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, February 24, 2012

What Impact Will All The Political Ructions Have On E-Health? It Seems There Was Some Real Disagreement and Turmoil in Health.

It seems the present war between PM Gillard and Former PM Rudd is flushing out all sorts of material.
Examples include the following:

Roxon attacks Rudd over health reform

Former health minister Nicola Roxon has launched a scathing attack on Kevin Rudd, accusing him of ignoring cabinet over "very big decisions" on health reform during his three years as prime minister.
Ms Roxon, now attorney general, spent four years in the health portfolio attempting the biggest reforms of the system since the introduction of Medicare.
But in an interview with the ABC World Today program on Thursday she said there were "big components of health reform" which she and Mr Rudd disagreed about.
"I think that there was a point in the [Rudd] prime-ministership where a proper cabinet process was not used," she claimed.
"Some very big decisions were being contemplated, in health in particular, that's of course the closest experience that I had, that often there was an inclination to want to go and announce those things without there being proper cabinet discussion or consideration of the downsides rather than just some of the political or potential upsides."
She added: "Now I've chosen not to go into this sort of detail before and I don't really want to go into it now. But I don't want [Labor MPs making the decision who should lead the party], without having their eyes open about the sort of government we would go back to if Kevin was the leader."
Ms Roxon who will supporting Julia Gillard in the expected leadership ballot next Monday, was asked whether it was true that health reform was Mr Rudd's "abiding passion" as he claimed.
More here:

Roxon warning: Rudd is not the 'messiah'

23rd Feb 2012
NICOLA Roxon has slammed ousted prime minister Kevin Rudd for his leadership style during her time serving as health minister in his cabinet, as the former PM heads toward a showdown to regain the Labor leadership next week.
With a ballot set to take place on Monday morning next week, the now Attorney-General Ms Roxon said Labor MPs needed to get over the idea that Mr Rudd is the "messiah" who could win the next election.
Ms Roxon, who was charged with the task of seeking sweeping health reforms for the Rudd and subsequent Gillard governments – and is a strong supporter of Prime Minister Julia Gillard – says Mr Rudd has many strengths and achievements but his recent conduct has been extremely unhelpful.

"We need to get out of this idea that Kevin is a messiah who will deliver an election back to us. That is just, I think, fanciful," she told ABC TV.

It wouldn't be good for the country to have Mr Rudd as prime minister again, Ms Roxon said.

"He was very difficult to work with. There were a lot of challenges," she said, referring to Mr Rudd's time in the top job and his rolling by Ms Gillard 20 months ago.

"People might say that we were too polite ultimately about the way we did it. We didn't air all our dirty linen. I don't really want to air it now, but the truth is that decision was made for very strongly-held reasons that are just as important now.

"Government has to be able to function properly so we can deliver for the community."
More here:
The PCEHR was announced in the 2010 budget which was released May 11,2010.
PM Rudd was deposed on the 24 June, 2010 so it looks like the PCEHR program was conceived and budgeted for when cabinet government was out the door and according to the then Minister Roxon just was not working. This from the above article seems typical.
"Some very big decisions were being contemplated, in health in particular, that's of course the closest experience that I had, that often there was an inclination to want to go and announce those things without there being proper cabinet discussion or consideration of the downsides rather than just some of the political or potential upsides."
I wonder is the reason we have this rushed, ill-considered mess anything to do with the surrounding chaos we have now become aware of?
A look at this page (expanded) shows how much fantasy was in the original announcements.
It looks to me like there is a real chance the Government processes really were not working when we were gifted the PCEHR and that is why it was so ill considered and under-consulted upon. I wonder how much Cabinet time was spent on it?
Fun to consider!
This link is also fun - where Ms Roxon claims Rudd wanted to rush to a referendum on the Federal Takeover of the Health System.
See here:
http://www.medicalobserver.com.au/news/rudd-wanted-referendum-on-federal-health-takeover

For the future - we really need it to be totally different to what has happened in the past in my view! 
It also seems pretty unlikely we will see the outcome of the PCEHR enquiry  on Wednesday. At least 1/2 of the Committee will have other things on their minds for a while.
As for what is now going on in Canberra I think it is awfully serious and I am concerned about all our futures unless what finally emerges is a rational and unified Federal Government  of either stripe. Right now it is a bit hard to see that happening any time soon!
David.

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Now Here Is An Approach That Might Actually Make A Difference! Fascinating Stuff.

The following appeared a few days ago.

Scarborough first with TPP record viewer

9 February 2012   Rebecca Todd
Emergency physicians at Scarborough Hospital say introducing a GP clinical record viewer has been like “turning on a light."
Lead A&E consultant Dr Andy Volans says staff can barely remember how they coped before TPP’s new CRV went live on 25 January.
The viewer allows hospital clinicians to access a read-only view of the patient’s full electronic record held by a TPP practice. It is currently being used in A&E but will be rolled out to other departments.
Dr Volans said the viewer was especially useful when dealing with the area’s large nursing home population.
In the past, elderly patients would often arrive in A&E with no GP letter, nobody from the nursing home to explain why they were there, and unable to communicate their own medical conditions and medications.
“Consequently you’re working a bit blind, so we’re particularly targeting those patients so we know what the GP knows about them,” he explained.
Staff must use their role-based smartcards to access the viewer.
Admission, Discharge and Transfer (ADT) messaging is used to communicate between the CRV and the hospital's patient administration system, which, at Scarborough, is iSoft's iPM.
When a patient is registered on the PAS, a message is sent to the CRV, so the hospital can retrieve the patient's SystmOne record, subject on their giving consent.
A template pulls down relevant information, including most recent acute illnesses, any chronic illnesses, acute drugs, blood pressure readings, and the last three attendances or clinical interactions with a GP.
More here:
This is an astonishingly good story and makes a it makes great deal of intuitive sense that such a system could really make a difference in a local area. The concept of an access only view makes a great deal of sense as does the smartcard access control.
Of course there are always caveats - and here they come from across the Atlantic from the example above.

