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."

Monday, August 31, 2020

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 31 August, 2020.

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

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Seems to have been a really nothing week I have to say with very little Digital Health news of any impact. Sorry about that…

Enjoy the morsels I did find.

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https://www.smh.com.au/national/victoria/trashed-their-fax-machines-health-department-scraps-paper-contact-tracing-20200826-p55pnr.html

'Trashed their fax machines': Health Department scraps paper contact tracing

By Dana McCauley

August 26, 2020 — 7.57pm

The Victorian Health Department has quietly scrapped its paper COVID-19 notification system in a major boost for the state's trouble-plagued contact tracing unit.

The new electronic notification system, which went live on Wednesday afternoon, allows doctors who test people for COVID-19 to quickly enter results into an online database that instantly alerts health authorities of positive tests.

Medical professionals said they hoped the change would speed up contact tracing in the state, where long delays have hampered efforts to get on top of community transmission of the virus.

Australian Medical Association Victorian president Julian Rait welcomed the new electronic system, which he had first called for in May.

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https://www.smh.com.au/national/gp-push-to-remove-ban-on-private-billing-for-telehealth-20200824-p55oti.html

GP push to remove ban on private billing for telehealth

By Kate Aubusson

August 24, 2020 — 11.55pm

GPs are urging the federal government to make Medicare rebates for telehealth services permanent and allow GPs to privately bill patients beyond the September 30 cut-off, as practices buckle under the financial pressure of COVID-19.

The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners has also intensified its calls for Medicare to cover longer mental health consultations, amid growing concerns the pandemic has triggered an impending wave of psychological distress.

College spokesman Dr Bruce Willett said preventing GPs from charging co-payments for telehealth consultations was inequitable.

In a submission ahead of the budget on October 6, the college called for the removal of mandated bulk-billing for telehealth services provided by GPs.

Preventing GPs from charging co-payments for a large proportion of telehealth consultations meant general practices - many already impacted by the recent and devastating bushfires - were under immense financial strain during the pandemic, the college warned in the letter sent to Treasurer Josh Frydenberg, Health Minister Greg Hunt and Finance Minister Mathias Cormann on Monday.

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https://www.afr.com/politics/push-to-add-marketing-features-to-check-in-sites-20200824-p55otn

Check-in websites a privacy 'ticking time bomb'

Finbar O'Mallon Reporter

Aug 25, 2020 – 5.43pm

Developers are under pressure to add marketing features to coronavirus check-in websites, prompting privacy concerns.

The sites, which patrons use to fill in contact tracing data at venues, are a privacy "ticking time bomb" due to lax regulations, the operator of one check-in site says.

GuestCheck Australia chief executive Adrian Kinderis wants the government to issue licences for the digital products.

The privacy watchdog has left it to small and medium-sized businesses to ensure the digital contact-tracing products they used met guidelines.

"It's unfair to put the responsibility of all the privacy and everything else, without any guidance, back on the venue operator," Mr Kinderis said.

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https://www.ausdoc.com.au/practice/app-review-ten-pandemic-support-doctors-mental-health

App Review: TEN - pandemic support for doctors' mental health

The Black Dog Institute's The Essential Network for healthcare professionals who are concerned about their own mental health during COVID-19

27th August 2020

By Antony Scholefield

The essential network (TEN) app from the Black Dog Institute was specifically made for healthcare professionals concerned about their mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic

Funded by the Federal Government, the app brings together a variety of tools, such as mood trackers, relaxation cues, links to local mental health resource and some short videos of other health professionals answering questions like: “How do I avoid taking stress home with me?” 

The app also directs users to educational courses on topics like managing stress and insomnia.

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https://www.themandarin.com.au/138237-csiro-and-microsoft-heads-want-the-australian-public-and-private-sectors-to-build-their-digital-literacy/

CSIRO and Microsoft heads want the Australian public and private sectors to build their digital literacy

By Shannon Jenkins

Wednesday August 26, 2020

The coronavirus pandemic has prompted Australian governments to quickly improve their digital literacy, but there is a still a long way to go, according to CSIRO chief executive Dr Larry Marshall.

Speaking on Work with Purpose for Science Week, Marshall noted that CSIRO created its Data61 agency in 2015 because it was concerned about the lack of digital literacy in Australian governments and industry. After seeing what has occurred during the pandemic, he believes Australia is capable of boosting its digital literacy even more.

“I spent my whole career in Silicon Valley, so I have a pretty high bar for digital literacy in organisations, and I don’t see that same capability here in Australia, not yet. But in the last five years it’s come a long way,” he said.

“I think COVID has probably accelerated us five years in terms of our digital literacy. We need to keep that up, so when we go back, we keep a lot of the digital learnings that we’ve had, like video conferencing, like the power of data.”

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/optus-medibank-and-la-trobe-uni-fund-digital-health-projects-552456

Optus, Medibank and La Trobe Uni fund digital health projects

By Matt Johnston on Aug 27, 2020 6:31AM

Probing consequences and workarounds of isolation.

La Trobe University has partnered with Optus and Medibank to fund ‘rapid turnaround’ projects to investigate the impacts of working from home, telehealth physiotherapy and virtual care technologies.

Three projects set to be completed by February next year are expected to deliver tangible improvements to health outcomes as the health crisis continues to unfold, La Trobe deputy vice-chancellor Professor Susan Dodds said.

One project sharing $250,000 in grant funding examines the challenges hospitals face after adapting to social distancing measures enacted to curb the spread of COVID-19.

Led by professors James Boyd and Ani Desai, the project will develop a framework to evaluate virtual care models, such as remotely monitoring the health of patients discharged from hospitals who might be at high risk of readmission, or long-term monitoring of patient health in residential aged care settings.

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https://www.afr.com/companies/healthcare-and-fitness/stroke-of-genius-mobile-scans-to-transform-regional-care-20200810-p55kfc

'Stroke of genius': mobile scans to transform regional care

Jill Margo Health editor

Aug 27, 2020 – 12.01am

Australian researchers are planning a conceptual leap that could radically reduce the risk of disability following a stroke.

It sounds fantastical, but they are planning to put brain scanners in the air and fly them to people who have had a stroke.

The first thing everyone needs after a stroke is a CT scan to determine what kind of stroke occurred. Was it a clot or a bleed? This is important because the treatments are completely different.

Treatment is needed as fast as possible because every minute of delay means more brain cells die.

In the new plan, a lightweight portable brain scanner will arrive with a stroke team and all the necessary medication and equipment to provide treatment as the patient is flown to a hospital with a specialist stroke care unit.

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https://www.australianageingagenda.com.au/technology/emma-pate-joins-health-metrics/

by Australian Ageing Agenda August 26, 2020

Emma Pate joins Health Metrics

Aged care software vendor Health Metrics has appointed industry management professional Emma Pate to its executive team.

Ms Pate is now Head of Sales and Strategy at Health Metrics, the company behind health and social care sector software solution eCase.

She was most recently was running her consultancy Akuna Health since March this year.

Prior to that, Ms Pate held senior management roles at several software companies including AlayaCare Australia, Telstra Health and its forerunner iCareHealth and Silver Chain’s EOS Technologies Australia.

Health Metrics CEO Steven Strange said he and the board were excited to have Ms Pate join the team.

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https://www.smh.com.au/business/small-business/stroke-prediction-startup-see-mode-secures-9-million-investment-20200819-p55n3w.html

Stroke prediction startup See-Mode secures $9 million investment

By Cara Waters

August 20, 2020 — 12.00am

Melbourne stroke prediction startup See-Mode has secured $USD7 million ($9 million) in fresh capital from investors including Australia's largest venture capital firm Blackbird Ventures.

The company, which also has operations in Singapore, plans to use the funding to take its artificial intelligence technology designed to improve analysis of medical images into new markets in Europe and the United States.

Co-founder Dr Milad Mohammadzadeh said there was a significant clinical gap in the long term management of stroke patients that See-Mode looked to address. "20 per cent of stroke patients go on to have another stroke within five years," he said. "Clearly there is a need for better technology to understand the long term risk for these patients and for doctors to pre-emptively treat them."

Mr Mohammadzadeh started See-Mode in 2017 with fellow bio-medical engineering PhD Dr Sadaf Monajemi and the startup uses artificial intelligence based medical software to improve the analysis of medical images such as ultrasounds, CT or MRI scans to predict critical stroke risk factors.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/victoria-health-creates-ciso-role-552514

Victoria Health creates CISO role

By Justin Hendry on Aug 28, 2020 7:00AM

Second IT security chief to sit within the department.

Victoria’s Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) has created a chief information security officer role to increase accountability over internal IT security.

The department put out the call for the senior technical specialist this month to lead its information security unit, which currently reports to DHHS' strategy and design assistant director.

iTnews understands the position is a new role, separate to the Victorian Public Healthcare Sector CISO held by Grant Lockwood and which also sits within the department. 

“Appointment of the new CISO role will elevate leadership of this team to report directly to the chief information officer,” the job ad states.

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https://www.smh.com.au/technology/amazon-s-creepy-new-health-wearable-analyses-your-voice-and-body-20200828-p55q60.html

Amazon's creepy new health wearable analyses your voice and body

By Geoffrey A. Fowler

August 28, 2020 — 10.23am

I couldn't pick just one crazy thing to say about the Halo, Amazon's new wearable health gadget. So here are three:

  1. Mirror, mirror on the wall, Amazon thinks you're fat.
  2. The artificial intelligence would like you to stop sounding overwhelmed now.
  3. That nagging voice inside your head is now on your wrist.

The Halo is a wrist-worn device that, among other functions, listens to your conversations so you can understand how you sound to others. And it comes with a companion app that 3D-scans your body to track your weight gain during quarantine.

Amazon is upfront about these invasive functions, which users of the Halo have to opt into using. What's revealing is that one of tech's biggest companies thinks consumers in 2020 might want them.

It makes sense that Amazon wants to push into health. This year in particular, tech companies are trying to transition their body-worn devices from fitness trackers into health and wellness assistants. Earlier this week, Fitbit launched a new smartwatch called the Sense that includes a temperature sensor, an electrocardiogram app and an electrodermal activity sensor to detect the body's response to stress. In September, Apple is expected to unveil a new version of its Watch with more health bells and whistles.

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https://www.ausdoc.com.au/news/resource-tracks-covid19-activity-australia

This resource tracks COVID-19 activity in Australia

The tools offer a deeper understanding of the growth rate and the impact of prevention strategies

22nd July 2020

By Dr Kate Kelso

As COVID-19 takes hold across Australia and the world it has become increasingly important to be able to track the virus's spread and impact.

These dashboards use data collated by world-renowned data scientists including researchers from Sydney’s University of Technology, Johns Hopkins University, US, and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, to help you do just that.

If you're viewing on a desktop computer, click the buttons on the bottom right to expand and explore the dashboards.

