Quote Of The Year

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

or

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

Friday, June 04, 2021

The ADHA Is Casting Far And Wide For #myHealthRecord Use Cases That Might Be Making A Difference

This appeared last week.

Technology brings better health care to one of the most remote communities in the world

Published 25 May 2021

In one of the most remote communities in the world, the Aboriginal community of Tjuntjuntjara in Western Australia, telehealth and the use of My Health Record have transformed health care delivery.

Tjuntjuntjara is 650km north east of Kalgoorlie in the Great Victoria Desert in Western Australia. There are about 160 people living at Tjuntjuntjara - they speak a southern variety of the Pitjantjatjara language and identify as belonging to a group of people known as Pilanguṟu, meaning ‘from the spinifex plains’.

For the last 10 years, the Aboriginal community-controlled Spinifex Health Service in Tjuntjuntjara has had a fly-in/fly-out (FIFO) GP and other health professionals through the Adelaide-based Kakarrara Wilurrara Health Alliance (KWHA).

With the advent of COVID-19 and the closure of the Western Australian border to the KWHA planes and health professionals from South Australia, there were no doctors or allied health outreach professionals able to go to Tjuntjuntjara for more than ten months from March 2020 to January 2021.

This is when digital health provided the answer. With telehealth the clinic was able to continue to have a high level of health care for chronic conditions, preventive activities and mental health issues.

Medical Director at Spinifex Health Service and GP, Dr Jill Benson AM, has been going to Tjuntjuntjara for more than a decade and is familiar with many of the patients there.

“In many cases, and despite the reduced face-to-face encounters with visiting medical specialists, the increased use of telehealth sessions improved care,” she said.

“This meant better continuity of care, the ability to have timely review and follow-up, the ability to deal with issues as they occurred and not just once a month and specialist referrals as needed and not just when they were scheduled to come out. The use of technology has been a real benefit in telehealth.”

Dr Benson said the majority of the patients in Tjuntjuntjara have all of their medications, investigations, discharge summaries and health summaries from Spinifex Health Service in My Health Record.

“This means that when they travel to other communities, all of this is instantly accessible. It also means that if a patient has a recall set up in another community then the health professionals there can alert the Spinifex staff if they can see the person has recently been in Tjuntjuntjara. This has been an invaluable resource to maintain continuity of care.”

Australian Digital Health Agency CEO Amanda Cattermole said: “For National Reconciliation Week 2021 we celebrate the success of Aboriginal community-controlled health care delivery in Australia.”

In line with this year’s theme More than a word. Reconciliation takes action, the Agency is promoting the benefits of digital technology to connect even the most isolated Aboriginal communities with first class health care.

“The Agency works with the National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation and its State and Territory affiliates to promote and embed digital health in Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services (ACCHS). ACCHS’ deliver a holistic and culturally appropriate health services to their communities, and the work that they undertake is fundamental to Closing the Gap in health outcomes.  Digital health is a key enabler for improving access to services and delivering improved health outcomes for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples, particularly those living in remote communities," Ms Cattermole said. 

Head of Regional and Remote Health and Education at NBN Co, Dr Jen Beer, who is a proud Darlot woman from the Western Desert region of Western Australia, shared that connectivity and the role it plays in enabling digital health has never been more important in particular for Indigenous Australians.

“We are hearing the many benefits that health practitioners, clinics as well as patients are experiencing in regional and remote communities across Australia where connectivity has improved their timely access to quality healthcare services. Examples of this include in East Arnhem Land where Wi-Fi calling access, through nbn Sky Muster™ Plus, enables medical staff to co-ordinate emergency retrievals at any time of the day or week through to telehealth services allowing greater continuity of care with staff who are familiar with their patients.”

NBN Co is committed to continuing its work with the Australian Digital Health Agency and the National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation to enable access to digital health across regional and remote Australia,” Dr Beer said.

Agency Consumer Advocate, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Champion and Co-Chair, Reconciliation Working Group and National Medicines Safety Program, Steve Renouf, said Aboriginal people and communities across the country were embracing technology to take control of their health.

“It’s fantastic to see yet another example of an Aboriginal health service leading the way in providing digital health benefits to their patients,” he said.

Over 2020, the Aboriginal community-controlled Wirraka Maya Health Service uploaded the ninth highest number of Shared Health Summaries in Western Australia, to My Health Record. Shared Health Summaries provide a summary of a patient’s key health information. The Wirraka Maya Health Service also viewed more uploaded documents than any other primary care provider in Western Australia.

“Aboriginal health services are at the forefront of a revolution in health care that uses technology to transform and improve people’s lives,” Mr Renouf said.

Ms Cattermole said the Agency was six months into implementing its first Reconciliation Action Plan (RAP) which has a strong focus on strengthening community partnerships, cultural safety, community empowerment, and opportunity.

“As we look back on our history as a young organisation, and celebrate the Agency’s impressive track record in building digital health capabilities right across Australia in partnership with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities, we also acknowledge that we have much more to do as Australia seeks to close the unacceptable gap in life expectancy and other health indicators between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians,” she said.

“Our organisation is committed to working in deep partnership with the Aboriginal community-controlled health sector to foster and earn their trust and respect in our joint pursuit to improve health outcomes for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities.”

Over the last six months, the Agency has established eight delivery partnerships with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health organisations to support the co-design and uptake of digital health, implemented a cultural competency training program for agency staff, implemented procurement protocols to support local Indigenous businesses, and commenced implementation of a My Health Record and digital health eLearning module with CPD accreditation for Aboriginal Health Practitioners.

National Reconciliation Week runs from 27 May to 3 June each year.

Here is the link to the release:

https://www.digitalhealth.gov.au/newsroom/media-releases/recent-media-releases/technology-brings-better-health-care-to-one-of-the-most-remote-communities-in-the-world

Reading this it seemed maybe for the few who were visiting different communities the #myHR might just offer some utility. Then I started to wonder about all the other issues of connectivity and remote data access for a community of 160 people and was left wondering just how real the benefit is / would be.

I am also sure the usual FI/FO clinicians have all the patient data on a normal Patient Management System for routine use which is probably remotely accessible meaning the #myHR is rather a secondary add-on. Telehealth use is, of course, nothing to do with the ADHA.

Also, on a broader non tech view, given the profound health disadvantage experienced by the remotely living First Nations people any thing that can be done is fabulous by me but I do wonder just how important this all is compared with addressing the other ‘Social Determinants Of Health’ around such issues as access to decent housing, clean water, quality food, addressing cultural disadvantage and so on. I rather suspect we are not on to op all these other issues. This maybe a bit of the ‘ambulance at the bottom of the cliff’ sort of initiative!

What do others think?

David.

 

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

This all smacks of "to a man with a hammer, every problem looks like a nail"

ADHA only sees healthcare though the lens of #myHR. Sad really.

Anonymous said...

You have to consider - would information be far more accessible without the My HR? As you slide to David it is telecommunications the is the real magic here, if data was lighter and more precision based I am sure much more could be achieved.

Anonymous said...

ADHA is a bit like a recently failed blogger residing in Florida. Just shouting into the void and inventing realities to comfort their and their minority followers ego’s.

Anonymous said...

@9:47 AM Bullseye.
@2:38 PM Bullseye.