-----
This weekly blog is to explore the news around the larger issues
around Digital Health, data security, data privacy, AI / ML. technology, social
media and related matters.
I will also try to highlight ADHA
Propaganda when I come upon it.
Just so we keep count, the latest Notes from the ADHA Board were
dated 6 December, 2018 and we have seen none since! It’s pretty sad!
Note: Appearance here is not to suggest I see any credibility or
value in what follows. I will leave it to the reader to decide what is worthwhile
and what is not! The point is to let people know what is being said / published
that I have come upon.
-----
https://www.innovationaus.com/australias-online-safety-reform-not-worthy-of-its-name/
Australia’s online safety reform ‘not worthy of its
name’
Denham
Sadler
National Affairs Editor
19 January 2022
The
federal government’s online safety laws and the eSafety
Commissioner are “woefully inadequate”, and planned reforms will do nothing to
help those most impacted from online harms, according to University of Western
Australia research associate Noelle Martin.
Ms
Martin, who was the WA Australian of the Year in 2019, told a public hearing
for the Select Committee on Social Media and Online Safety on Tuesday that the
series of planned online safety reforms will not live up to their name.
The
government last month unveiled draft anti-trolling legislation which would
enable those who have been defamed to identify anonymous posters of the
defamatory material and reverse the High Court’s decision that administrators
of social media pages are liable for defamatory comments posted by third
parties.
While
the government is branding this as an effort to assist victims of abuse online,
Ms Martin said the reform will do nothing to help those who actually need it.
-----
https://www.zdnet.com/article/oaic-wants-stronger-accountability-measures-in-upcoming-revised-privacy-act/
OAIC wants stronger accountability measures in upcoming
revised Privacy Act
Australia's
Information Commissioner has called for a positive duty on organisations to
handle personal information fairly and reasonably in light of the federal
government considering amendments to the Privacy Act.
Written by Campbell Kwan,
Journalist
on January
18, 2022 | Topic: Security
The Office of
Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) has called for more data
accountability measures across the board in light of the Attorney-General's
Department (AGD) seeking consultation for its review of the Privacy Act.
The AGD began
its review into the country's Privacy
Act at the end of 2020 as part of the Commonwealth's
response to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission's
(ACCC) Digital
Platforms Inquiry, which found the laws needed to be updated to adequately
protect consumers and their data.
Among those measures [PDF] recommended by the OAIC is a central
obligation to collect, use, and disclose personal information fairly and reasonably
for entities under the scope of Australia's Privacy Principles (APP). The OAIC
envisions this would entail providing consumers with the right to erasure,
meaningful consent through requiring them to be properly and clearly be
informed about how their personal information will be handled, and the right to
notification when their personal information is collected.
-----
https://www.zdnet.com/article/commercial-surveillance-the-more-immediate-pressing-problem-for-citizens-home-affairs-chief/
Commercial surveillance the more immediate problem for
citizens: Home Affairs chief
Mike
Pezzullo says Australia needs a broad societal discussion about privacy, but
government spying will always be more restricted. Meanwhile, our surveillance
laws need bulldozing and a complete rebuild.
Written by Stilgherrian ,
Correspondent
Posted in The Full Tilt on January
21, 2022 | Topic: Security
Home Affairs
secretary Mike Pezzullo has made clear his intended approach to the reform of
Australia's electronic surveillance laws: Bulldoze everything and start again.
We also need
"a broader societal discussion about privacy", he said.
Speaking at a
seminar organised by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) on
Thursday, Pezzullo described the surveillance law reforms now under way as more
of a rebuild, not just a renovation.
"I'd
like to get to a point if we can design the legislation almost as if we are...
not just renovating an existing structure, but literally clearing a site,
levelling it, understanding what's in the ground, what all the different
conditions are in relation to that site, and building the new structure
together," he said.
-----
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/australiabritain-cyber-pact-to-shape-asecure-internet/news-story/c357031655b8e39b47e80268f4dcbe28
Australia-Britain cyber pact to shape a ‘secure’
internet
Jess Malcolm
8:15PM
January 20, 2022
Australia and
Britain have agreed to a cyber and critical technology partnership following
high-level ministerial meetings on Thursday, as the countries seek to
strengthen ties and work together to tackle “malign” actors in the Indo-Pacific
region.
Scott
Morrison is hosting Foreign Secretary Liz Truss and Defence Secretary Ben
Wallace in Sydney this week as part of AUKMIN talks to discuss how the allies
can bolster diplomatic relations in the face of rising authoritarian regimes.
Foreign
Minister Marise Payne said the partnership would shape a “positive” and
“secure” internet environment.