5 Considerations for Hospitals Releasing Medical Records to Patients Electronically

Written by Sabrina Rodak | February 13, 2012
In September the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology launched the Consumer e-Health Program to encourage individuals' engagement in their healthcare. One of the major goals of the program is to provide patients with easy access to their medical records. To accomplish this goal and others, ONC created the Healthy New Year Video Challenge and is developing an animated video to explain the value of health IT to consumers, among other initiatives.
Hospitals are also encouraging patients to take a more active role in their care by providing easy access to patients' lab reports and other medical information. Jan McDavid, general counsel and compliance officer, and Steve Emery, director of product management, at HealthPort share five considerations for hospitals when providing patients with electronic access to their medical records.
1. Compliance. Whenever dealing with patients' protected health information, hospitals need to ensure compliance with HIPAA and other applicable federal laws. HIPAA requires patients' records to be provided within 30 days of their request, barring certain exceptions. For instance, if a physician decides providing the full record is not in the best interest of the patient, the physician may withhold certain parts of the record.
Hospitals also need to be aware of laws of the state in which patients' medical records are located. Ms. McDavid says in general, that when federal and state laws differ, hospitals should follow whichever set of laws is stricter. She suggests hospitals' privacy and security officers constantly educate themselves on updates to the law and the specific facility's policies regarding patients' medical records. Policies may include requiring documents with confidential information to be shredded, prohibiting the sharing of passwords, and mandating training on HIPAA.
2. Security. Hospitals releasing medical records to patients need to consider both the physical and electronic security of the records. For example, Ms. McDavid says hospital officials should ensure restricted areas are enforced if a computer containing patient records is located there. In addition, computers with screens that can be seen by patients may need privacy screens. Hospitals may also need to develop policies on where to store patients' charts, which are typically placed outside the patients' doors and are easily accessible to unauthorized individuals.
Furthermore, computers and the hospital network need to be electronically secure to prevent viruses and people from accessing information. A best practice for securing medical records is encryption. While encryption is not required by law, it lessens the reporting requirements if breaches occur, Mr. Emery says. Another best practice for securely releasing medical records to patients is two-factor identification. For example, the hospital would send the patient an email with a link to a website that hosts medical records. The patient would then have to authenticate his or her identity with personal information and a password to access the records.
3. Content.
4. Format.
5. Portal.
Learn more about HealthPort.
More here:
Again this is a fascinating discussion of the issues you face when opening access up to the EMR for the patient. In the UK you are at least giving access to another clinician who will typically ‘get’ what is said! It might be just that much harder with patient access!
As I have said before we really do live in some exciting and interesting times and I have to point out that this sort of innovation rather makes the PCEHR so 1990’s!
David.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Senate Estimates Hearing - NEHTA - Wednesday 15 February 2012. Transcript and Comments.

Here is the relevant part of the transcript with some comments in italics.

Community Affairs Legislation Committee - 15/02/2012 - Estimates - HEALTH AND AGEING PORTFOLIO - National E-Health Transition Authority