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https://themarketherald.com.au/g-medical-innovations-asxgmv-adds-new-revenue-stream-for-idtf-platform-2020-08-27/

G Medical Innovations (ASX:GMV) adds new revenue stream for IDTF platform

ASX:GMV

Ashleigh Melanko Markets Reporter

ashleigh.melanko@themarketherald.com.au 27

August 2020 12:30

  • Mobile health company G Medical Innovations (GMV) has added a new revenue stream to its Independent Diagnostic Testing Facilities (IDTF) platform
  • This platform is a patient monitoring service which allows hospital staff to keep track of a patient's vital signs remotely
  • G Medical has today announced that it will offer remote patient monitoring services to patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) treatment
  • Hospitals can now monitor pre and post TAVR patients through G Medical's AECG Patch technology and mobile cardiac telemetry (MCT) device
  • G Medical is steady on the market and shares are currently trading for 4.2 cents each

Mobile health company G Medical Innovations (GMV) has added a new revenue stream to its Independent Diagnostic Testing Facilities (IDTF) platform.

This platform is a patient monitoring service which allows hospital staff to keep track of a patient's vital signs remotely.

G Medical has today announced that it will offer remote patient monitoring services to patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) treatment.

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Alcidion - FY2020 Full Year Results and Annual Report

Alcidion grows recurring revenue base, while investing to accelerate growth

Melbourne, Australia – Alcidion (ASX: ALC) has today released its audited full year results and Annual Report to Shareholders for the Financial Year ended 30 June 2020 (FY2020).

Highlights:

·         $18.6M revenue reported for FY2020, 10% increase vs FY2019;

·         Recurring revenue significantly increasing to $10.5M, 35% up on the prior year;

·         Net loss of $3.1M, reflecting planned investments to accelerate growth;

·         Cash reserves of $15.9M, well capitalised to support further growth in FY2021;

·         Significant product contracts signed in the UK and Australia

·         Entering FY2021 poised for further growth, with strong pipeline of potential business and $12.8M already contracted revenue to be recognised in FY21.

Alcidion has continued to grow revenue, delivering full year revenue of $18.6M, up 10% on the prior year. Notably, the recurring revenue base has increased by 35% year on prior year to $10.5M. 
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https://itwire.com/security/nz-stock-exchange-suffers-outages-due-to-ddos-attacks.html

Wednesday, 26 August 2020 11:13

NZ stock exchange suffers outages due to DDoS attacks

By Sam Varghese

New Zealand's stock exchange has been hit by a distributed denial of service attack on Wednesday morning which forced the exchange to go offline for about an hour.

The New Zealand Herald reported that the exchange had gone down at 11.24am local time (9.24am AEDT) on Wednesday and resumed operations at 12.20pm.

On Tuesday evening, the exchange could not operate during its last hour, due to a similar reason.

This outage happened as the exchange was approaching a record closing.

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https://www.zdnet.com/article/new-zealand-stock-exchange-suffers-day-four-disruption-following-ddos-attacks/

New Zealand Stock Exchange suffers day four disruption following DDoS attacks

The NZX was hoping to open on Friday but says it's experiencing connectivity issues resembling attacks from earlier in the week.

By Asha Barbaschow | August 28, 2020 -- 00:07 GMT (10:07 AEST) | Topic: Security

The New Zealand Stock Exchange (NZX) is still suffering from the aftermath of distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks that hit the exchange earlier this week.

On Friday morning, the NZX said its markets would open as normal, following ongoing work to put in place additional measures to maintain system connectivity and address the severe DDoS attacks. 

Two hours later, however, the NZX said it was experiencing connectivity issues which appeared to be similar to those caused by the DDoS attacks from earlier this week.

"Given the current issue, we have extended the pre-open for the NZX main board and Fonterra shareholders market. The NZX debt market was placed into a halt at 9:58am [NZST]," the exchange said. "The NZX derivatives market remains open."

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https://www.hinz.org.nz/news/523049/Digital-health-solutions-win-Hi-Tech-awards.htm

Digital health solutions win Hi Tech awards

Monday, 24 August 2020  

eHealthNews.nz editor Rebecca McBeth

Digital health was a big winner at the 2020 Hi-Tech Awards with Emergency Q and Precision Driven Health scooping three awards between them.

DHB ICT staff have also been recognised as finalists in this years CIO Awards.

Emergency Q, a Kaupapa Maori software company that built a digital platform to reduce overcrowding in hospital Emergency Departments, won The Callaghan Innovation Maori Company of the Year Award and the Kiwibank Most Innovative Hi-Tech Service Award.

Precision Driven Health won the Visa Hi-Tech Solution for the Public Good award for the partnership’s freely accessible surgical risk calculator, nzRISK. 
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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/technology/norton-offers-dark-web-tracing/news-story/6744df32fc4a5f2cf5980e6e01255fd6

Norton offers dark web monitoring to consumers

Chris Griffith

Norton will let you trace whether your personal information is being stored or up for sale on the dark web.

It says its product LifeLock will search for more than 120 personal identifiable pieces of information. This includes email addresses, physical address, a phone number, driver‘s licence number, credit card, bank account numbers and gamer tags.

“With 42 per cent of Australian respondents now online gaming regularly, monitoring crucial information such as gamer tags is more important than ever,” says Norton.

But how will Norton know your personal information to start with, and how does it safeguard it?

Norton says any personal data you provide is encrypted, and only a few selected employees who undergo training on how to handle personal data can access it. “These employees must provide their own credentials every time they access personal data and are subject to monitoring by our Information Security and Compliance team,” Norton told The Australian.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/data3-confirms-network-related-security-incident-552472

Data#3 confirms network-related security 'incident'

By Ry Crozier on Aug 27, 2020 10:09AM

After detecting 'suspicious activity' earlier this month.

IT services firm Data#3 has disclosed a “cyber incident” that appeared to target a third-party networking service the company used, resulting in 28 of its customers being impacted.

The incident appears to have occurred back on August 4, when Data#3 notified on its website the detection of “suspicious activity on [its] network.”

The Australian Cyber Security Centre (ACSC) was called in to investigate at that point, but there had been no updates since.

However, in a financial filing on Thursday morning [pdf], Data#3 disclosed the extent of the incident in terms of the number of its customers that were impacted.

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https://itwire.com/telecoms-and-nbn/australia-s-average-5g-speed-third-among-12-measured-by-opensignal.html

Thursday, 27 August 2020 09:55

Australia's average 5G speed third among 12 measured by OpenSignal  

By Sam Varghese

Australia's average 5G download speed is third among the leading 12 5G markets studied by analytics firm OpenSignal, with Saudi Arabia, unexpectedly, top and South Korea second.

OpenSignal looked at 5G speeds in isolation and also in combination with 4G use; the company also looked at the amount of time users spend connected to 4G and 5G in the 12 countries/regions studied.

Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Australia, the US, the UK, Kuwait, Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands and Canada were included in the study as were the two regions of Hong Kong and Taiwan.

As far as the overall download speed was concerned, users in Saudi Arabia experienced 144.5Mbps, much ahead of Canada. This measure covered both 4G and 5G as it was looking at total use. Australia was seventh with 48.7Mbps.

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Enjoy!

David.

 

Sunday, August 30, 2020

It Is Always Interesting To See How Financial Interests Can Override Obvious Common-sense And Lead To Unanticipated Consequences.

Last week this opinion piece appeared.

FROM THE ALLIANCE

Telehealth—Improving access for rural, regional and remote communities

Gabrielle O’Kane PhD

First published: 28 August 2020

https://doi.org/10.1111/ajr.12663

Over the past few years, the Alliance has been advocating for improvements to digital health capability and greater access to telehealth services for rural, regional and remote communities. The Alliance has been supportive of My Health Record, e‐prescribing, secure messaging and home monitoring, for their potential to enhance health care integration and bolster coordinated care for improved health outcomes of rural, regional and remote communities.1

…..

While the broader digital health transformation of health care may be moving relatively slowly, COVID‐19 has been the catalyst to rapidly change the Australian Government's policy position on telehealth services. This has been very welcome amongst rural health providers and consumers. The rolling out of the temporary Medical Benefits Schedule (MBS) telehealth items since March to GPs, medical practitioners, nurse practitioners, midwives and allied health providers has been vital to help reduce the risk of community transmission of COVID‐19 and provide protection for patients and health professionals alike.

Now is the time to capitalise on the Government's common‐sense approach to averting a health care crisis and embrace the use of digital technologies and telehealth options for a whole range of purposes, settings and demographics. The uptake of telehealth services in general practice between 1 April and 30 June 2020, during the height of the pandemic, was at 30.7% and even higher for mental health services offered by allied health providers and specialists, at 43.4% and 38.0%, respectively. For allied health and specialist providers of care other than mental health, the use of telehealth was lower at 3.8% and 23.7%, respectively. Notably, allied health and specialist providers of health services made greater use of videoconferencing telehealth than GPs, who only used this modality for 3.5% of services.2

There appears to be enthusiasm for the continuation of telehealth MBS items amongst the health care sector and consumers. A recent survey conducted by the Royal Australasian College of Physicians during the COVID‐19 pandemic reported that 87% of respondents supported retaining the new telehealth items beyond the current crisis. The survey also found that almost 70% of the sample of members stated that their patients were more likely to keep their telehealth appointments than their face‐to‐face appointments, which suggests that the convenience of not having to travel to appointments is highly attractive to consumers, regardless of place of residence.3

Previous research published in this journal has already demonstrated that using telehealth‐based models of care can have benefits for those residing in rural and remote communities, the health care provider and the system.4, 5 One study showed that telehealth can be successfully applied to the management of patients with a spinal fracture, which allowed the patient to be cared for in their local rural hospital and offered opportunities for allied health professionals to upskill and work to their full scope of practice, while also providing cost efficiencies for the health service.5 Another innovative application of telehealth was an integrated approach to oral health in rural aged care facilities with an oral health therapist screening residents using an intraoral camera probe that transmitted a live feed to a dentist in another health care facility.4 With so few dentists living in rural and remote Australia, there is real opportunity to scale up this sort of application of telehealth for other population groups such as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people living in remote communities. In rural and remote education settings, speech pathology teletherapy services have been able to overcome limited connectivity issues by successfully using low‐bandwidth videoconferencing facilities.6 These examples demonstrate that telehealth can offer rural and remote communities a more flexible and convenient mode of access to health care, while also upskilling rural health generalists, parents and educators by linking them and their patients or clients to urban‐based specialists.

An issue that still needs to be addressed more fully is the quality of telehealth services, particularly when considering the use of telephone versus videoconferencing consultations. Certainly from the perspective of specialist physicians, videoconferencing is considered preferable for patient assessment and establishing patient rapport. It is better for communicating with geriatric patients and those with impaired hearing and those from a non‐English‐speaking background.3 However, the same survey found that many elderly patients found it difficult dealing with the technology required to use videoconferencing platforms and poor connectivity was also flagged as a problem for those living rurally. One of the recommendations from the report was that Government should consider additional funding for videoconferencing and other digital health technology for selected households.3 The Alliance would certainly support such measures, but there must also be resources put towards improving digital health literacy for both consumers and health care providers so that all Australians can be enabled to make optimal use of digital and telehealth services.