She said the
policy would be centred around four pillars: “tackling malign actors; promoting
our values and positive vision for technology; strengthening global technology
supply chains; and harnessing technology to solve global challenges”.
-----
https://marketplace.service.gov.au/2/digital-marketplace/opportunities/18621
Australian Digital Health Agency
Data Architect
Opportunity ID 18621
Deadline for asking questions Tuesday
25 January 2022 at 6pm (in Canberra)
Application closing date Thursday
27 January 2022 at 6pm (in Canberra)
Published Thursday 20 January
2022
Category Software engineering
and Development
Additional terms Comprehensive
terms apply
Overview
Reporting
directly to the Director of Enterprise Architecture, the Data Architect will be
a technical Reporting directly to the Director of Enterprise Architecture, the
Data Architect will be a technical expert responsible for the development,
maintenance, and ongoing evolution of the organisations Data Architecture,
underpinning the program agenda. You will be responsible for advocating data
integration benefits and leading technical project teams in the adoption of
best practice. Additionally, you will ensure the analytical data solutions meet
business intelligence requirements by working in conjunction with other
specialist resources and subject matter experts from across the Agency and the
broader Health sector to support the development of project deliverables,
program and Agency objectives. This will involve acting as intermediary between
the project team, other Agency project teams and external stakeholders to
ensure that solution designs and their trade-offs are identified, documented,
communicated, endorsed and delivered. the Data Architect will be responsible
for: • Working in partnership with business units to understand business needs,
gather data requirements and develop and enterprise data model, and assist
project teams with implementation. • Provide advice to projects and apply
expertise in native cloud implementation including developing and maintaining
the logical and physical data models consistent with enterprise standards and
objectives. • Perform metadata design and maintenance, developing and
maintaining the formal description of the data and data structures. • Design
project data integration and data migration activities, advising on the
transition from current to desired state. • Contribute to building the
capability by mentoring, training, and providing expert advice to other staff.
• Develop transition and target Data Architecture to achieve strategic
objectives. • Assist with the definition and maturity of Data Governance and
Data Quality programs. • Develop standards and assist with the selection and
implementation of systems for Master Data and Reference Data management. •
Provide leadership with a multi-disciplinary team to ensure delivery of quality
outcomes, and • Follow all Agency policies, procedures and instructions and
take reasonable care for your own health, safety and wellbeing in the
workplace.
-----
https://www.itnews.com.au/digitalnation/news/australian-tech-spending-to-exceed-111-billion-in-2022-says-gartner-574928
Australian tech spending to exceed $111 billion in 2022,
says Gartner
By Velvet-Belle
Templeman on Jan 20, 2022 5:39PM
Australian
tech spending is forecast to increase by 6.3 percent this year, exceeding $111
billion in 2022, according to Gartner research.
The research house’s latest IT spending forecast reveals that the highest
spending growth area in tech this year will be in enterprise software (up by
14.9 percent), followed by the IT services segment (up 6.1 percent from last
year).
This
growth in IT services spending, which includes consulting and managed services,
makes the segment the largest category for IT spending in Australia, expected
to reach $39.2 billion.
Heightened demand for IT services, comes as a result of organisations
increasingly relying on external consultants to assist with their digital
transformation agendas.
-----
https://www.digitalhealth.gov.au/careers/senior-policy-advisor-06022022
Senior Policy Advisor
EL1
($122,716 - $139,959)
Digital
Strategy Division > Info/Comm Tech (ICT)
Brisbane,
Canberra, Sydney
Closing - 6
Feb 2022
Division overview
The Digital Strategy Division’s purpose is to support the delivery
of the Australian Digital Health Strategy and the Agencies workplan by
continually delivering insights and research which shapes the future strategy
and expands digital health enablement through continually delivering solutions
for quality customer experiences.
Primary purpose of position
The Senior Policy Advisor will work collaboratively across teams
to provide specialist policy advice and shape strategic thinking to deliver
Agency priorities. The Digital Strategy section leads a range of strategic
projects including development of strategy documents, business cases and policy
proposals.
The Senior Policy Adviser will be responsible for the following,
but not limited to:
- Preparing written material such
as meeting papers, briefings, presentations and emails.
- Provide specialist policy advice
and complex problem solving for a range of Agency initiatives and
projects.
- Work collaboratively across the
Australian Digital Health Agency to cultivate productive working
relationships and implement digital health services and systems.
- Engage and collaborate with key
stakeholders to identify opportunities, achieve outcomes and facilitate
cooperation and partnership in digital healthcare delivery.