National E-Health Transition Authority

CHAIR: I suggest that we move to e-health, outcome 2, and then we will go from there.
Senator BOYCE: Is Mr Fleming here?
CHAIR: I hope he is, because I have a statement to make for Mr Fleming. I will put a statement on the record first with Mr Fleming.
During a recent hearing that we had on the e-health legislation I actually made comments on record which stated that Mr Fleming and NEHTA had not returned questions on notice in time. Mr Fleming, I received your letter, I was incorrect and I want to put it on public record that my statements were incorrect and that your responses were on time. They may not have been to the satisfaction of everybody who was receiving them, but absolutely they were on time and I was wrong. I want to make sure that people know that that has now been retracted publicly.
We will move on to questions. Could we have the officers and NEHTA together? Do we have enough space for the officers and NEHTA to be at the table together?
Ms Halton : Why not start on the questions and then we will decide who can fit.
Senator BOYCE: The questions go to the issue of the standards that are being used by the PCEHR. Perhaps I should also, Mr Fleming, make a short statement pointing out that the error about the timeliness of responses in fact came out of my office. We have looked at this very closely, of course, having received your letter from the chair. It appears to be a process issue where we thought we were asking questions of NEHTA but they were, in fact, transferred over. Our log of answers from NEHTA was different from where, in fact, the answers were coming from.
Ms Halton : So the wrong box was ticked or flicked or crossed?
Senator BOYCE: We were not aware that the questions were being transferred. We were still waiting for responses from you, when in fact they were from elsewhere, as I understand it.
I think we started out with over 500 standards being intended for the PCEHR; is that correct?
Mr Fleming : I have with me Mr David Bunker who heads up our architecture group. That standards team is part of David's, so I might ask David to go into more detail, if required, and also Dr Chris Mitchell, who works in the clinical change and adoption side of the team is here.
The standards are actually grouped into 23 separate bundles. There are a number of components within there, so we tend to talk more in terms of the 23 specific bundles of activity that are attached to the work that we are doing. David, did you want to comment?
Senator BOYCE: I appreciate there are 23 bundles. I understand that we started with a situation where you were expecting up to 500 standards and I think you are down to 17 now; is that correct?
Mr Bunker : I am the head of architecture at NEHTA. I am also responsible for standards and security and also our reference-platform-demonstrator-environment software developers. It is probably worth separating specifications and standards so that we are clear. Certainly, NEHTA wants to make use of standards wherever they exist. During the process of understanding the relationship of standards to the design of the PCEHR, and certainly e-health more broadly, what we have done is identify the standards that we can make use of that exist in the marketplace and that exist and are common in Australia.
Senator BOYCE: How many of those are there?
Mr Bunker : In order to achieve a design for the PCEHR system that was based on standards and that would adopt an approach that would use standards and identify novel standards where required, we conducted an extensive piece of work that identified a number of areas that were specific to certain standards. So there were 140-something areas that were actually used to identify the sets of areas within the PCEHR design where standards would be relevant.
Mr Bunker : Through the process of design we have identified what specific standards can be applied. So there are obviously—
Senator BOYCE: Existing standards?
Mr Bunker : Existing standards that can be applied. In the specifications and standards plan that we put into the market late last year we described the use of those standards where there are existing ones, but importantly, also where there is a requirement for a new standard that actually describes certain components of the PCEHR—for example, the clinical information in an event summary, and how that might be moved around.
The specification bundles that were described in that standards and specification plan describe the specifications that NEHTA is producing to support the market to adopt and build to the PCEHR system.
Senator BOYCE: Is it not true, though, that if you are going to be involved in delivering services to the PCEHR you cannot use one standard and not another standard? You need the suite of standards, don't you?
Mr Bunker : That is correct. There are obviously a number of standards, including very technical standards and standardised information components, that support interactions with the PCEHR.
Senator BOYCE: What is currently in the suite of standards that people seeking to provide services or products to the PCEHR would use?
Mr Fleming : If I understand the question correctly—and tell me if I am off track—we have created a website that has all of the specifications that are involved here. In that context I mentioned that there are 23 bundles. For each bundle there are three separate groups of documents. The first group is the information requirements document, which is a high-level definition of what is required, and generally those documents are about 40 pages in length. So it is 40 by 23. Then there is a structured content series of documents. That goes into the detailed specifications and lists all that information. Generally, they are about 300 pages in length. There is a lot of information in there—and once again by 23.
Then there is a third set of documents, which we call the CDA implementation guide. They are about 450 pages in length each. What we do there is provide examples—for example, example code. So we have talked about the standards and then we provide code that shows how that would work. If I hear your question correctly, for each set of specifications, the 23 sets, there is probably over 1,000 pages of documentation that define, in various levels of detail, all those components. That is up on our website and available for all vendors to use. There are also processes that we have in place to provide education and training in that environment.
So we are talking about of the order of 20,000 pages of documentation. One really wonders how all this can be digested, interpreted and implemented. Quite a challenge!
Senator BOYCE: I will go back and then I will follow up on that. Mr Bunker, just to get this on record, how critical are those standards to the architecture, the functionality, the performance and quality of a PCEHR system?
Mr Bunker : Obviously they are critical. It is very important. Certainly NEHTA is, as I said before, committed to this process of seeing these specifications progress through the Standards Australia process. NEHTA has developed the specifications through consultation and engagement with the sector, and has described the interfaces and the design through those specifications, which make use of existing standards. But for a number of those novel requirements we have identified a number of new standards that we would seek to progress through the Standards Australia process. Obviously, we have been working with Standards Australia. They have been very supportive, as has the IT14 community, to actually help us to develop the specifications and standards plan because they are so critical.
I wonder how the IT-14 Volunteers are going to work through all this in other than geological time.
Senator BOYCE: I would like to go to the answer you gave me to question on notice 465 from the last estimates. You said there were 16 areas of standard specifications that were complete and that had been tested. You go on to say they are available on the website for vendors with guidance material on how to implement the specifications. Where are they on the website?
Mr Bunker : Mr Fleming has described what some of the key components of those specifications are. Those specifications—
Senator BOYCE: You told me there were 23 bundles and we have 16 areas.
Mr Bunker : Those specifications are available on the software development learning centre through the national change and adoption partners portal environment. That environment makes the specifications as well as a number of supporting documents available to support vendors interacting with those specifications. But it is not just the website. Obviously there is a lot of communication we have. We have regular webinars with our vendor community so that they can ask questions and get updates and information on what the development status is of different components.
Senator BOYCE: I have vendors telling me that they are not on the website and they are not in your standards catalogue. Why would that be?
Mr Fleming : I guess the only thing I can say is that if someone can look at the website you will see them there. So the answer that we have provided—
Senator BOYCE: They are openly available to anybody who wants to view them? They are not restricted in any way?
Mr Fleming : No, there is a process for logging on. We do ask people to log on so that we know who is accessing them. The reason is that as things are added and the information is made available, we can then provide prompts to let people know they are there. That information is available. As Mr Bunker mentioned, there is a regular webinar with vendors. They should all be aware of that.
