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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."

Thursday, October 26, 2023

It Looks Like The Aged-Care Health IT Sector Is Due For Some Major Rationalisation.

This appeared last week:

Use of clinical software differs greatly among providers

Natasha EganOctober 19, 2023

A research project led by the aged care sector’s technology peak body has identified high rates of data duplication, the need for standardised terminology and almost 300 unique clinical software vendors in residential aged care.

The report Residential Aged Care Use of Clinical Care Systems produced by the Aged Care Industry Information Technology Council in collaboration with the Australian Digital Health Agency was released on Thursday. It identifies the need for aged care providers to develop comprehensive data-related policies and procedures as they move to implement the royal commission’s recommendation for the universal adoption of digital clinical care technology and the My Health Record.

“First of all, the exciting thing about the report is it’s the first time we’ve had a chance to actually look at what software is in place and how it’s used end to end,” ACIITC chair Dr George Margelis told Australian Ageing Agenda on the sidelines of the Aged Care Transformation stream at Victorian Healthcare Week in Melbourne on Thursday.

“The standout finding is the heterogeneity – the differences between providers in what they’re using and how they’re using it – the lack of standardisation, not just around data but around processes, and also the fragmentation.”

The fragmentation reflects the way the industry has grown so that medication management, prescribing, inventory, payroll and so on are all separate, he said. “Nothing’s integrated and that’s because they’ve had to add systems on the fly. There’s never been a strategic roadmap saying, ‘here’s where we are going to go forward’.”

Dr Margelis is hopeful the findings will provide an opportunity to identify all the functions needed and integrate the common data across those functions with common terminologies. “The different ways things are described in the industry is frightening. And that’s just that massive fragmentation.”

The issue of integration was raised among the aged care transformation discussions on Wednesday by Tanunda Lutheran Homes chief executive officer Lee Martin. He said his organisation used more than 30 systems that did not talk to each other.  

“I don’t think we’ll ever integrate to one. But we should be able to integrate to a couple of platforms that we can use to solve the problems,” Dr Margelis told AAA.

Key report findings

  • a notable amount of duplication of core clinical information in multiple clinical systems, highlighting the importance of data integration
  • the absence of consistent terminology across the sector presented challenges in data collection and analysis
  • 287 unique clinical software vendors identified in residential aged care
  • widespread Wi-Fi connectivity
  • visiting clinicians have higher access to input, extract, and review data on-site than remotely
  • clinical software integration with visiting clinicians’ software and community pharmacy software varies widely
  • most organisations reported limited integration with My Health Record, and most did not record data in residents’ My Health system
  • organisations have varying technology investment strategies, with some lacking a specific focus on clinical software
  • barriers to clinical software adoption include the cost of products, training, upgrading, employee culture, time, resources, and digital literacy
  • a significant percentage of clinical software systems have been in deployment for five to 10 years, indicating a need for updates and improvements.

Opportunities for providers, vendors

In addition to the challenges, the report outlines opportunities for both aged care providers and software vendors.

“The key message for providers is that there are opportunities for efficiency,” Dr Margelis told AAA. “Because of their fragmentation, there’s a lot of inefficiency, double entry of data, disparate data and same data being captured in different formats in different systems.

More here:

https://www.australianageingagenda.com.au/technology/use-of-clinical-software-differs-greatly-among-providers/

This looks like a useful report that shows just what is needed to remedy the present chaos in the sector.

Worth a browse!

David.

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