- Act strategically to develop
practical, innovative and creative solutions to manage complex issues.
- Communicate and make decisions
that are based on professional judgement, evaluating risks and in the
context of a complex and changing environment.
- Adhere to the Agency Values and
Code of Conduct.
- Developing strategic policy
advice on complex matters in tight timeframes that meets the needs of the
Agency and the government.
- Successfully engaging with a wide
variety of stakeholders and marshalling the necessary specialist expertise
to deliver effective solutions to challenging problems and opportunities.
-----
https://www.ama.com.au/gpnn/issue-22-number-2/articles/my-health-record-has-proof-covid-19-vaccinations
My Health Record has proof of COVID-19 vaccinations
Published 20
January 2022 ADHA Propaganda
GPs
can inform patients that they can find proof of their vaccination in their My
Health Record. The record provides an immunisation history statement as well as
the COVD-19 digital certificate. Patients can also download their digital
certificate to a digital wallet for ready access. To access it, patients need
to link their My Health Record through their myGov account.
The
Australian Digital Health Agency has advised that the My Health Record has a
new dashboard with everything COVID-19-related in one place – this includes
COVID-19 vaccination details and test results, medical conditions, relevant
medicines and allergy information (eg anaphylaxis), plus links to the COVID-19
vaccine clinic finder and side effect checker.
My
Health Record also gives health care providers information on pre-existing
conditions and medicine history of the patient which may be useful in assessing
potential allergic reactions or side effects of immunisation.
COVID-19
vaccination data flows into My Health Record from all states and territories
after it has been reported to the Australian Immunisation Register (AIR).
Providers can access this data through their clinician information system or
the National Provider Portal.
For
patients having problems with linking to My Health Record via myGov this FAQ
page. on digitalhealth.gov.au
may help or they can contact the My Health Record Help line is 1800 723 471. It
is available 24 hours, 7 days a week.
-----
https://www.themandarin.com.au/179083-digital-health-services-prove-merit-as-frontline-of-pandemic-response-under-pressure/
Digital health services prove merit as frontline of
pandemic response under pressure
By Jackson
Graham ADHA Propaganda
Thursday
January 20, 2022
As
pressure mounts on health systems from surging coronavirus cases, an initially
controversial digital record of Australians’ medical information is proving its
merits.
The
My Health Record sparked
opposing views from medical and privacy advocates when the
government automatically started storing information for all Australians who
didn’t opt out before early 2019.
Now
it’s recording clinical information for more than 22.2 million people and
relieving administrative pressure on health professionals during the pandemic,
the Australian Digital Health Agency acting chief, Paul Creech,
told The Mandarin.
Creech
said the record became more useful as the pandemic dragged on, with many
Australians needing the continuation of their interactions with the health
system stored together.
“More
and more, that information will become important in the context of the overall
information, not just single pieces of it,” he said.
-----
https://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=9d9c40bc-7926-488c-b314-97b1351c5e30
Breaking down an employer’s ability to collect and
store an employee’s vaccination status under the Privacy Act
Cooper Grace
Ward Annie Smeaton
and Megan Cheng
Australia January 18 2022
With
a rising number of employees claiming that asking for their vaccination status
is a ‘breach of their privacy’, it is important for employers to understand
their rights and obligations under the Privacy Act.
It
comes as no surprise that many employers across Australia have commenced
collecting their employees’ COVID‑19 vaccination status. However, on 30
November 2021, Virgin Australia entered into Federal Court consent orders to
delete all proof of certain COVID-19 vaccination documents.
In
this article, we explain who the Privacy Act 1988 (Cth) applies to, when
employers can collect an employee’s vaccination status, and what employers must
do with the information they collect.
We
also discuss why Virgin Australia was required to delete all proof of COVID-19
digital certificates and Immunisation History Statements, and how employers can
avoid making the same mistake.
-----
https://www.myhealthrecord.gov.au/help/advance-care-plan-and-goals-of-care
Advance care planning and goals of care
Your future
medical treatment depends on your wishes and the plan you have in place. This
information can be captured in an advance care plan or a goals of care
document.
What
is an advance care plan?
An
advance care planning document details your future medical care preferences. It
provides guidance to your family, close friends and healthcare providers if you
can no longer speak for yourself or make your own decisions. Adding your
advance care plan to your My Health Record can ensure this information is
available to your treating doctors if it’s ever needed.
What is a
goals of care document?
A
goals of care document includes medical and non-medical goals of care
information determined through a shared decision-making process between
healthcare providers, patients and families or carers in relation to an episode
of care. This is consistent with the national guidelines which are currently
being developed.
What
is an advance care plan document custodian?