Senator BOYCE: With respect to what is on that website, I will have to go back because when I am stuck or they are not there and they are not complete, as is being told to me by vendors, I have to go backwards and forwards to try and see where the truth is.
Mr Fleming : We would be very happy to sit down and show you. They are there; they are available. Clearly, in that answer, where we referred to the 16, with the information in which we indicated there was a problem with the CDA guides for five of those, that might be what is being referred to there. But that information is there, it is available and we are happy to show anyone.
Senator BOYCE: Does this mean I can use that information today if I were a software developer?
Mr Fleming : Absolutely.
Senator BOYCE: It is fit for practice?
Mr Fleming : Absolutely. I will give a couple of examples. We have a national infrastructure partner, Accenture, who are building the PCEHR system. They have used those specifications; the system is built and is being finished. Components are in test at the moment. They have done it; they are building to that. We have our wave site partners, in wave 1 and 2. They are building to those specifications with us. Clearly, we are going through lessons learnt. But that is happening today, yes.
Senator BOYCE: What about other companies that are looking to become involved in the PCEHR? Are they fit for use for those companies? Are they complete?
Mr Fleming : Absolutely. We have made it very publicly available if people wish to use them. Not only are they available to use but we would like to provide them with help, assistance and processes, if they have questions.
Senator BOYCE: You have told me that there are 23 bundles of specification and yet software vendors and others wanting to use the site say there are only two that are fit for use five months out from the launch of the PCEHR. Can you give me any reason why people would be saying that, Mr Fleming?
Mr Fleming : We have a regular meeting with the ICT forums. One of those occurred yesterday. That was stated to me and I asked if that point could be substantiated and there was no substantiation of the point. So the bundles are there.
Senator BOYCE: Doesn't that comment concern you? Did you go back and verify for yourself that it was wrong?
Mr Fleming : When that statement was made to me I said 'please explain', because as far as we are concerned not only can they be built to, but they are being built to. When I asked for examples, none were forthcoming. I am very happy for people to come to me and say, 'This is our problem', but a statement like that needs to be substantiated and no-one has substantiated it. There are people using it and building to those systems now.
CHAIR: Mr Fleming, was yesterday the first time you heard that comment? You actually said in your response when you heard that—
Mr Fleming : Yesterday was the first time I heard that comment. It was in a meeting.
Senator BOYCE: In terms of the use of the standards to develop product to be used in the PCEHR, I am using really broad terms so that I do not inadvertently narrow my inquiry field because I do not know how broad my inquiry field really should be. Accenture and the wave 1 and wave 2 people have been using these bundles of specifications and standards that you have mentioned. What is the feedback on them? Has there been any evaluation of the use of them et cetera?
Mr Fleming : Yes, there has been. I do not have that detail with me. If you do not mind, I will take it on notice to give you a more substantial discussion than I can provide here. The purpose of the wave sites has been that we can work with them. One of the things we have said quite publicly is that it is one thing for us to sit in an office and write specifications and it is another thing to see how it works in the real world. The purpose of the wave sites is to test them through. Most of the problems have not been in the technical specifications; they have been more things like: 'Okay, that's great; now how do I get that inculcated within my work flows? What does it mean if I have to register an HPIO et cetera?' It has been more in those areas. The things we have learned have been quite interesting and clearly we have adjusted our processes accordingly. But if I could take it on notice, we will provide you with a full list of those learnings.
This is a very strange exchange. I wonder why the Senator is being told information that is at such variance to what Mr Fleming is saying?
There is no doubt that July 1 will see a log-on screen. I wonder why no-one asked what you will be able to do what you have logged on!
Senator BOYCE: Would you say that the testing that has so far gone on constitutes real world testing of the products developed using the standards and specifications that you have on your website?
Mr Fleming : There are multiple components to the testing that we do, as you would expect. That includes fairly basic unit testing right through to systems testing, integrated testing, clinical testing and testing whether it is fit for purpose. The testing we are now doing, particularly with some of the earlier needed products that we are actually implementing in GP practices, is real world testing. That is occurring.
Senator BOYCE: That is the wave 1 and wave 2.
Mr Fleming : Absolutely. That is part of why we are doing this, to see what it means, with obviously a lot of hand holding because there is a learning curve that goes on.
Senator BOYCE: You had a pause there.
Mr Fleming : Absolutely. As we have learnt, there were some issues in the CDA.
Senator BOYCE: Are they back on track now?
Mr Fleming : Yes. The actual problem that was detected has been fixed and we are currently testing that. One of the things that we do, which is part of our testing, is that we build out the system ourselves. So for everything that we write a spec for we actually build. We are testing building that. We also had an external process called CCA, certification, compliance and accreditation, which we run through NATA, not NEHTA; therefore there are test labs, external labs, that are accredited through NATA. So anyone who is implementing these systems needs to go through those conformance checkpoints too. So there are very many tests as part of this process.
Senator BOYCE: The product is being developed by Accenture. Have they been subject to real world testing, Mr Fleming?
Mr Fleming : Accenture is developing the national infrastructure for the PCEHR.
Senator BOYCE: So it has not—
Mr Fleming : That build will be completed and available for registration on 1 July. We are in the process of receiving the first component of that, called 1A. We have detailed tests that we do there. We have invited a number of vendors to come and assist us through that process. It is early days for testing.
Senator BOYCE: What do you mean by that?
Mr Fleming : It is one thing for us to test but it is also another component to get vendors in to test their systems against the specs, their interfaces, to see how that works.
Senator BOYCE: When will that testing be complete?
Mr Fleming : There is a test program that will run through right into late June and it is starting now.
Senator BOYCE: Late June?
Mr Fleming : And it is starting now. As you would expect with any system going live on 1 July, there will be various tests that we will do all the way through.
Senator BOYCE: The end result of this will be that the first real world testing of the Accenture system will be when this scheme becomes operational on the government's current deadline of 1 July.
Mr Fleming : Real world in the context of consumers registering for an electronic health record. However, there will be a huge amount of testing with us and with vendors to test the systems process—with the assistance, wherever possible, of our wave sites et cetera—and to test the various environments and configuration. But it will be 1 July when the system goes live that obviously—
Senator BOYCE: I am not sure that everyone is as confident that it is going to go live on 1 July.
Mr Fleming : Senator, this is a very large program, as you are aware.
Senator BOYCE: I realise that.
Mr Fleming : In that context, the types of issues, for instance, that we saw with the specifications were not good, but you expect problems in a large program. Generally, there is nothing that we see that would indicate that we will not be ready for 1 July. We are on track.
Senator DI NATALE: I suppose the first question relates to something that took up a significant amount of time in the recent inquiry—that is the no-access consumer control issue. Is it true to say that NEHTA took the decision to remove the no-access consumer control from the concept of operations? Was that against the advice of the consumer reference forum?
Ms Halton : That is a departmental issue, Senator.
Senator DI NATALE: What does that mean?
Ms Halton : You will have to ask departmental officers, not NEHTA. I am happy for them to come to the table and answer your question.
CHAIR: We are on NEHTA at the moment Senator, if there is anything particularly for NEHTA, and then we will get the officers from the department to come to the table.
Senator DI NATALE: Has NEHTA set any hard targets for consumer inclusion and adoption? Have you actually got hard targets?