One final consideration in the move to greater access to telehealth services must be about ensuring that rural health private providers are offered protection from telehealth providers that offer no local services. The Australian Government's recent decision to reform the Medicare‐subsidised telehealth services is helpful. Under stage 7 of the telehealth reforms, the GP telehealth provider will be required to have an ongoing relationship with the patient receiving the care to enable continuous, high quality care. Specifically, the patient will have to have seen the same GP or practice in the last 12 months to be eligible to receive the Medicare rebate. Ultimately, without some safeguards, primary care practices, particularly those in rural and remote communities, may not remain viable, which short‐changes rural communities in the long term.7

Here is the link:

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/ajr.12663

A useful review of the present situation (other than a keenness for the #myHR) which reveals at the end a desire to restrict some access to services to save money and preserves some incomes presumably.

This article shows how this may be rather discriminatory.

Telehealth changes risk sexual and reproductive health delivery

Authored by Deborah Bateson

Issue 33 / 24 August 2020

WHEN COVID-19 hit Australian shores, governments and health care workers scrambled to prepare a response to the looming crisis unfolding around the globe. Like many places, including Canada, France and the UK, the Australian response in the sexual and reproductive health sector included a rapid upscaling of telehealth services.

Enhanced telehealth accessibility, funded through the Medicare rebate system, allowed people to access healthcare in their own homes through the March–May 2020 lockdown. The switch to telehealth was in line with growing international evidence of how the pandemic response has dramatically altered health care delivery in high income countries, given the imperative to provide physically distanced health care where feasible.

However, this early win for the health of Australians has been short-lived with new restrictions making telehealth inaccessible for many and leaving the nation at risk of falling behind similar countries such as Canada and France and the UK.

The 20 July federal government changes to Medicare mean Family Planning NSW, like other similar services, can no longer offer telehealth to new clients or anyone not seen face-to-face by our doctors in the past year, which represents a great many of the patients who come to us for help.

“From July 20, telehealth GP providers will be required to have an existing and continuous relationship with a patient in order to provide telehealth services. This will ensure patients continue to receive quality, ongoing care from a GP who knows their medical history and needs. A relationship is defined as the patient having seen the same practitioner for a face-to-face service in the last 12 months, or having seen a doctor at the same practice for a face-to-face service during the same period.”

These cutbacks, while aimed at preventing rogue operators, also affect the most vulnerable patients. Global predictions of higher rates of unintended pregnancies, unsafe abortion, short interpregnancy intervals and untreated sexually transmissible infections (STIs) are all highlighted in our recent BMJ Sexual and Reproductive Health editorial.

Telehealth delivered health care to more than 1500 Family Planning NSW patients from 30 March to 20 July 2020, and accessing advice on contraception was the number one reason people used our telehealth service. We found telehealth greatly improved access to essential health care – particularly for people living in rural and remote areas, young people and those not connected with a regular GP. Assessments for long-acting reversible contraception and provision of contraceptive pill scripts, medical abortion and STI screening were all important health care services being delivered effectively by telehealth.

Telehealth is truly valuable for improving health and outcomes both in this pandemic environment and beyond, as we move to our “new normal” way of life. Telehealth delivers health care access to marginalised patients unable to attend in person because they live in a rural or remote area, have a disability, or live busy lives juggling work, young children and caring for elderly relatives.

It also opens access for young people who were the largest users of our telehealth service. In fact, from March to July 2020, 700 people aged 20–29 years used our telehealth service to access health care. We know this age group is particularly unlikely to have a regular doctor or may still be tied to a family GP with whom they prefer not to discuss sensitive sexual and reproductive health concerns.

The very nature of our specialised practice means we do not routinely provide continuity of care but rather see people when the need arises, with referral back to their GP for their ongoing care.

These telehealth restrictions mean many of our potential patients can no longer access our services nor those of other service providers, including GPs with specialised skills, as they do not fall within the current criteria. It is a sad reality that for the most vulnerable people in our society, these changes which can block access to telehealth will simply mean health care is not available.

Since the new restrictions rolled in, many of our patients can no longer access vital health care, including contraception, STI care, and medical abortion. So far, since 20 July, 48 people have been unable to access essential health care through our telehealth services due to the Medicare rebates changes.

The increasing chlamydia rates among young people, rising numbers of gonorrhoea diagnoses in women and men and the rise in new human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection diagnoses in the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population mean there is no room for complacency in relation to STIs. Complications including infertility and chronic pain from untreated STIs can create ongoing cost burdens to individuals as well as governments.

……

Having people turned away from essential health care such as contraception, STI checks and medical abortions in Australia in 2020 is a cause for alarm, and patients seeking these specialised services need their access to telehealth reinstated through an exemption to the federal government cutbacks.

Clinical Associate Professor Deborah Bateson is the Medical Director of Family Planning NSW.

More here:

https://insightplus.mja.com.au/2020/33/telehealth-changes-jeopardise-sexual-and-reproductive-health-delivery/

Clearly there are some patient groups who may be disadvantaged with the planned benefits schedule changes and who really need special consideration in the COVIDTimes!

Maybe the ADHA might want to carefully review and then advise the Government on the best way forward to resolve the conflicting interests since they seem so have claimed telehealth as a Digital Health initiative on what I reckon are pretty flimsy grounds. The again, probably not, as they are really largely a clinical vacuum with a pretty small roster of clinical staff.

Certainly the work needs doing to minimise the unintended consequences and preserve balance!

While on the topic of telehealth I am wondering just how much care is going into measuring the impact on quality and safely of the care being received. I find it hard to believe there has not been at least a small negative impact. We really do need to know just what it is costing in these terms with such a rapid shift in the approach to so many consultations.

We are really still feeling our way with this transition I believe.

David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 542 – Results – 30th August, 2020.

 Here are the results of the poll.

Should Australia Move To A Single National Electronic Script Exchange With Integrated RTPM?

Yes 57% (48)

No 42% (35)

I Have No Idea 1% (1)

Total votes: 84

A marginal  poll with 57% of readers saying it would be better to move to a single exchange.   

Any insights on the poll welcome as a comment, as usual.

A rather low number of votes.  

It must also have been an easy question with just 1/84 readers were not sure how to respond.

Again, many, many thanks to all those who voted!  

David.

Saturday, August 29, 2020

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links – 29 August, 2020.

Here are a few I came across last week.

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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https://www.digitalhealth.net/2020/08/managing-the-uks-next-big-crisis-of-disrupted-cancer-care-and-diagnosis/

Managing the UK’s ‘next big crisis’ of disrupted cancer care and diagnosis

With a lot of medical care on hold during the coronavirus pandemic, Paul Landau, founder and CEO of digital cancer care company Careology, looks into how (this is) the UK’s ‘next big crisis’.

DHI News Team – 20 August 2020

On the 23rd March, the UK government announced that lockdown measures to combat coronavirus would come into play, sparking concern for thousands of people living and dealing with cancer.

For some, their treatment continued as planned, for others changes were made such as switching to oral chemotherapy tablets. But many faced anxiety-inducing delays to operations and treatment. this was combined with a sharp decline in those who suspected they had cancer symptoms from seeking help, causing new referrals to fall by an estimated 70%.

Delays in diagnosis have huge implications and according to Clare Turnball, a professor of genomic medicine: “for some cancers, a three-month delay could make the difference between a tumour being curable or not.”

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https://mhealthintelligence.com/news/telehealth-kiosks-give-homeless-veterans-a-link-to-healthcare-other-services

Telehealth Kiosks Give Homeless Veterans a Link to Healthcare, Other Services

Soldier On has partnered with Let's Talk Interactive to expand a telehealth platform that connects homeless veterans and those in transitional housing with mental health counselors and other sorely needed services.

By Eric Wicklund

August 17, 2020 - A non-profit that targets veteran homelessness is using telehealth to expand access to mental health and other services.

Soldier On, which was launched in 1994 in Pittsfield, MA and now serves thousands of veterans in the Northeast, recently Partnered with Let’s Talk Interactive to leverage telemedicine kiosks and telehealth platforms in transitional and permanent housing and jail programs.

The kiosks allow the organization’s 80 full-time case workers to conduct virtual visits with veterans who might otherwise ignore or skip appointments for care. They also give the organization a platform to help veterans with other issues, including financial literacy, social services, legal representation, housing needs and even employment counseling.

“It’s a great platform for connecting with veterans,” says Bruce Buckley, Soldier On’s CEO. Veterans “generally feel more comfortable in their own environment, and this gives them a chance to connect when and where they need to make that connection. When you’re in someone else’s office, you’re a visitor, and that isn’t always comfortable.”

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https://healthitanalytics.com/news/deep-learning-models-can-detect-covid-19-in-chest-ct-scans

Deep Learning Models Can Detect COVID-19 in Chest CT Scans

The deep learning tools could distinguish between COVID-19 and other pneumonias in chest CT scans, enhancing coronavirus diagnosis.

By Jessica Kent

August 18, 2020 - Deep learning tools were able to identify COVID-19 in chest CT scans, indicating that artificial intelligence could enhance diagnosis of the virus, according to a study published in Nature Communications.

While CT scans have been useful in helping providers detect COVID-19, clinicians are discouraged from using these medical images for coronavirus diagnosis.

“CT evaluation has been an integral part of the initial evaluation of patients with suspected or confirmed COVID-19 in multiple centers in Wuhan China and northern Italy,” researchers noted.

“However, these guidelines also recommend against using chest CT in screening or diagnostic settings in part due to similar radiographic presentation with other influenza-associated pneumonias. Techniques for distinguishing between these entities may strengthen support toward use of CT in diagnostic settings.”

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https://healthitanalytics.com/news/big-data-dashboards-to-help-us-colleges-track-covid-19-spread

Big Data Dashboards to Help US Colleges Track COVID-19 Spread

As students begin to return to campuses across the country, colleges are leveraging big data dashboards to monitor the spread of COVID-19 among students and staff.

By Jessica Kent

August 19, 2020 - To help track and monitor the spread of COVID-19 on college campuses, leaders across the country are implementing big data dashboards to promote transparency and comfort among students, faculty, and staff.  

Boston University recently went live with its BU COVID-19 Testing Data Dashboard, a data visualization resource that allows users to see the number of tests conducted and the number of individuals who have tested negative, positive, or inconclusive.

Leaders will update the dashboard daily, and will include daily and cumulative numbers as well as seven-day averages and comparative figures from the local county. The university expects that the dashboard will enable proactive measures to stop further spread of the virus.

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https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/opinions/preventing-cyber-attacks/

17 Aug 2020 Opinion

Prevent-ilation: Airing out the Myths of Preventing Cyber Attacks

Zeki Turedi Technology Strategist, EMEA, Crowdstrike

Cyberspace remains plagued by vague assumptions surrounding the correct methods of preventing cyber-attacks. Whilst some of these preventative measures have merit (often there is no smoke without fire), they are often exaggerated in effectiveness against determined and multi-faceted attacks.