An
advance care document custodian is someone who holds a copy of your advance
care planning document. Up to two custodians for your advance care plans can be
stored in your My Health Record.
-----
https://itwire.com/technology-regulation/aussies-concerned-about-how-personal-details-are-used-for-marketing.html
Aussies concerned about how personal details are used
for marketing
By Chris
Coughlan
Australians
want more control over how their information is used by businesses to contact
them for marketing, according to new research released by the ACMA.
The
research found that in the 6 months leading up to the survey, 98% of
Australians received some form of unsolicited communication and that more than
7 in 10 Australians would like more control over the communications they
receive. Only one in 10 of those surveyed felt they always have control over
how their information is used by business to sell or promote something.
Of
Australians who asked a business to stop contacting them, 56% had trouble
unsubscribing and 59% said they were still contacted after unsubscribing, the ACMA advised.
The research
also showed that scam calls were the most prevalent type of unwanted
communication received, with 86% of Australians reporting that they had a scam
call in the 6 months before the survey and 4 in 10 Australians receiving them
at least weekly.
-----
https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/media/big-tech-must-be-punished-for-allowing-online-abuse/news-story/95bde43f9990c835bbcc7a680d5749c3
‘Big tech must be punished for allowing online abuse’
Sophie Elsworth
8:32PM
January 18, 2022
Online abuse
victim Noelle Martin has revealed the torment she endured after bullying from
anonymous trolls who published photoshopped pornographic images of her, saying
not enough was being done to punish social media sites and perpetrators.
Broadcaster
and journalist Erin Molan also spoke of the relentless online abuse she
experienced, noting there was “no incentive for them to stop”.
The pair
addressed the Inquiry into Social Media and Online Safety on Tuesday, detailing
the pain they both experienced at the hands of online trolls and urging tougher
measures be implemented to end abuse.
Ms Martin,
27, a legal researcher based in Perth, told the inquiry how she discovered when
she was 18 digitally fabricated images of herself online that had been stolen
from social media and turned into a “deepfake” sexual video of her.
-----
https://www.afr.com/technology/how-the-afr-called-the-death-of-the-home-computer-in-1985-we-were-wrong-20220117-p59oyn
The home computer is dead, we said in 1985. Oops
As part of
our 70th anniversary, the Financial Review is reproducing classic stories. On
March 21, 1985, David Noble debunked what became one of the biggest selling
home items ever: the home computer.
Jan 18, 2022
– 5.39pm
The surprise
announcement by IBM yesterday that it will stop making its PCnr next month has
confirmed that the home will never be a viable market for computers, except for
specialist applications.
The
announcement comes as US high technology stocks lose their gloss, several
companies in America announce slow-downs in projected sales, and share prices
drop across the board.
IBM’s
decision is not expected to affect its revenue greatly, but it could be one of
the final nails in the coffin of a market which never grew to meet industry
analysts’ original high expectations.
And IBM’s
withdrawal leaves what is left of the market open to Apple
and a handful of niche market suppliers.
It is an
embarrassing move for a company which rose to dominate the personal computer
market in just four years, and follows moves by some leading computer marketing
companies to scrap their involvement in the home computer area.
-----
https://www.afr.com/technology/microsoft-buys-activision-blizzard-in-96b-game-deal-20220119-p59pc8
Microsoft buys Activision Blizzard in $96b game deal
Dina Bass and Nate Lanxon
Jan 19, 2022
– 3.50am
Microsoft
agreed to buy Activision Blizzard in a $US68.7 billion ($96 billion) deal,
uniting two of the biggest forces in video games to create the world’s
third-biggest gaming company.
In
its largest purchase ever, Microsoft will pay $US95 a share in cash for one of
the most legendary gaming publishers, known for titles including Call
of Duty and World of Warcraft but which is also grappling
with a cultural upheaval over its treatment of women.
Activision
chief executive Bobby Kotick will continue to serve in that role until the deal
closes, a person familiar with the deal said. It was unclear what position, if
any, he would take afterward.
Once
the transaction is completed, the Activision Blizzard business will report to
Phil Spencer, who was promoted along with the deal to CEO of Microsoft Gaming.
-----
https://anmj.org.au/my-health-record-contains-all-covid-19-info-including-proof-of-vaccinations/
My Health Record contains all COVID-19 info, including
proof of vaccinations
By ANMJ Staff|
January 18th,
2022| ADHA Propaganda
The Australian Digital
Health Agency is reminding people that My Health Record holds all COVID-19
information, including proof of vaccinations.
Agency
Acting CEO Paul Creech called on Australians who use My Health Record to take
advantage of theirs to help manage the impact from COVID-19.