Mr Fleming : There are obviously a number of groups working on this program. NEHTA is managing agent for the Department of Health and Ageing regarding PCEHR, and then you have the COAG component of the program as well. In that context one of our partners is NCAP, the National Change and Adoption Partner. They have produced a number of different scenarios as to what might happen depending on certain environmental triggers. We have not locked in any targets—nothing has been approved—but there have been various scenario mappings that indicate numbers in terms of consumers' conditions that could be achieved over time frames.
Senator DI NATALE: What are some of the assumptions that might change?
Mr Fleming : There are various assumptions. One of the assumptions we have looked at, for instance, is that the market will remain as it currently exists—no incentives et cetera—and what that might mean in terms of uptake of the program. The first assumption is: in that environment what does that mean? There are assumptions in terms of what would happen if there were certain target groups and what that might mean. There are clearly groups that would benefit significantly from this, such as those with chronic disease—
Ms Halton : Diabetes, for example.
Mr Fleming : There has been nothing locked in there. That is a policy decision.
Senator DI NATALE: And incentives? You have done some modelling around incentives?
Mr Fleming : No. Once again they are policy decisions.
Ms Halton : That is not a matter for NEHTA.
Senator DI NATALE: I am happy to move on. The suspension of the pilot e-health sites: is that something I can talk to NEHTA about?
Mr Fleming : Absolutely.
Senator DI NATALE: How long did it take NEHTA to identify the software incompatibilities that related to the suspension?
Mr Fleming : The issue we had, as I mentioned earlier when Senator Boyce was asking some questions, was that there are three types of documents that we produce. The information requirements documents were correct; the structured component documents were correct, so the real specs; it was the CDA implementation guide, so the examples, where we had some issues. What had happened was that because we have work that we are undertaking with wave 1 and wave 2 sites, we provided some early guidance to those sites back in May this year. 'Here's the draft specifications, this is what it looks like,' and then we continued to work to build those specifications out with the rest of the industry. What happened, and it should not have happened, was that we did not fully manage our change control, so that when we published the final November specification, we did not give the full change control log to the wave 1 and 2 sites.
Senator DI NATALE: Can you explain 'change control' to me in English?
Mr Fleming : Change control simply says, 'Here's version 1 and here's version 2 and this is the difference.' The difference could be anything. So we gave them a change log but not with everything in there. That was the gap. We have had to go back and update that change log to reflect those changes. For example, if you are a software builder, you have built to this early draft, you need to know what the differences are with examples so that you can change to the new specification. That was a gap. In terms of fixing that, the problem is fixed but we are going through and testing that at the moment. It has caused, in terms of the wave site, about a six-week delay on where they were at. We work very closely with those groups, as you would expect. Therefore we are working closely with them to see what we can do to continue and minimise the impact of that. It is a large program, as I mentioned, so whereas it impacts that component, it does not impact the delivery of PCEHR and the ability to register on 1 July. That is a separate—
Ms Halton : The national infrastructure, basically.
Mr Fleming : That is a separate component.
Senator DI NATALE: How much do you think the suspension cost the project?
Mr Fleming : This is a high level so we are still dotting the i's here. It does not look like it has cost anything in terms of dollars, because the work that we have to do to transition our wave sites across to the national infrastructure had to happen anyway. We have had to put a slight delay on the work. We have been able to rejig those processes. It does not look like financially it will cost us anything. Time-wise, it is probably about six weeks.
This really tests credibility - surely redoing the work to update and correct the specification must have a cost - or is the staff level so high that the extra load is able to be absorbed painlessly!
Senator DI NATALE: Can you tell me about the basis on which the nine organisations were selected to participate in wave 1 and wave 2? What were the criteria?
Mr Fleming : Twelve organisations were selected. There is a process we went through with the first three. They are groups that have had a very strong involvement in e-health from day one with amazing experience in terms of change management contracts. So they were chosen because of their experience and we knew that, no matter what would happen in terms of tenders et cetera, these were groups that had a huge amount of experience that we needed to use and learn from. They were chosen on the basis of their knowledge. The nine other sites were chosen through a tender process which followed the Commonwealth procurement guidelines. There were separate officers on there evaluating that, so it went through the full Commonwealth procurement process.
What this is saying is the Wave 1 was selected on a nod and a wink and only with Wave 2 was a proper tender process conducted.
Senator DI NATALE: On what basis were the sites chosen? What were some of the criteria that were used?
Mr Fleming : There were a number of different criteria. I will provide that on notice. At a high level, the intention was to be able to drill down into specific areas of interest and also to get a reasonable demographic footprint.
Senator DI NATALE: I have some questions about the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner, which has been nominated to conduct investigations relating to the PCEHR. It seems like a fairly substantial task. What are the additional resources that will be given to that office?
Mr Fleming : That is a policy matter for the department.
Senator DI NATALE: Again, with the intention of the department that the system operator of the PCEHR will notify consumers of breaches. Is that something you want me to put again to the department?
Mr Fleming : Yes.
Senator DI NATALE: Good. I am done.
Senator BOYCE: I have a follow-up question, for the sake of the record. How many patient records do the wave 1 and wave 2 suppliers currently have or are dealing with?
Mr Fleming : I am not sure I fully understand the question.
Senator BOYCE: They are developing EHRs, whether they are PCEHRs or PEHRs, which perhaps is the difference, but how many records have they got?
Mr Fleming : There are some high level targets for each of the groups. Once again, I will provide that on notice. Off the top of my head, as part of the wave 1 sites, there is a requirement for about 400 GP practices. It is probably best if I provide it on notice because I will give the wrong numbers.
Senator BOYCE: It is the individual records that I am after. We are talking about less than a million, aren't we?
Mr Fleming : I will provide those numbers separately, if that is all right. They are fairly significant numbers though.
Senator BOYCE: Fairly insignificant?
Mr Fleming : Significant. We spoke about wave 1 and, as you are aware, that is Brisbane, Melbourne east, Hunter et cetera. But when you start moving then into the wave 2, where you have got Medibank and quite a significant number of records there, such as the FRED project, in terms of medication management, the numbers are actually quite significant. I will provide a table with them.
Senator BOYCE: I was thinking while Senator Di Natale was asking his questions that if you have a glitch like this—which probably affects significantly under 20 per cent of the potential e-health records in Australia—with a much bigger, more complicated system which actually allows for personal control, is the likelihood not far greater for problems, glitches, to emerge?
Mr Fleming : The specifications that we are talking about were not things that are being used—
Senator BOYCE: It was a process problem really, wasn't it?
Mr Fleming : It is not things being used in production. This is early work where we were defining specifications and working through those with a number of vendors. It was not a production system. This was picked up as part of our normal—
Senator BOYCE: As you point out, the wave 1 people were in fact people with strong and lengthy experience in the area.
Mr Fleming : Correct, which is why we are working with them. Once again, in that context, this was working with them. It was not into the GP practices or with the consumers at that point in time.
Senator BOYCE: There was still a process issue which led to a six-week pause.
Mr Fleming : Yes, as we learned lessons, but that is part of a process of development. If the question was: what does that mean in terms—
Senator BOYCE: I as a lay person would have concerns, and I imagine most people would, over a glitch of this sort occurring in a simpler system without personal control with less than 20 per cent of the health records of Australia. This would perhaps send up some warning signals about a more complex, personally controlled, vastly greater system.