Our 2019 CrowdStrike Global Threat Report suggests that the cyber landscape once again changed with more frequent attacks coming via alternative methods such as malware-free intrusions. In fact, the report revealed 51 percent of cyber-attacks were orchestrated via malware-free means, whereby an actor doesn't employ a malicious file or file fragment to a computer disk. These attacks are usually perpetrated by more sophisticated adversaries, particularly in EMEA and North America, and are much harder to detect. Typically, organizations will have to rely on behavioral detection and human threat hunting to intercept malware-free attacks. 

Despite the growing focus on best practices and increased regulation in recent years, businesses need to take a more proactive approach to cybersecurity. Here are some of the common misconceptions of attack prevention.

Anti-virus is enough to prevent intrusion from adversaries
Anti-virus (AV) software is an important first step in protecting against foreign infiltration. However, relying on it solely is a mistake. Traditional anti-virus software can only go so far in preventing and detecting infiltration, as traditional or legacy AV deployments can only detect known or existing viruses.

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https://www.wkbw.com/news/local-news/phone-scam-circulating-callers-pose-as-covid-19-contact-tracers

Phone scam circulating, callers pose as COVID-19 contact tracers

By: Anthony Reyes

Posted at 4:23 PM, Aug 20, 2020

and last updated 6:23 AM, Aug 21, 2020

BUFFALO, N.Y. (WKBW) — State and federal authorities say a phone scam is circulating where the callers pose as COVID-19 contact tracers.

Officials say the callers that pose as contact tracers try to obtain credit card or bank account information from their victims.

The Chautauqua County Department of Health and Human Services has issued information to help avoid this scam.

County officials say if you are tested for COVID-19 and your result is positive a Chautauqua County public health nurse will contact you and if you are named a close contact, a NYS contact tracer will contact you.

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https://www.zdnet.com/article/ai-may-not-predict-the-next-pandemic-but-big-data-and-machine-learning-are-key-to-fighting-this-one/

AI may not predict the next pandemic, but big data and machine learning can fight this one

In Spain, a new observatory processes epidemiological, mobility and environmental data to manage COVID.

By Anna Solana for IT Iberia | August 21, 2020 -- 10:15 GMT (20:15 AEST) | Topic: Artificial Intelligence

In April, at the height of the lockdown, computer-science professor Àlex Arenas predicted that a second wave of coronavirus was highly possible this summer in Spain.

At the time, many scientists were still confident that high temperature and humidity would slow the impact and spread of the virus over the summer months, as happens with seasonal flu.

Unfortunately, Arenas' predictions have turned out to be accurate. Madrid, the Basque country, Aragon, Catalonia, and other Spanish regions are currently dealing with a surge in COVID-19 cases, despite the use of masks, hand-washing and social distancing.

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/health-passports-distancing-tools-among-covid-19-tech-climbing-gartner-hype-cycle

Health passports, distancing tools among COVID-19 tech climbing Gartner Hype Cycle

Those pandemic-era technologies will reach the fabled Plateau of Productivity sooner than other emerging innovations approaching the peak of the curve, such as digital twins, data fabric, SASE network architecture, researchers say.

By Mike Miliard

August 21, 2020 11:30 AM

Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies, 2020 (Source: Gartner)

Gartner research's famous hype curve looks like a steep roller coaster leading to a launch pad. Beginning with the necessity-is-the-mother-of-innovation "Innovation Trigger," it predictively tracks new technologies as they might evolve over the next years and decades: a long, slow climb the Peak of Inflated Expectations, then falling with a reality check into the Trough of Disillusionment, before slowly, with tweaks and refinements, clawing back up the Slope of Enlightenment toward, eventually, the Plateau of Productivity.

WHY IT MATTERS
With most technologies it can take five years or more to trace that bumpy path, from shiny-object to indispensable tool (or, in many cases, obsolete fad).

And, indeed, plenty of the innovations on the most recent Hype Cycle for Emerging Technologies, published this week, will take plenty of time to evolve and either prove their worth or lose steam, whether two-way brain-machine interface, generative adversarial networks or responsible AI.

But at least a couple species of emerging tech are charting their course on the hype curve much faster than usual, and it probably won't be a surprise that they emerged in response to the COVID-19 public health crisis.

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https://www.healthcareittoday.com/2020/08/21/cerner-follows-epic-in-adding-consumer-friendly-digital-health-tools-to-its-platform/

Cerner Follows Epic In Adding Consumer-Friendly Digital Health Tools To Its Platform

August 21, 2020

Anne Zieger

Following in Epic’s footsteps, Cerner has struck a deal with a vendor supporting a range of digital health tools designed for both consumers as well as physicians. What makes the agreement notable is less the fact that both Cerner and Epic have signed on with digital health vendor Xealth – though a bit unusual – but rather, that the deals suggest that the two have similar ideas as to how patient outreach and patient engagement should work.

Cerner is so impressed by Xealth that in addition to using Xealth technology, it partnered with LRVHealth on a $6 million investment in the company. This follows investments by a number of other healthcare organizations, including the Cleveland Clinic, Froedert and the Medical College of Wisconsin, UPMC, McKesson, Novartis, Phillips and ResMed. In other words, it’s not only the two EHR giants who think the vendor has the right approach to digital health management.

According to a news release, the Xealth platform connects with more than 30 digital health solutions, including remote patient monitoring, virtual care platforms and e-commerce tools making product recommendations.

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https://www.healthleadersmedia.com/covid-19/californias-data-failures-stymie-efforts-curb-virus

California's Data Failures Stymie Efforts to Curb the Virus

By Kaiser Health News  |   August 21, 2020

Data system failures left California with a backlog of about 300,000 lab reports. Of those, nearly 15,000 turned out to be positive for COVID-19.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

·         Gov. Gavin Newsom's administration is still struggling to fix the problems and prevent future breakdowns.

·         Iowa recently discovered a major flaw that backdated thousands of test results.

·         North Carolina learned that another commercial testing company, LabCorp, had been including out-of-state tests in its data since April.

·         Alabama found that some labs were not properly sending test results to the state.

This article was first published on Friday, August 21, 2020 in Kaiser Health News.

By Anna Maria Barry-Jester and

The failure of California's infectious disease monitoring system for a stretch of at least 20 days in July and August triggered potentially deadly fallout that continues to reverberate across the state.

The fallout has been most severe in heavily populated counties, which rely primarily on a statewide electronic information system to guide their pandemic response. Local health departments couldn't clearly see where the coronavirus was spreading, dramatically slowing their efforts to trace and track new infections — leading to more death and disease, public health officials said.

Data system failures left California with a backlog of about 300,000 lab reports. Of those, nearly 15,000 turned out to be positive for COVID-19, according to state Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly.

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https://patientengagementhit.com/news/covid-19-pushed-older-adults-to-telehealth-quality-concerns-persist

COVID-19 Pushed Older Adults to Telehealth, Quality Concerns Persist

Although telehealth use is growing among older adults, patients still have fears about privacy and care quality over video visit.

By Sara Heath

August 19, 2020 - Adult patients over age 50 are warming to telehealth, with one in four patients saying they had used telehealth to access care between March and June of 2020, the National Poll on Healthy Aging revealed.

That is up from the only 4 percent of patients over age 50 who said the same in a similar 2019 National Poll on Healthy Aging, which like the 2020 poll was conducted by University of Michigan’s Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation (IHPI) with support from AARP and Michigan Medicine.

This surge in telehealth access and satisfaction can largely be credited to the novel coronavirus, which pushed individuals to lean on digital technologies to access healthcare.

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https://ehrintelligence.com/news/icd-10-codes-unreliable-for-covid-19-symptoms-ehr-surveillance

ICD-10 Codes Unreliable for COVID-19 Symptoms, EHR Surveillance

A high number of false negative tests were observed when researchers examined ICD-10 data codes to capture COVID-19 symptoms and conduct disease surveillance in the EHR.

By Christopher Jason

August 18, 2020 - Symptom-specific ICD-10 codes do not accurately capture COVID-19 related symptoms and should not be utilized for disease surveillance in the EHR, according to a recent study published in JAMA Network Open.

EHR data is being used by health systems to learn more about the coronavirus and how to treat the pandemic accurately. Notably, ICD-10 is a key code set clinicians use for disease surveillance.

In this study, researchers from the University of Utah Health assessed the accuracy of ICD-10 codes through EHR review to capture COVID-19 symptoms, such as fever, cough, and dyspnea. Researchers examined more than 2,200 patients who underwent COVID-19 testing for those symptoms between March and April 2020.

Researchers compared the sensitivity, specificity, and both the positive and negative predictive code values for the three symptoms. Looking at those measures set to help the researchers understand how well ICD-10 codes could demonstrate whether or not a patient had COVID-19.

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https://www.healio.com/news/cardiac-vascular-intervention/20200818/youtube-as-educational-tool-in-mi-may-help-patients-understand-dapt-use-after-pci

August 18, 2020 By Scott Buzby

YouTube as educational tool in MI may help patients understand DAPT use after PCI

YouTube was found to be an effective tool for educating patients who had PCI for MI on their condition and the significance of adherence to their prescribed dual antiplatelet therapy, researchers reported.

For the study presented at the virtual Association for Healthcare Social Media meeting, investigators administered two tests to 21 patients with acute MI who had PCI that evaluated their understanding of the importance of adherence to DAPT. In between the two tests, patients were shown a standardized educational YouTube video that addressed their condition and why they were prescribed DAPT.

“PCI with coronary stenting is nothing without appropriate concurrent and complimentary medications like dual antiplatelet therapy, and medications only work if the patients take them,” Marc Katz, MD, cardiology fellow at St. Luke’s University Hospital in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, said during the presentation. “We’ve all experienced that we have a limited amount of time in clinic and at bedside with our patients, and there are many reasons why a patient might not take their medications as prescribed, but not understanding why they’re taking their meds and not understanding the possible side effects shouldn’t be one of them.”

Each patient (mean age, 63 years; 38.9% women; 9% with prior DAPT) was administered the same exam of four true or false statements:

  • Antiplatelet medications help prevent future heart attacks by preventing platelets from activating and forming clots inside stents placed in the heart.
  • Stopping DAPT early may lead to serious complications.
  • While taking DAPT, if bleeding occurs, it is most commonly a nuisance or nonserious bleeding and DAPT should be continued.
  • DAPT may be stopped without confirming with a cardiologist.

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/europe/nurses-20-digital-transformation-nursing

Nurses 2.0 - The digital transformation of nursing

Healthcare IT News spoke to nursing and informatics experts to find out how exactly nurses have led the digital transition.

Sara Mageit

August 20, 2020

Digital innovation is becoming increasingly critical to clinical practice, not just as a workforce management tool, but as a foundation to change the way care is delivered. Healthcare IT News spoke to senior nursing informatics officer for Abu Dhabi Health Services, Hana Abu Sharib and professor in health and human services informatics at the University of Eastern Finland, Dr Kaija Saranto, to find out exactly how nurses and midwives are leading the digital transition.