“COVID-19
test results come from pathology providers and the majority of pathology
providers in Australia routinely upload test results to My Health Record,” he
said.
“We’ve
seen huge demand since last July, with more than one million views a month by
consumers across Australia.
“Previously,
people needed to wait seven days to view their test results, however for
COVID-19 test results, consumers can read them as soon as they are uploaded to
their record and in the majority of cases this would be sooner than they would
receive an SMS.”
-----
https://www.digitalhealth.gov.au/newsroom/podcasts/my-health-record-emergency-access
Podcasts • My Health Record
My Health Record emergency access
Published
17 January 2022 ADHA Propaganda
In
this podcast we explore the appropriate use of the My Health Record emergency
access function, by healthcare providers.
Speakers:
Dr Andrew Rochford (Facilitator), Jennie McDonald (Director Compliance
Outreach), Dr Xiu Lee (Emergency Physician and Agency Clinical Reference
Lead), Neil Fraser (Deputy Chief Executive Officer, Positive Life NSW and
Agency Consumer Adviser), Diana Weston (Assistant Director, Regulation and
Strategy Branch Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC))
-----
https://www.digitalhealth.gov.au/careers/business-support-officer
Business Support Officer
APS5
($89,205 - $96,471)
Digital
Strategy Division > Administration
Brisbane,
Canberra, Sydney
Closing - 30
Jan 2022
Division Overview
Digital
strategy – responsible for national digital health design and
strategy, underpinned by strong clinical governance and digital health
standards.
Primary purpose of position
Supporting
a Division in the Agency, the Business Support Officer is an important conduit
within the Division which provides executive support to senior executives and
is required to consult and engage with stakeholders to deliver Division
outcomes. The Business Support Officer is accountable for:
- Acquiring, maintaining and applying
a well-developed understanding of the legislative and Agency’s
administrative policy frameworks, practices, and procedures in providing a
high level of executive; administration; secretariat and business support
to senior executives in the Division.
- Managing the workflow and enquiries
for senior executives: coordinating competing requests and demands;
setting priorities; seeking clarification; escalating sensitive issues and
proposing solutions to be considered.
- Assisting, supporting, and
coordinating corporate activities within the Branch including: supporting
HR and recruitment processes; monitoring expenditure against budget;
coordinating IT and infrastructure resource requirements.
- Acting as a point of contact between
the senior executive, senior managers, and other areas within the
Division.
- Developing relationships and
liaising with internal and external stakeholders on policy; project;
administration; or operational issues to ensure the relevant information
is available to the senior executive.
-----
https://www.miragenews.com/my-health-record-has-all-covid-information-707855/
17 Jan 2022
4:18 pm AEDT
My Health Record has all Covid information including
proof of vaccinations
Australian
Digital Health Agency ADHA Propaganda
The
Australian Digital Health Agency is reminding people that My Health Record has
proof of COVID-19 vaccinations.
Agency
Acting CEO Paul Creech said more and more Australians were using My Health
Record and consumers should take advantage of theirs to help manage the impact
from Covid-19.
“COVID-19
test results come from pathology providers and the majority of pathology
providers in Australia routinely upload test results to My Health Record,” he
said.
“We’ve
seen huge demand since last July, with more than one million views a month by
consumers across Australia.”
“Previously,
people needed to wait seven days to view their test results, however for
COVID-19 test results, consumers can read them as soon as they are uploaded to
their record and in the majority of cases this would be sooner than they would
receive an SMS.”
-----
https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2022/jan/17/he-said-im-in-canada-the-doctor-will-see-you-now-but-not-from-australia
‘He said, I’m in Canada’: the doctor will see you now –
but not from Australia
Australian-trained doctors living overseas are treating patients
in rural and regional New South Wales, to curb the bush doctor shortage
Lauren Marer
Last modified on Mon 17 Jan 2022 11.15 AEDT
Bet Matthews set off on a trip of salvation from Queensland to
Victoria last year, to visit her sister and ex-husband who had both been
diagnosed with cancer. She was there to assist with whatever they needed, but
in the end it was she who needed the help.
The 73-year-old has diabetes and constant high blood pressure was
causing her to have dizzy spells throughout the driving trip. In Cobar in
western New South Wales, she couldn’t go on.
After multiple visits to the local GP, her husband took her to the
Cobar hospital for more specialised treatment. Unbeknown to her, the doctor she
was about to see was nearly 14,000km away.
“I was having a telehealth consult, because there was no hospital
doctor and no doctor that could come to the hospital,” Matthews says.
-----
David.