Mr Fleming : In this context the problem we had was with the specifications. What we are doing is writing some specifications, then building it ourselves, then building it with vendors and then, once we have got that right and we have tested it, move it into local areas and so on. The specifications were written. We are now testing with the vendors. It is very early days. It is not yet in production. That is the reason why we are doing it in those early wave sites, to pick it up and make sure it is scalable. We are not implementing a component of it; we are doing the full build with them to see how it works in a local environment and therefore how it will scale. That is the very reason why you do those early implementations, to pick that up and make sure it does not scale into—
Senator BOYCE: Thank you, Mr Fleming.
It is hard to make much sense of this also. I wonder why it is so hard to get clarity as to what is really going on and what the plans actually are?
CHAIR: There being no further questions for NEHTA, we will move to the officers of the department on e-health.
Senator DI NATALE: My question was about the no-access consumer control from the concept of operations and the fact that it was removed, against the advice of the consumer reference forum. Is that correct?
Ms Huxtable : The process of developing the concept of operations was subject to significant consultation. There were a range of issues about which there were different views. Those issues were worked through with a variety of organisations. There were a variety of views put on the table. In regard to that particular issue, as we discussed at the inquiry, there were views on both sides and at the end of the day there was a middle road found, I guess. That was the decision of government in terms of the features of the PCEHR. So that is in the addendum to the concept of operations. That issue is resolved. I could not tell you in respect of particular stakeholder groups what their particular views were. There were 165 submissions on the conops. There were targeted discussions with stakeholder organisations in addition to that. Through that process a whole variety of views were put on the table.
Translation: We consulted a few groups and made up our own mind - without providing much in the way or discussion or reasons.
Senator DI NATALE: That is fair enough. The next question relates to the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner. As I said, it sounds like a huge task. What are the additional resources that are going to be given to that position?
Ms Huxtable : That really goes to issues around future funding for the PCEHR and there is still consideration being given by government to the features of that. I do not think I am really in a position to answer that question directly. I do not know if anyone election se has more to add.
Ms Halton : Other than to acknowledge that we know it is an issue.
Senator DI NATALE: Aren't we going live in a few months?
Ms Huxtable : There is a budget between now and then, Senator.
Senator DI NATALE: I realise that. I would have thought there would have been perhaps a little bit of planning around that.
Ms Huxtable : There has been plenty of discussion.
Ms Halton : Certainly planning.
Senator DI NATALE: Are you prepared to say anything else?
Senator BOYCE: Watch this space, Senator Di Natale; that is what I think is being said. It would be fairly unusual, would it not, that the funding to just be cut off? Surely there would be forward estimates for this in normal circumstances, wouldn't there?
Ms Huxtable : The decision in respect of the PCEHR, as you will recall, was a two-year funding decision. When that decision was taken in 2010 there was $466 million allocated over the two years. So that money does end on 30 June 2012. There may be other elements—
Senator BOYCE: No-one was expecting they would need to spend another cent on the PCEHR in the next few years?
Ms Huxtable : As the secretary said, there is ongoing consideration being given to the next stage
Senator BOYCE: Are there any other programs within the department of health where there is no funding in the forward estimates despite the fact that the program is going to continue?
Ms Halton : I will take that on notice, Senator. I think there probably are.
Senator BOYCE: Where they are intended to continue?
Ms Halton : Yes, Senator.
Senator DI NATALE: Would it be fair to say that it is something that the department has given some thought to and actually has some planning in place? You are going to go live in a few months. It is hard to think, particularly initially, that there is not going to be a need for significant resources within the office.
Ms Halton : Lots of thought, Senator. We can promise you lots of thought.
Senator DI NATALE: I will be watching with interest.
Ms Halton : By the bucket load.
We have to read this to suggest that DoHA thinks more money is coming and that it will be in the Budget. Watch this space as they say!
Senator DI NATALE: Is it the intention of the department that the system operator will notify consumers of all breaches?
Ms Huxtable : I probably need to get some support on the detail of the legislation.
Ms Granger : Yes, that is in the approach to the legislation: that we will be notifying breaches.
This sound a little vague but is better than what I recall has been said previously.
Senator BOYCE: I just want to confirm this because I have some questions on telehealth and NBN. I am told it comes under you, Ms Huxtable; is that right?
Ms Huxtable : I believe telehealth would be under outcome 3. It probably depends a bit on the question. The telehealth measures are under outcome 3.
Senator BOYCE: They are around the pilot projects in Townsville, New England and Illawarra.
Ms Halton : That is the department of communications, actually. If it is the money that is being spent on the pilots which comes out of the department of communications—
Senator BOYCE: Can I perhaps flip through my questions? You can tell me 'don't worry' but I would hate to—
Ms Halton : Yes, sure. We might be able to answer some of them. Certainly, with the pilots, we do not control those funds, and they are definitely controlled by communications.
Senator BOYCE: The first question I have is: what number of diabetics must the Townsville study recruit to have sufficient power—credibility—to achieve significant findings? Is that something that the department of communications is going to be able to tell me?
Ms Halton : What I can tell you is that the department of communications has worked with us on their pilots to do with the NBN. I suspect that the best thing to do with those kinds of questions is to take them on notice. We will have a conversation and get you an answer across us and the department of communications.
Ms Huxtable : I have just been told that this is a Broadband measure, not one of our measures. I think the questions would need to be directed to them.
Ms Halton : We will put them on notice.
CHAIR: We will be able to see what engagement Health has had, because I imagine the numbers of diabetic people would have to somehow come back through some area of Health. If not, we will get them to Communications for you.
Senator BOYCE: I wanted to also ask some questions about the $20.6 million fund to conduct the trials using the NBN. Did DOHA contribute any funds to that?
Ms Halton : No. I will correct this if I am wrong, but I am sure I am not. The funding has come through Communications. When they were identifying priorities for these early rollout initiatives, there was quite a lot of dialogue with us on the kinds of things that are relevant to the practice of health: how you connect into the home et cetera, including with the consultants—I am almost loath to say that word—who were advising that department. Those consultants came and talked to a number of people, including me, about those projects. As I said, the measures, the money, is through that department.
Senator BOYCE: Through the department of communications?
Ms Halton : Yes. We will take it on notice.
Senator BOYCE: But I understood you were contributing half the funding for the telehealth trial.
Ms Halton : There is a difference. We have other things on telehealth. I think we need to see the questions in precise detail.
Senator BOYCE: What things have you got on telehealth and the NBN?
Ms Halton : We have telehealth measures.
Ms Huxtable : Incentives.
Senator BOYCE: Does that include the NBN? Are they related to the NBN?
Ms Huxtable : No, not directly.
Ms Halton : No.
Senator BOYCE: It is around the two trials that are being done with telehealth and the NBN that I am interested.
Ms Halton : The officers who can talk about telehealth more broadly are not here because that is not in this area.
Senator BOYCE: When would they be here?
Ms Halton : They should be around shortly.
CHAIR: We will make a note.
Senator BOYCE: I do not necessarily need to ask all the questions now. I just want to be sure where I should be doing this.
Ms Halton : The people from medical benefits at 5.15 can certainly talk about our engagement.
Senator BOYCE: Thank you.
CHAIR: Thank you to the officers from e-health; I think we can say we have covered that area.
----- End Transcript.
It seems like it was a rather wasted hour or so but at least we seem to have confirmation some funding will continue and breaches will be notified. Progress I guess.
It is also useful to see the Greens are taking an interest via their medically trained Senator for Victoria. I hope the Greens are going to be able to take a considered position now their numbers have reached critical mass.
David.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Read Closely - This is Really A Rather Odd Position To Be Adopting On The PCEHR.