Nurses and midwives have played a key role in leading the digital and informatics arena to improve patient care, particularly in the COVID environment where the quality of digital care delivery has come to the forefront of healthcare and been under more scrutiny than ever. In September, they will be speaking at the HIMSS & Health 2.0 European Digital Event, in the ‘Nurses 2.0’ session, where they will expand on some of these key issues in greater detail.

“During the pandemic, nurse informatics teams were involved in training for different EMR applications and devices for nurse shifting cross settings (ED-OPD-Inpatient) based on operational needs. They were also very actively involved in building the input forms for nursing and addressing the patient surge during the crisis. From a data perspective, they were validating the reports and dashboard,” explains Abu Sharib.  

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/europe/project-will-use-himss-digital-health-indicator-create-roadmap-health-services

Project will use HIMSS Digital Health Indicator to create roadmap for health services in Queensland, Australia

The initiative aims to drive digital transformation across the state and identify services in need of investment.

By Tammy Lovell

August 20, 2020 01:35 AM

A Queensland government project will use the HIMSS Digital Health Indicator to help health workers in the Australian state understand the technology used in local health services.

The initiative will run in hospitals and health services, as well as some primary health networks across the state, with the aim of building a data-driven roadmap for digital transformation.

Health research body, the Digital Health Cooperative Research Centre (DHCRC) is supporting the collaboration between the state’s largest healthcare provider, Queensland Health, the University of Queensland and HIMSS.

HIMSS, which owns Healthcare IT News, has developed a virtual assessment process, which will reduce the burden on the hospitals and health services and Queensland health team.

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/hhs-said-reverse-course-hospitals-report-covid-19-data-cdc-again

HHS said to reverse course, with hospitals to report COVID-19 data to CDC again

White House task force coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx said the process of HHS bypassing the CDC was meant to be "solely an interim system," according to a WSJ report that HHS later denied.

By Kat Jercich

August 20, 2020 04:05 PM

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services reportedly said Thursday that it would return responsibility for collecting data from hospitals about COVID-19 patients back to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, but HHS later said the process would not change. 

Dr. Deborah Birx told hospital executives and government officials that the HHS system was "solely an interim system" while the CDC worked to build a new data system "so [reporting] can be moved back to the CDC," according to The Wall Street Journal

The CDC will work with the U.S. Digital Service to "build a modernized automation process" for hospital data, an HHS official told The Journal. The modernized automation process will still send data to HHS Protect, where all agencies who need it, including the CDC, will have access to it. 

HHS spokesperson Michael Caputo denied the reports Thursday afternoon, telling Healthcare IT News that the process for data reporting "has not and is not changing."

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https://www.healthcareittoday.com/2020/08/20/have-you-tried-to-make-an-appointment-with-your-own-doctors-lately-it-may-be-harder-than-you-expected/

Have You Tried To Make An Appointment With Your Own Doctors Lately? It May Be Harder Than You Expected

August 20, 2020

Anne Zieger

As the pandemic grinds on, healthcare systems are looking for ways to adapt to the situation and better meet the new demands imposed by caring for COVID-19 patients. This includes improving how they handle their communications with patients. For example, at New Hyde Park, N.Y.-based Northwell Health, they’re planning to introduce robotic process automation to direct inbound callers to an appropriate level of care.

Other health systems, unfortunately, don’t seem to have gotten this particular memo. Part of the reason, I suspect, is that the leaders of these institutions haven’t tried to make an appointment with their own doctors lately. If they did, some would be aggravated or even horrified by the inefficiency and poor design within their interactive voice response systems.

Unfortunately, my personal experiences provide a good example of what can go wrong with IVR systems.  Due to flawed IVR logic, scheduling a visit with a Johns Hopkins-affiliated doctor turned out to be something of, let’s say, an adventure due to its crazily disorganized IVR and telephony infrastructure. Even given my experience as an e-patient with chronic conditions, it took multiple calls to navigate to where I needed to be and at several points I almost gave up the fight.

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https://www.healthleadersmedia.com/telehealth/telehealth-visits-skyrocket-among-americans-age-50-80

Telehealth Visits Skyrocket Among Americans Age 50-80

By Alexandra Wilson Pecci  |   August 18, 2020

A new poll reveals several threats and opportunities for the future of telehealth among older Americans.

The percentage of older adults who had ever participated in a telehealth visit rose from 4% in May 2019 to 30% in June 2020, according to the University of Michigan National Poll on Healthy Aging.

However, the poll also found that these patients still considered in-office visits more effective, and many of them had no choice but to see their doctor via telehealth.

Nearly half of those who had a telehealth visit said their healthcare provider canceled or rescheduled an in-person visit between March and June, and 30% said that a virtual visit was the only option when they called to schedule an appointment.

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https://healthitanalytics.com/news/machine-learning-tool-predicts-staffing-needs-during-covid-19

Machine Learning Tool Predicts Staffing Needs During COVID-19

The machine learning model tracks local hospitalization volumes and the rate of confirmed COVID-19 cases to predict staffing needs during the pandemic.

By Jessica Kent

August 17, 2020 - Researchers from Cedars-Sinai have developed a machine learning tool that can forecast data points related to the COVID-19 pandemic and predict staffing needs.

When COVID-19 began to spread across the US, healthcare organizations were faced with the challenge of accurately forecasting the number of patients who would need hospitalization. Entities also needed to have an idea of how many patients would be in the ICU and would need ventilators, as well as how much personal protective equipment (PPE) staff would use.

A data science team at Cedars-Sinai adjusted a machine learning platform’s algorithm to predict factors related to coronavirus. The platform now tracks local hospitalization volumes and the rate of confirmed COVID-19 cases, running multiple forecasting models to help anticipate and prepare for increasing COVID-19 patient volumes with an 85 percent to 95 percent degree of accuracy.

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https://patientengagementhit.com/news/understanding-the-new-patient-preference-for-telehealth-access

Understanding the New Patient Preference for Telehealth Access

Emory Healthcare, like other systems during the pandemic, has leaned heavily on telehealth access. And now, there's no going back.

By Sara Heath

August 17, 2020 - March 2020 brought about one of the biggest catalysts for care delivery change at Emory Healthcare. Telehealth access, which once was a key tool for the health system mostly on the hospital side, soon became the crux of the patient experience in ambulatory care, too.

This isn’t a novel story. Most healthcare organizations, big and small, saw a major problem on their hands when the novel coronavirus quarantined people in their own homes and sparked industry-wide calls to postpone non-urgent or elective healthcare. Clinics and hospitals could be a breeding ground for the virus, logic held, and so it was best for patients who weren’t urgently sick or injured to stay at home for the time being.

But also like organizations across the country, Emory Healthcare knew that would leave a major patient cohort behind. Chronic disease management, which hinges on a high-touch and communicative patient engagement strategy, would fall by the wayside of patients couldn’t get into ambulatory clinics to see their doctors.

In a short period of time, these medical facilities put up advanced telehealth access programs that helped patients receive the care they needed without going into the office.

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https://www.fiercehealthcare.com/practices/nearly-half-physicians-believe-covid-19-will-not-be-under-control-until-after-june-2021

Nearly half of physicians believe it will take a year to get COVID-19 under control

By Heather Landi 

Aug 18, 2020 1:09pm

The majority of physicians believe COVID-19 won’t be under control until January 2021, and nearly half (49%) expect it will take much longer to get the virus under control.

Most doctors (59%) also see opening businesses, schools and public places as a bigger risk to patients than continuing policies of social isolation, according to survey of 3,500 providers conducted by The Physicians Foundation.

The results are part of a three-part survey examining how COVID-19 is affecting and is perceived by U.S. physicians.

A majority of physicians (72%) believe that the virus will severely impact patient health outcomes due to delayed routine care during the pandemic, the survey found.

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https://abcnews.go.com/Health/teletherapy-meets-teens-live-screen/story?id=72374725

Teletherapy meets teens where they live: On-screen

New apps help teens access mental health services during the pandemic.

By  Jay Bhatt

19 August 2020, 20:03

Due to the coronavirus, many teens have been missing their proms, graduation ceremonies, daily routines and their friends. These missed events and social interactions are only adding to the additional stress many adolescents are facing amid the pandemic, health experts say.

"A lot of my clients have been more depressed, more anxious,” said Geovany Martinez, a bilingual social worker who treats at-risk clients in New York City and Yonkers, New York.

Some feel isolated and lonely even as they might be stuck in crowded apartments, perhaps with difficult or abusive family members. Previous coping practices like seeing friends and playing sports are risky, Martinez said.

And in a coronavirus hotspot that's also home to the nation's poorest congressional district—where many employed adults have to take public transit to essential jobs, while many who are no longer employed worry about paying for food—parents’ angst often filters down to their teenage children.

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https://ehrintelligence.com/news/data-standardization-tool-normalizes-covid-19-test-terms-in-ehr

Data Standardization Tool Normalizes COVID-19 Test Terms in EHR

Researchers developed a data standardization tool that yielded 99 percent accuracy when characterizing COVID-19 testing names to LOINC codes.

By Christopher Jason

August 19, 2020 - A well-developed data standard tool that automatically normalizes and characterizes COVID-19 testing names to the Logical Observation Identifiers Names and Codes (LOINC) dataset can support secondary use of EHRs for COVID-19 research and enhance interoperability, according to a recent article published in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association (JAMIA).

Patient data stored in EHRs is a crucial source of data for COVID-19 research and studies. While having access to the actual data is key, one requirement is to normalize or characterize the data to standard terminologies. To understand and address the pandemic, institutions such as Regenstrief Institute, have developed local codes and names for COVID-19 tests.

LOINC aims to streamline health data standardization for more efficient EHR use and health data exchange, which is critical when a pandemic, such as COVID-19 occurs.

As one of the most widely-used code systems, LOINC seeks to provide standardization in medical test result identification, observations, and a variety of other clinical measures. LOINC promotes interoperability with new terms for tests and clinical observations available through requests from end-users.

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https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-facebook/on-facebook-health-misinformation-superspreaders-rack-up-billions-of-views-report-idUSKCN25F1M4

August 19, 2020 / 11:08 PM / Updated 15 hours ago

On Facebook, health-misinformation 'superspreaders' rack up billions of views: report

Elizabeth Culliford

(Reuters) - Misleading health content has racked up an estimated 3.8 billion views on Facebook Inc (FB.O) over the past year, peaking during the COVID-19 pandemic, advocacy group Avaaz said in a new report here on Wednesday.

The report found that content from 10 “superspreader” sites sharing health misinformation had almost four times as many Facebook views in April 2020 as equivalent content from the sites of 10 leading health institutions, such as the World Health Organization and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The social media giant, which has been under pressure to curb misinformation on its platform, has made amplifying credible health information a key element of its response. It also started removing misinformation about the novel coronavirus outbreak that it said could cause imminent harm.

