report his income to Centrelink and apply for jobs — things he used to be able to do using pen and paper.
Mr Douglass said he considered himself lucky because he had a car to drive to places like the neighbourhood house from his Pontville home 12 kilometres away, instead of having to use public transport.
But he will soon disconnect his home internet and sell his vehicle because a $20-a-week rent increase has stretched his tight budget even further.
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Sunday, 11 August 2019 13:19

Huawei sounds warning to US and Google with launch of open source HarmonyOS  

Huawei Technologies would prefer to keep using Android in its smartphones but with the launch yesterday of HarmonyOS its own open source cross platform operating system, the Chinese telecoms giant has signalled that it is not prepared to take US sanctions against the company lying down.
That is the message delivered by Richard Yu, CEO of Huawei consumer division to a packed Huawei Developer Conference 2019 in Dongguan on Friday.
“If we cannot use Android in the future we can immediately switch to HarmonyOS,” Yu told the audience at the conference.
Known in China as Hongmeng, HarmonyOS is not only open source - a point reportedly enthusiastically received by the audience - but has been developed to be cross platform to include PCs, tablets, IoT edge devices.
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Comments more than welcome!
David.

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