The following appeared today.

Liberal MPs to vote for e-health records

LIBERAL MPs will vote to pass the Gillard government's legislation on personally controlled e-health records in the lower house, but warn they may move changes when the findings of a Senate inquiry are released.
Opposition e-health spokesman Andrew Southcott said the Coalition supported the concept of shared e-health records, but had concerns about the way the system was being implemented.
"Labor's implementation of the PCEHR since taking government in 2007 has received enormous criticism from industry for the poor management of the program's development and progress," he told the house last week.
"This legislation was introduced in the final sitting week of 2011; the opposition referred the bills to a Senate inquiry, which is due to report on February 29.
"Submissions to that inquiry have just closed. In its public hearing (on February 6), the inquiry heard testimony highlighting a number of stakeholders' concerns.
"A better approach would have been for the Health Minister and the government to defer debate on the bills until the Senate has reported its findings."
Almost all submissions raised concerns about the government's July 1 go-live date for the system, and statements that "the minister has repeatedly stated we will be able to register" for a personal record from that date.
"Unfortunately, just repeating it will not necessarily make it come true," Dr Southcott said.
"There is widespread belief by the majority of industry experts, health bodies and medical practitioners that July 1 will not bring the fanfare we are expecting."
Nevertheless, Dr Southcott said, the Coalition was committed to the concept of an e-health record, and recognised the benefits "a properly implemented PCEHR could bring to patients and practitioners alike".
"For this reason, while not opposing these bills, we do reserve our right to move amendments, pending the outcome of the Senate inquiry."
The house is in recess this week and reconvenes next Monday.
Lots more with coverage of what NEHTA says will be ready for July 1, and the comments of Senator Boyce is found here:
It is really hard to understand, in the light of the comments made by Dr Southcott, just what the Opposition is doing just passing legislation to introduce the PCEHR when, from his own comments, he has so many doubts about things related to the PCEHR.
To be passing legislation to enable a ‘concept’ rather than something tangible for which there was some evidence of value - especially when an enquiry report is due in a little over a week - seems rather odd to me.
I guess the machinations of the political mind will always remain a bit of a mystery to those on the outside.
I guess we will just have to await events!
David.

Monday, February 20, 2012

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 20th February, 2012.

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

Really a quiet sort of week with a couple of highlights. The first is the first statement I have seen from the opposition on the PCEHR as reported by e-Healthspace.org. The comparison with ‘pink bats’ does not seem to bode all that well.
The other big issue is the re-emergence of the incentive issue for GPs to assist patients with their PCEHR. This story certainly has some way to run!
Enjoy a quiet week as we are meant to hear from the PCEHR Senate Enquiry next week!
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Opposition votes for ehealth, slams PCEHR

The federal opposition has weighed into debate about the sector’s transformation, branding the $467 million Personally Controlled Electronic Healthcare Record (PCEHR) another example of the federal government’s “poorly implemented approach to blockbuster projects.”
Andrew Southcott, federal opposition spokesman on ehealth, told eHealthspace.org that while he supports the broader ehealth agenda, the PCEHR program was similar to other controversial Labor Government programs including the Building the Education Revolution and home insulation debacle.
Ehealth falls under Mr Southcott’s purview as shadow parliamentary secretary for primary healthcare. “Ehealth is an area where lots of money can be wasted, and we are starting to see some of the problems,” he said.
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AGPN calls for PCEHR incentives

14 February, 2012 Michael Woodhead
Incentives are needed to support individual GPs, practices and Medicare Locals to get the PCEHR up and running by and beyond, July 2012, says AGPN chair Dr Emil Djakic.
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Cash for GPs’ e-health role on agenda

13 February, 2012 Paul Smith
The Federal Government is considering a new funding plan to assist general practices in developing the $467 million e-health records system, due to be rolled out from July.
There have been long-running concerns about the additional workload for GPs signing patients up and ensuring the clinical information on the records is up-to-date and accurate.
Those GPs who opt to take part will be expected to ensure patients give informed consent for their information to be uploaded onto the system.
They will also be expected to “curate” the clinical data that appears on the shared health summaries — the electronic documents detailing diagnoses, allergies and medications that will be made accessible across the health system.
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PCEHR specification glitch identified: NEHTA

Written by Kate McDonald on 15 February 2012.
The technical issue that has held up the implementation of some components of the PCEHR has been resolved and is currently being tested before work restarts, the CEO of the National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA), Peter Fleming, said.
Mr Fleming told a Senate Estimates committee hearing in Canberra today that the technical fault was discovered in one of the Clinical Document Architecture (CDA) implementation guides.
He said there are 23 different bundles of specifications for each component of the PCEHR, and three different types of documents for each bundle. The error occurred when the Wave 2 sites were not given an updated version of some of the CDA specifications.
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E-health specifications back in testing

By Josh Taylor, ZDNet.com.au on February 16th, 2012
The National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA) is testing specifications and has almost recovered from its stumble that lead to it stopping e-health record trials, said NEHTA CEO Peter Fleming.
In January, NEHTA revealed that it had paused the implementation of primary care e-heath software at the e-health trial sites in North Brisbane, Melbourne, the Hunter, South Brisbane, Western Sydney, St Vincent's, Calvary, Cradle Coast, the Northern Territory and Mater. This pause was due to detected technical incompatibilities for specifications pushed out to the sites in November 2011.
Speaking in a Senate estimates hearing yesterday, Fleming said that the NEHTA was testing the revamped specification solution internally before pushing it out to the trial sites.
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Remote GPs embrace telehealth benefits

Emma Connors
14 February, 2012
West Australian GP Mike Civil is a big believer in telehealth.
While some remain unconvinced taxpayers will ultimately get value for money from the $35.9 billion national broadband network, early adopters suggest remote medicine is an application with big potential.
Since last year GPs have been able to claim Medicare rebates and incentives for linking specialists with their patients via a video link if they are located in a rural, regional or outer metropolitan areas.
About $620 million over five years has been set aside to help encourage consultations over video links.
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NSW government 'sitting on health report'

The computer system, known as FirstNet, continually makes hospital staff spend excessive time on data entry and is underfunded
  • AAP (AAP)
  • 13 February, 2012 09:15
The NSW government has come under attack for failing to release a report into problems with the computer system that runs emergency departments throughout the state.
The report by consultants Deloitte was obtained by Fairfax Media under freedom-of-information laws. It says the computer system, known as FirstNet, continually makes hospital staff spend excessive time on data entry and is chronically underfunded.
Staff are not adequately taught how to use the software and it does not provide an acceptable record of care received, according to the report.
"With some exceptions, FirstNet reporting is inadequate for effective governance of operations," the report states.
-----

NSW government accused of dodgy software cover-up

FirstNet: the First State's deadest duck
The buggy FirstNet emergency department software has become the subject of a political argument in NSW.
In one of those paradoxes of democracy, an opposition which, in government, was responsible for a now-despised implementation is now using the IT project as a stick to beat a government which was in opposition when the system was chosen.
Last week, the Sydney Morning Herald obtained a report into the system by Deloitte, under a freedom of information request. It says the Deloitte report criticises FirstNet because it is:
- Is chronically under-funded;
- Produces inadequate records;
- Was unreliable in delivering messages, and did not provide alerts when messages failed to reach their destination; and
- Demanded excessive amounts of screen time from clinicians.
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Death highlights need for script tracking

16 February, 2012 AAP
Moves to introduce a national real-time prescription monitoring system to stamp out "prescription shopping" have been backed by a Victorian coroner in the summing up of the death of a young man from prescription drugs.
The recommendation was made by Coroner John Olle at a summary inquest into the death of a Melbourne man who had visited 19 doctors and 32 pharmacies in the three years before he died from an overdose of prescribed morphine and diazepam in October 2009.
Mr Olle's comments come just days after Federal Health Minister Tanya Plibersek announced a $5 million national electronic records system to combat prescription drug abuse.
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Calls for alcohol inclusion in drug monitoring system