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/europe/uk-government-seeks-new-healthcare-data-guardian

UK government seeks new healthcare data guardian

The new national data guardian will oversee the collection and use of patient data.

By Sara Mageit

August 19, 2020 10:50 AM

The Department of Health and Social Care is seeking a new national data guardian (NDG) to advise and challenge the healthcare system on safeguarding patient data.

The data guardian is expected to represent the interests of patients and the public, ensuring people’s confidential information is kept securely and shared appropriately.

The role is offered at £45,000 per annum, working two to three days per week and will be chosen by a panel including NHSX chief Matthew Gould and deputy director of data and information governance policy, Simon Madden.

WHY IT MATTERS

In 2018, the NDG role was given statutory powers to guide and challenge the health and social care system.

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https://www.healthcareittoday.com/2020/08/19/the-importance-of-handling-legacy-ehr-data-during-the-move-to-a-new-ehr/

The Importance of Handling Legacy EHR Data During the Move to a New EHR

August 19, 2020

John Lynn

While many EHR projects were put on hold or at least slowed down during COVID-19, we’re starting to see many of these projects revving back up.  Just because COVID-19 happened doesn’t mean it changed the fact that many healthcare organizations need to upgrade and switch out their EHR software or consolidate onto one EHR.  In fact, in many cases COVID-19 highlighted the need to move to a more modern EHR across their organization.

Plus, I predict that the market is ripe for a bunch of EHR switching and consolidation over the next couple years.  For example, Marlin Equity Partners has acquired AdvancedMD, Aprima, Practice Partner, and e-MDs.  It’s hard to imagine them going forward with all of these software platforms.  At some point I think they’re going to consolidate onto one and then those practices are going to have to move to a new EHR.

In my interview with Howard Messing, CEO of MEDITECH, we highlighted the 50 year history of MEDITECH and how they essentially launched a new EHR every decade.  While MEDITECH has been and seems to continue to be a strong partner when it comes to not sunsetting their legacy products, our recent MEDITECH EHR telehealth interview highlighted why it pays to be on their latest version to receive the most highly integrated telehealth possible.  Some of the latest features that healthcare organizations want can’t be built on the legacy systems.  It just makes sense that many organizations need to bite the bullet and move to MEDITECH Expanse.

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https://healthitsecurity.com/news/covid-19-home-monitoring-tools-pose-patient-privacy-safety-risks

COVID-19 Home Monitoring Tools Pose Patient Privacy, Safety Risks

A study published in Nature Medicine reveals potential risks caused by the rapid adoption of home monitoring tools in light of COVID-19, including risks to patient privacy and safety.

By Jessica Davis

August 14, 2020 - The COVID-19 pandemic spurred the rapid adoption of remote patient monitoring tools to support patient care in light of social distancing needs. But the accelerated development of these technologies potentially increased risks to patient safety and privacy, among other regulatory concerns. 

Published in Nature Medicine, a group of Harvard University researchers assessed the adoption of these home monitoring technologies amid the pandemic and needed interventions to ensure patient safety and compliance with regulatory requirements, privacy laws, and Emergency Use Authorizations (EUAs). 

The study defined home monitoring technology as products used for monitoring without direct supervision from a healthcare professional and that collects healthcare-related data. Remote patient monitoring tech is included, while a telehealth visits were not considered for the purposes of the study. 

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https://ehrintelligence.com/news/how-a-ny-hie-transformed-healthcare-for-its-homeless-population

How a NY HIE Transformed Healthcare for its Homeless Population

Healthix, one of the largest public health information exchanges (HIEs) in the country, was faced with major challenges that severely impacted healthcare for the homeless community.

By Christopher Jason

August 17, 2020 - In March, roughly 61,000 people in New York City were reported homeless, a number that rivaled the Great Depression. As a result of this staggering number, Healthix, a public health information exchange (HIE) that covers New York City and Long Island, used a coordinated approach to improve the health outcomes of individuals without stable housing.

However, Tom Moore, VP of innovation for Healthix, and its provider partners, quickly found three major challenges that stood in the way of executing that goal.

For one thing, it’s hard to connect an individual who is homeless to an HIE if you can’t connect the individual to an address.

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https://www.aiin.healthcare/topics/research/cds-software-improves-outcomes-performance

CDS software improves patient outcomes as well as practitioner performance

Dave Pearson | August 17, 2020 | Research

Computerized clinical decision support has strong upsides and few to no downsides for both clinicians and patients, according to a systematic literature review conducted at Texas State University’s school of health administration.

Analyzing a small but representative set of articles meeting the review’s criteria, Clemens Scott Kruse, PhD, MHA, MBA, and Nolan Ehrbar, BHA, made several key findings:

  • 61% of 36 articles described occurrences of positive patient medical outcomes, while
    • 8% found no statistically significant difference in medical outcomes between intervention and control groups, and
    • 31% did not report or discuss medical outcomes.
  • 66% of 38 articles documented occurrences of positive practitioner performance, while
    • 13% found no difference in practitioner performance, and
    • 21% did not report or discuss practitioner performance.

Similarly encouraging for clinical CDS proponents: Zero articles turned up reporting negative patient outcomes or negative practitioner performance associated with the use of CDS.

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https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/17/technology/coronavirus-disinformation-doctors.html

Coronavirus Doctors Battle Another Scourge: Misinformation

Physicians say they regularly treat people more inclined to believe what they read on Facebook than what a medical professional tells them.

By Adam Satariano

·         Aug. 17, 2020

  An emergency room doctor in Illinois was accused in April of profiting from naming coronavirus as the cause of a patient’s death, a rumor spreading online.

An internist in New York treated a vomiting patient in May who drank a bleach mixture as part of a fake virus cure found on YouTube.

And in June a paramedic in Britain aided a clearly sick man who had refused to go to a hospital after reading misleading warnings about poor coronavirus treatment on social media.

Doctors on the front lines of the global pandemic say they are fighting not just the coronavirus, but also increasingly combating a never-ending scourge of misinformation about the disease that is hurting patients.

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https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2020/08/18/covid-cdc-white-house-fail-meet-health-literacy-guidelines/3389522001/

Many Americans may not comprehend COVID-19 information as agencies fail to meet health literacy guidelines, study says

Adrianna Rodriguez

USA TODAY

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the White House and state health departments failed to meet guidelines when communicating vital information about COVID-19 to the public, according to a study released Tuesday.

The CDC, the American Medical Association and the National Institutes of Health all recommend that medical information for the public be written at no higher than an eighth-grade reading level. 

But after studying 137 federal and state web pages, Dartmouth College researchers found that public information about the coronavirus averaged just over an 11th-grade reading level.

The study worries public health experts, who reference previous research highlighting health inequities among vulnerable communities impacted most by the coronavirus pandemic. 

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/europe/covid-19-and-future-care-delivery

COVID-19 and the future of care delivery

It was quickly recognised that the pandemic required tools to provide safe access to health and care at a distance. Scotland is demonstrating how a rapid telehealth transformation can be achieved says Nessa Barry of the Scottish government.

August 18, 2020 03:56 AM

The opportunity to deliver a session for new healthcare students on the subject of telehealth is an enjoyable one. However, these sessions usually begin with a hurdle to be overcome – that of terminology. Discussion on the definitions for telehealth, telecare, telemedicine and other terms under the digital health and care umbrella is always required, and will be discussed in greater detail during the HIMSS & Health 2.0 European Digital Event taking place on 7-11 September 2020..

We start with a graphic that shows citizens accessing health and care at different points along a continuum of care. The continuum runs from the home or community setting – through to an acute hospital setting. In these conversations about how technology might be used in different scenarios, and the terms that are applied, we always emphasise that the prefix telesimply means at a distanceand that students should focus on the intervention, the health and care being provided. I have repeated that sentence many times over the years and it comes to mind now, more than ever, as we look for tools to maintain and provide safe access to health and care services at a distance.

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https://www.mobihealthnews.com/news/north-america/when-will-medical-simulation-catch-consumer-video-games

When will medical simulation catch up to consumer video games?

In a HIMSS20 Digital session, Level Ex CEO Sam Glassenberg discusses his company's efforts to bridge the gap.

By Jonah Comstock

August 18, 2020 03:02 pm

Sam Glassenberg, CEO of Level Ex, dodged the family business of medicine and went into video game design. But his path led him right back to the world of medicine

“All of this came to a head in 2012 when my father, who is an anesthesiologist, finally gave up and said ‘All right Sam, you’re not going to medical school. It’s too late. So at least put this game silliness to good use and make me a game to train my residents to do a fiber optic intubation.”

He made a game. And, to make it easy for his fathers’ residents to access it, he put it on the app store. A little while later his father, hoping to check in on his students, asked him how many times the game had been downloaded.

The answer was 100,000, Glassenberg revealed in a recent HIMSS20 Digital session. And not only that, a peer-reviewed paper about his game had come out demonstrating its effectiveness in training anesthesiologists on the procedure.

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https://www.healthcarefinancenews.com/news/technology-prioritizes-patient-dignity-essential-expert-panel-says

2020

Technology that prioritizes patient dignity is essential, expert panel says

Dignity-preserving technology allows the patient to decide what information is shared and for how long.

Mallory Hackett, Associate Editor

Preserving a patient's dignity is essential to creating a human-driven healthcare model, according to panelists from the HIMSS 2020 digital session "Dignity-Preserving Technology: Addressing Global Health Disparities in Vulnerable Populations."

A person's dignity is becoming increasingly intertwined with technology, according to panelist Dr. Alex Cahana, chief medical officer at ConsenSys Health. He says that technology has become an important mode for sharing how people think, feel and speak.

"And so if we are in essence our data, then any third party that takes that data – with a partial or even complete agreement of consent from my end, and uses it, abuses it, or loses it – takes actually a piece of me as a human," Cahana said during the panel.

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/ai-bias-may-worsen-covid-19-health-disparities-people-color

AI bias may worsen COVID-19 health disparities for people of color

A new article in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association points to the dissemination of "under-developed and potentially biased models" in response to the novel coronavirus.

By Kat Jercich

August 18, 2020 02:17 PM

Developers and data scientists have long said that biased data often leads to biased models when it comes to machine learning and artificial intelligence. 

A new article in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association argues that such biased models may further the disproportionate impact the COVID-19 pandemic is having on people of color.

The article's authors, Eliane Röösli, of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, and Brian Rice and Tina Hernandez-Boussard, of Stanford University, noted that even as the global research community has rushed to push out new findings, it risks producing biased prediction models.

"If not properly addressed, propagating these biases under the mantle of AI has the potential to exaggerate the health disparities faced by minority populations already bearing the highest disease burden," wrote the researchers.

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https://www.healthcareittoday.com/2020/08/18/data-driven-decisions-for-care-transitions/

Data Driven Decisions for Care Transitions

August 18, 2020

Colin Hung

Transitioning elderly patients from acute care facilities continues to be inefficient, inconvenient, and fraught with risk. Most are still done via paper and fax machines. In addition, the decision on the patient’s most appropriate next level of care is often made without using patient data or using only superficial information like primary diagnosis. It shouldn’t be this way.

naviHealth is a company that makes a technology platform that uses evidence-based protocols along with dedicated staff to track patient recoveries, manage hospital discharges and improve clinical decision making. Their goal is to help build a future with more senior-centered care.

I recently had the opportunity to sit down with Jay LaBine MD, Chief Medical Officer at naviHealth. We discussed how decisions are made when transitioning patients to post-acute care, the future of homecare, and the overall lack of investment in this area.

Determining Next Level of Care
“The first part of the care transition is determining what’s the most appropriate next level of care setting for that individual,” stated Dr. LaBine. “But how is that determination made?”

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https://www.healthleadersmedia.com/innovation/whats-next-telehealth-opportunities-innovation

What's Next for Telehealth? Opportunities for Innovation

By Mandy Roth  |   August 18, 2020

Experts point to areas of potential growth and improvement in the telehealth landscape.

While telehealth has accelerated in popularity, it is far from reaching its zenith. Tremendous innovation is needed to help it reach its potential. BDO USA, part of BDO International, an accounting network, published the 2020 Healthcare Digital Transformation Survey earlier this year. HealthLeaders spoke with Deb Sheehan and Chris Cooper, both managing directors of the BDO Center for Healthcare Excellence and Innovation who were involved with the study, to obtain their insights regarding where opportunities for improvement exist in the virtual care arena. Among their recommendations:

  • EMR enhancements: During in-person visits, physicians have time to check in with staff members and orient themselves to the patient outside of the examination room. As physicians conduct virtual care, that dynamic changes. They need to be able to quickly reference the EMR on demand. Enabling technology is needed so providers can easily access necessary screens to enhance workflow and reduce time needed to navigate through the EMR platform.
     

·         Balancing virtual and in-person visits: As patients begin returning for in-person visits, new workflow issues exist with the current need for social distancing and the inability to keep multiple patients in the waiting room. Coupled with longer patient turnover rates due to the extra time it takes to sanitize rooms between visits, physicians may design their workflow to alternate between virtual and in-person visits throughout the day. Data is needed to help physicians determine the optimal mix.

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https://www.healthleadersmedia.com/innovation/3-ways-covid-19-transformed-healthcare-delivery-through-telehealth

3 Ways COVID-19 Transformed Healthcare Delivery Through Telehealth

By Mandy Roth  |   August 18, 2020

With the coronavirus crisis, health systems catapulted the industry into the future by accelerating virtual care initiatives that will forever change the way healthcare is delivered in the U.S.  


KEY TAKEAWAYS

·         The ability to rapidly scale solutions that were already in place was an essential component of telehealth success stories.

·         Massive training initiatives were necessary to deploy technology to thousands of new users.

·         With access to new tools, novel uses for virtual care evolved, such as virtual rounding and ER video handoffs.

As 2020 launched, healthcare executives had no way of knowing the havoc a novel virus that had emerged in Wuhan, China, would wreak on the healthcare industry. By March 11, 2020, the World Health Organization acknowledged a pandemic was in progress, and COVID-19 began impacting the U.S. population. Hospitals and healthcare systems went into overdrive, brainstorming new ways to protect patients, and providers set out to devise new ways to deliver care.

Between mid-February and April, healthcare innovation was happening everywhere at a rate and scale never before experienced. New ideas were quickly greenlighted; funds were released to purchase new technology; and staff members were reassigned to deliver care in new ways. In this wellspring of ingenuity, one innovation that was already entrenched—yet mired in a bog of skepticism, regulations, and reimbursement restrictions—was ready to break loose: telehealth.

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https://mhealthintelligence.com/features/healthcare-looks-to-telehealth-to-address-physician-burnout-stress

Healthcare Looks to Telehealth to Address Physician Burnout, Stress

In an industry plagued by burnout, hospitals and health systems are using telehealth to give providers virtual access to mental health counselors - and to make their jobs less stressful.

August 14, 2020 - Like any profession that deals in life and death, healthcare has a stress and burnout problem - to which telehealth could be the answer. 

Physicians have the highest suicide rate of any profession, losing 300 to 400 of their colleagues a year, and their struggles with stress and depression have an adverse effect on the healthcare industry’s economic health – a 2019 study posted in the Annals of Internal Medicine found that burnout adds roughly $4.6 billion in costs each year. 

Writing in the American Journal of Medicine, Scott Yates, MD, MBA, MS, FACP, of the Plano, Texas-based Center for Executive Medicine, says burnout affects roughly half of all physicians in practice, manifesting itself in medical errors, lower quality of care and higher costs. Furthermore, it’s a systemic issue, rather than an individual one, and COVID-19 certainly isn’t helping.

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https://healthitanalytics.com/news/how-big-data-analytics-models-can-impact-healthcare-decision-making

How Big Data Analytics Models Can Impact Healthcare Decision-Making

Big data analytics models can help policymakers make more informed healthcare decisions, contributing to better public and population health.

By Jessica Kent

August 17, 2020 - In healthcare, providers and lawmakers are faced with the task of making the best possible decisions for patients and the industry as a whole. From choosing the best treatments, to determining the most effective ways to utilize resources, leaders are making decisions every day that can impact health outcomes and costs.  

With all of this information to consider, it’s no wonder that big data analytics tools have played an increasingly significant role in healthcare decision-making.

Researchers, providers, and policymakers are turning to big data analytics models to help improve care delivery, allocation of resources, and preventive health measures.

As the industry continues to innovate and refine these tools, data-driven decisions will soon become standard, leading to more proactive, successful healthcare operations.

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https://healthitanalytics.com/news/harnessing-big-data-to-enhance-population-health-management

Harnessing Big Data to Enhance Population Health Management

Big data and analytics tools can help providers meet the clinical and social needs of the patients they serve, paving the way for improved population health management.

By Jessica Kent

August 13, 2020 - As the industry continues its quest to provide holistic, comprehensive, and cost-effective care to patients, the term population health management has emerged as a crucial task for organizations to undertake.

Understanding the needs of particular patient groups, targeting resources to those who need them most, and measuring outcomes are all part of advanced quality care delivery. But in order to successfully manage patient populations, institutions must have a solid grip on something the industry contains in multitudes: Data.

“Healthcare is typically slow to take things up, but the industry was always big data even before there was big data,” Brian Coffey, senior vice president and chief data insight and innovation officer at Southwestern Health Resources (SWHR), told HealthITAnalytics.com.

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https://www.fiercehealthcare.com/practices/how-covid-19-shaking-up-medical-education-for-good

How COVID-19 is shaking up medical education—for good

By Paige Minemyer 

Aug 14, 2020 10:54am

As the wave of closures swept across the U.S. due to the COVID-19 pandemic this spring, Jason Rosenstock, M.D. found himself among the educators scrambling to totally rethink how school would work.

For the interim associate dean for medical education at the Univeristy of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, that meant rethinking the delivery of medical education using pre-recorded classes while lecturers connected with students in active discussions through online platforms like Zoom, Rosenstock said.

“It was okay, but it really wasn’t as good as doing synchronous discussions,” he said. 

With COVID-19 shows no signs of letting up soon, leaders at medical schools like Rosenstock are adapting their plans for education in the fall to meet the new demands of the pandemic. That means going digital in an unprecedented way—both in terms of classes and in terms of the type of clinical care students are learning about. 

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https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2020/08/14/902271822/13-states-make-contact-tracing-data-public-heres-what-they-re-learning

14 States Make Contact Tracing Data Public. Here's What They're Learning

August 14, 20205:00 AM ET

Updated 3:40 p.m. ET

Note: This story was updated to include Massachusetts, which began to share contact

When everyone who tests positive for coronavirus in your community gets a call from a public health worker asking them about their contacts and those contacts are then asked to quarantine, the process creates a powerful way to keep the virus from spreading.

But contact tracing can do more than that: At scale, the data gathered in those calls also offers vital information about where transmission is happening in a community. That data can drive policy and even guide individuals in assessing what's more or less safe to go out and do.

NPR has surveyed the health departments of all U.S. states and territories three times about contact tracing capacity — first in April, then again in mid-June, and most recently in late July. The latest survey, done in collaboration with the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security, also asked states about contact tracing data: what they were gathering and what they're making public.

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https://www.fiercehealthcare.com/payer/cms-issues-medicaid-guidance-for-states-implementing-interoperability-rule

CMS issues Medicaid guidance for states on implementing interoperability rule

By Heather Landi 

Aug 14, 2020 11:48am

A new federal regulation requires state Medicaid agencies to make it easy for patients to access their health information via smartphone by January 1.

To help with the heavy lift, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) issued guidance (PDF) Friday to help states implement the Interoperability and Patient Access final rule in Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP).

"The timeline for compliance with the CMS Interoperability and Patient Access final rule is aggressive, and CMS is committed to providing states with the necessary technical assistance to implement these advancements in improving patient access to their data and interoperability," said Calder Lynch, deputy administrator and director of the Center for Medicaid and CHIP Services in the guidance.

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/europe/jordanian-telehealth-solution-provide-free-medical-access-beirut-residents

Jordanian telehealth solution to provide free medical access for Beirut residents

Altibbi will provide the Arabic-language consultations for a month, allowing anyone who needs medical assistance to connect directly with doctors via audio calls and online chats.

By Ahmed El Sherif

August 17, 2020 02:26 AM

Jordan’s Altibbi has announced it is to provide free telehealth consultations for Beirut residents “to support the overstretched healthcare system in Lebanon.” This comes following the devastating explosions that recently took place in the capital.

Dubbing itself as the “first and largest platform in the Arab region that offers telemedicine consultation services”, Altibbi will provide the free Arabic-language consultations for a month, allowing anyone who needs medical assistance to connect directly with doctors via audio calls or online chat. Those requiring the service can visit altibbi.com/consultation or download the app after which they will be connected with a doctor “within minutes”.

CEO Jalil Allabadi explained: “Telehealth has proven vital with its ability to surpass physical boundaries to support the masses: from empowering governments with their fight against the spreading of COVID-19 to aiding a country in need of humanitarian healthcare aid. 

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/blog/interoperability-improved-care-coordination-amid-covid-19

Interoperability for improved care coordination amid COVID 19

How healthcare providers can leverage interoperability across the care continuum for improved care coordination and patient empowerment.

By Joyoti Goswami

August 17, 2020 11:46 AM

COVID-19 has brought up the issue of fragmented health information again, making interoperability of health data paramount. Therefore, there could have been no better time for the interoperability and patient access rule.

The rule helps improve the decision-making process for physicians and health systems by connecting siloed information across the care continuum. According to Grahame Grieve, the founder of HL7 FHIR, interoperability is all about people and connecting their health stories across different specialties, visits, and consults across multiple locations. Connecting the health story of an individual holds valuable clues to the diagnosis and treatment.

Advantages of FHIR

Data today is still locked down in individual EMR systems after each patient visit. The payers, too, have a large portion of this data through the claims and encounter data that flows to them during billing processes.