17th Feb 2012
Mark O’Brien 
THE nationwide expansion of Tasmania’s controlled drug monitoring system has led to calls for the system to include alcohol sales in supermarkets, while a Victorian coroner has recommended the state government monitor the sale of all prescription drugs.
Health Minister Tanya Plibersek announced this week the Electronic Recording and Reporting of Controlled Drugs system developed by the Tasmanian government would be made available to doctors, pharmacists and state and territory health authorities across Australia from 1 July.
The $5 million system will monitor the prescribing and dispensing of addictive drugs in real time, allowing practitioners and administrators to immediately detect people suspected of trafficking in painkillers, forging prescriptions and ‘doctor-shopping’.
-----

GPs tick real-time drug database

By Suzanne Tindal, ZDNet.com.au on February 17th, 2012
The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP) has patted Health Minister Tanya Plibersek on the back for announcing a new $5 million e-health system to counter prescription-drug abuse.
On the weekend, Plibersek announced that the Federal Government will fund an e-health database for doctors, pharmacists and state and territory health authorities, which will allow real-time monitoring of the prescription and consumption of addictive drugs. The database will be available from 1 July.
Health professionals will be able to access the database, which will contain prescription records, over a secure network, and detect whether a person suspected of trafficking painkillers, forging prescriptions or doctor shopping is seeking medication.
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Medicines could be delivered by remote-controlled microchips in a 'Star Trek'-style program

  • From: AP
  • February 17, 2012 9:37AM
MEDICATION via remote-control instead of a shot? Scientists implanted microchips in seven women that did just that, oozing out the right dose of a bone-strengthening drug once a day without them even noticing.
Implanted medicine is a hot field, aiming to help patients better stick to their medications and to deliver those drugs straight to the body part that needs them.
But the study is believed to be the first attempt at using a wirelessly-controlled drug chip in people. If this early-stage testing eventually pans out, the idea is that doctors one day might program dose changes from afar with the push of a button, or time them for when the patient is sleeping to minimise side effects.
The implant initially is being studied to treat severe bone-thinning osteoporosis. But it could be filled with other types of medication, said co-inventor Robert Langer of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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Andrew Took: Access essential for e-health cards

THE Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record (PCEHR) system to be introduced in Australia from 1 July is consumer-centric in its design.
Not only is it an opt-in model and a completely voluntary scheme, but consumers will be able to access all their health information stored on the PCEHR and, by setting advanced access controls, can exclude parts of their medical history from being accessed by treating practitioners.
Much has been said that unless we adopt an opt-out model, take up rates will be poor and the vision of better health outcomes for Australians will remain illusory.
Ideally, a consumer’s PCEHR will enhance their medical treatment by providing a consolidated summary of his or her health information. It does not — and never will — replace the doctor’s clinical records.
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US and China may have to store our medical data

AUSTRALIAN medical research is to be boosted by the country's most powerful supercomputer, but there is rising concern that a shortage of mathematical and programming skills will eventually force discoveries and developments offshore.
The Victorian Life Sciences Computation Initiative, based at Melbourne University, has signed a deal to acquire an IBM Blue Gene/Q supercomputer that will have the power of more than 20,000 desktop computers.
It will allow researchers to crunch the vast amounts of data generated in areas such as genetic coding to target and personalise treatments based on an individual's genetics.
But VLSCI director Peter Taylor said that while the hardware would come online, Australia faced a looming shortage of skilled mathematicians and programmers to guide the research, because too few students studied high-level maths at school and university.
In the future, he warned, the genetic information of Australians that would underpin the personalised medical treatments of the future could end up being mapped, analysed and kept in countries such as the US and China.
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IBM supercomputer to boost health research in Victoria

The Blue Gene/Q supercomputer should be operational in June this year
The University of Melbourne (UoM) has acquired one of the world’s fastest and greenest supercomputers to help further the study of human diseases.
The IBM Blue Gene/Q supercomputer — expected to be operational in June this year — will provide 836 teraflops of processing power, which is the equivalent of more than 20,000 desktop computers.
The supercomputer will be installed at the Victorian Life Sciences Computation Initiative (VLSCI), which was established by the Victorian government in conjunction with UoM and the IBM Research Collaboratory for Life Sciences, in Melbourne for $100 million to advance biotechnology by enabling scientists to improve diagnostics, find new drug targets and refine treatments.
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Feb. 17, 2012, 8:35 a.m. EST

MMRGlobal and VisiInc Sign Agreement to License MMR Australian Patent Portfolio on the Road to HIMSS

LOS ANGELES, CA, Feb 17, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) -- MMRGlobal, Inc. MMRF 0.00% ("MMR"), a leading provider of Personal Health Records ("PHR"), MyEsafeDepositBox storage solutions and electronic document management and imaging systems for healthcare professionals, today announced that the Company and VisiInc PLC in Australia signed an agreement to license MMR's Australian patents for "Method and System for Providing Online Medical Records" for use in MMR and Visi(TM) consumer and professional health IT products and services, including the MyMedicalRecords Personal Health Record. The Agreement calls for minimum performance royalty guarantees of nearly one million dollars. The Agreement also calls for VisiInc to start selling the services in Australia starting June 1, 2012. In addition, the Agreement contains an understanding allowing the companies to utilize each other's consumer and professional products and services. VisiInc is also seeking rights to sell MMR products in additional territories such as in Eastern Europe where VisiInc already does business.
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Health Industry Exchange Case Study

Health Industry Exchange Case Study
Health Industry Exchange (HIE) achieved NeHTA’s Health Identifiers (HI) Compliance, Conformance and Accreditation via the KJ Ross NATA accredited ICT test laboratory for its ‘HIE Synch’ software. Download the PDF version of this case study here.

PROJECT OVERVIEW

HIE aimed to be one of the first clinical information software systems vendor and developer, to obtain NeHTA’s HI Compliance, Conformance and Accreditation (CCA) via the K. J. Ross & Associates (KJ Ross) NATA Accredited Test Lab. HIE is an Australian company developing eHealth software infrastructure for the primary care sector. The company is the developer and vendor of ‘HIE Synch’ software, which is employed by health professionals and medical institutions, it was a critical requirement for HIE Ltd to have this software accredited to the NeHTA HI conformance specifications and Australian standard.
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Enjoy!
David.