As an example, a patient’s journey from ambulatory care to urgent care and acute care in an episode of COVID has tons of important healthcare information generated in a short span. Seamless access to this information about a patient across the care continuum is the solution to better care coordination that can be solved by the Interoperability and Patient Access rule primarily by using FHIR APIs.

  • FHIR is free to use. FHIR is built on existing web technologies such as https, REST, XML, and JSON. The FHIR API standards support technologies that mobile devices use - both Android and iOS devices - making it easy for developers to build on it. 
  • FHIR allows for vendor-neutral information exchange. The HL7 Argonaut project is a private sector initiative that is an implementation community led by technology leaders in healthcare. The primary goal is to collaboratively work on industry use cases using FHIR and secure authentication protocols for healthcare information exchange. The goal is to create vendor-neutral applications that can be leveraged across the healthcare industry by all patients. So, it becomes easier for patients to visit multiple facilities using different EMR technologies to get information on their smartphones using standard technologies and interfaces.

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/europe/public-health-england-s-chief-executive-reflects-lessons-learned-covid-19-crisis

Public Health England’s chief executive reflects on lessons learned from the COVID-19 crisis

HIMSS chief clinical officer, Dr Charles Alessi, sat down with Duncan Selbie, chief executive, Public Health England, to discuss the positive outcomes of the COVID-19 crisis.

By Sara Mageit

August 17, 202010:54 AM

Although Public Health England has played an integral role in the global pandemic, it was announced yesterday that it is to be replaced by a new agency with a sole focus on health protection specifically designed to protect the nation from pandemics. This new body, modelled on Germany's independent agency, Robert Koch Institute, will be announced later this week by health secretary, Matt Hancock. 

In a recent interview for Healthcare IT News, HIMSS chief clinical officer, Dr Charles Alessi, spoke to Duncan Selbie, chief executive, Public Health England, about the nation’s response to the pandemic and the outcomes that have followed. 

“In a time of pressure and adversity during the COVID-19 crises, there have also been some positive outcomes like the implementation of more granular surveillance systems and improvements to the quality of data that we have collected,” said Selbie.

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/icd-10-codes-dont-accurately-capture-covid-19-symptoms-study-shows

ICD-10 codes don't accurately capture COVID-19 symptoms, study shows

A JAMA Network Open study suggested that ICD-10 codes had poor sensitivity for fever, cough and dyspnea.

By Kat Jercich

August 17, 2020 12:27 PM

A study published this past week in JAMA Network Open suggests symptom-specific ICD-10 codes don't always capture COVID-19-related symptoms.

An electronic health record review of 2,201 patients who had been tested for COVID-19 found that ICD-10 codes had low sensitivity and negative predictive value for capturing cough, fever and labored breathing.

"Symptoms are an essential part of data collection for SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 surveillance and research, but symptom-specific ICD-10 codes lack sensitivity and fail to capture many patients with relevant symptoms; the false-negative rate is unacceptably high," wrote researchers.

WHY IT MATTERS

Researchers at the University of Utah reviewed the EHRs of 2,201 patients who had been tested at UU Health for COVID-19. Most of the patients had been tested in an outpatient setting; 7% had been tested in the emergency department; and 3% were tested in an inpatient setting.

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https://www.healthcareittoday.com/2020/08/17/possible-discrimination-against-remote-workforce/

Possible Discrimination Against Remote Workforce

August 17, 2020

John Lynn

One of the big optimization lessons learned as people quickly shifted to remote work was that if one person is remote, then everyone should connect in as if they were remote (whether they’re remote or not).  It creates some really tough dynamics if a few people are hopping on Zoom or Google Meet remotely and the rest of the people are in person.  There may be some technology companies trying to make this better, but I haven’t seen a good solution for it yet.

My guess is that most of you have experienced this.  In some cases, the remote person isn’t an intimate part of the discussion and they just need to hear what’s being shared.  If that’s the case, then it can work fine.  However, if you want them to be an active contributor to the discussion, then having them remote while others are in person is problematic.  The remote person will have a hard time interjecting their thoughts and sometimes even keeping up with the conversation.  Thus, the advice that if one person is remote, everyone should hop on a virtual meeting so the playing field is equal.

This is going to become a major issue in most healthcare organizations as companies encourage their employees to return to work while allowing some of their employees to continue to remote work.  The desire to have a meeting in person might be there, but you’ll want to consider how that’s going to impact those who can’t attend in person.  Is it better to just go fully virtual so everyone can equally contribute?

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https://www.healthcareittoday.com/2020/08/17/millions-of-elderly-patients-in-u-s-arent-prepared-to-participate-in-telehealth-visits/

Millions Of Elderly Patients In U.S. Aren’t Prepared To Participate in Telehealth Visits

August 17, 2020

Anne Zieger

New research appearing in a high-profile medical journal suggests that millions of U.S. seniors aren’t ready to participate fully – or in some cases, at all –  in telehealth visits due to a lack of technical knowledge or health-related issues.

The study, which was published in JAMA Internal Medicine, looked the degree to which U.S. seniors were ready to participate in telemedicine sessions. To look at these issues, the researchers analyzed 2018 data from the National Health and Aging Trends Study, a nationally representative study of Medicare beneficiaries age 65 and older. The mean age of patients included in the study was 79.5 years.

When looking at whether these seniors were prepared to participate in telehealth sessions, they assumed that the elderly patients were unready if they had health issues such as difficulty hearing well, problems with speaking, possible or established dementia or limited vision.

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https://patientengagementhit.com/news/healthcare-next-steps-to-opening-the-digital-front-door

Healthcare’s Next Steps to Opening the Digital Front Door

As healthcare increasingly approaches the digital front door, an industry-wide goal to humanize care will help organizations walk all the way through.

Source: Getty Images

By Sara Heath

August 13, 2020 - Before the outbreak of the novel coronavirus, healthcare didn’t even have its hand on the knob of the digital front door. The industry was only in what Summer Knight, MD, managing director in Deloitte Consulting’s Life Sciences & Health Care practice, calls the first phase of overall transformation.

“The first wave of industry transformation is having group think identifying that, ‘hey, we have a major problem and we need to get on a path to solve it for the stability of our industry,’” Knight told PatientEngagementHIT in an interview. “And then we begin to start to see early actions and early destructors come into the marketplace.”

That’s about where healthcare was back in the early months of 2020, before the world got turned upside down with the COVID-19 pandemic. The US healthcare system knew it needed to undergo change, that it needed to push for more patient centricity, and it was even already seeing some big disruptors and some articulation of a digital front door.

But it wasn’t until the middle of March when the virus — and fear — spread at pandemic levels that the medical field began creeping into phase two transformation territory.

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https://mhealthintelligence.com/news/new-telehealth-bill-seeks-funding-for-broadband-expansion-programs

New Telehealth Bill Seeks Funding for Broadband Expansion Programs

The ACCESS the Internet Act, introduced last week, proposes to designate $400 million to restart the FCC's COVID-19 Telehealth Program and give the VA $100 million to boost telehealth access for rural and remote veterans.

By Eric Wicklund

August 10, 2020 - A new bill before Congress aims to increase funding for telehealth expansion programs that target improved broadband connectivity.

The Accelerating Connected Care and Education Support Services on the Internet (ACCESS the Internet) Act, introduced this past week by Senators Joe Manchin (D-WV) and John Cornyn (R-TX), proposes to add $400 million to Federal Communications Commission’s COVID-19 Telehealth Program, which was shut down last month after exhausting its $200 million allocation through the CARES Act. It would also set aside another $100 million for the Department of Veterans Affairs to expand connected health access for veterans in rural and underserved areas.

The bill targets a significant barrier to telehealth expansion in rural and remote areas of the country. Healthcare providers can’t extend programs and services into these areas – and residents can’t use them – unless they have access to reliable and uninterrupted broadband.

“The current COVID-19 pandemic has shone a new light on the broadband issues in West Virginia and across rural America,” Manchin said in a press release. “Americans and West Virginians have had to adjust to a new way of working, learning, and living from home due to the COVID-19 pandemic and for most people, this change relies on accessible, reliable broadband which many rural Americans do not have.”

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https://www.livemint.com/news/india/pm-modi-launches-national-digital-health-mission-11597467562654.html

PM Modi launches National Digital Health Mission

3 min read.Neetu Chandra Sharma

The National Digital Health Blueprint of the mission was prepared by a health ministry panel to create a framework for the national health stack proposed in 2018 by the NITI Aayog

NEW DELHI : Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday launched the National Digital Health Mission, while addressing the nation from Red Fort on India's 74th Independence Day.

Modi said that the initiative which is completely technology based will revolutionise the health sector in India.

Every Indian under the mission would get an ID card containing all relevant information about his/her medical conditions and treatments, tests etc, the Prime Minister said.

"Every Indian will get a Health ID card. Every they visit a doctor or a pharmacy, or a lab, all the detail will be registered in this health card. Ranging from doctor appointment to the medication prescribed, medical tests, when were they done, every bit of detail will be available in your health profile," Modi said.

The National Digital Health Blueprint of the mission was prepared by a health ministry panel to create a framework for the national health stack proposed in 2018 by the NITI Aayog, the government think tank.

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https://histalk2.com/2020/08/14/weekender-8-14-20/

Weekly News Recap

  • MDLive announces plans to go public early next year.
  • Health Catalyst announces its acquisition of Vitalware for $120 million.
  • Epic reverses its mandatory return to campus policy, approving working from home through at least the end of the year.
  • Waystar will acquire ESolutions, valuing the company at $1.3 billion.
  • Craneware raises $100 million for acquisitions.
  • Providence Services Group acquires Navin Haffty.
  • VA OIG recommends that the VA work on increasing its use of VA Direct and improve oversight of its VHIE community coordinators.

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https://www.digitalhealthcrc.com/professor-roughead-in-iran/

August, 2020

Professor Libby Roughead’s Surprising eHealth Adventures in Iran

A new collaboration between the Digital Health CRC, Macquarie University, Outcome Health and three Primary Health Networks in Victoria promises to deliver important public health insights through real-time reporting on the primary care frontline.

But while Australia’s world-class health system rates very highly in most aspects, Professor Libby Roughead says that this project shows Australia’s digital health readiness lags behind that of Iran, which began trialling real-time primary care reporting more than three years ago.

Professor Roughead is Director of the Quality Use of Medicines and Pharmacy Research Centre at the University of South Australia (UniSA). She has extensive expertise in pharmaceutical policy, adverse events and improving use of medicines. UniSA is a participant in the Digital Health CRC.

Libby has been an advisor on medicines policy, pricing and quality use of medicines at regional and global meetings of the World Health Organisation (WHO).

As the Islamic Republic of Iran extended their digital health services into pharmaceutical services, Libby was asked by the WHO in 2017 to visit Iran on their behalf as a consultant to share her expertise and advice on the nation’s developing e-prescription system.

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Enjoy!

David.