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."

Saturday, February 06, 2016

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links - 6th February, 2016.

Note: Each link is followed by a title and few paragraphs. For the full article click on the link above title of the article. Note also that full access to some links may require site registration or subscription payment.
Note: A very sad week with the closure of the iHealthBeat.org website. An invaluable resource for a very long time!
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Do you know where your hard drives are?

Published  January 28 2016, 2:54pm EST
There’s no shortage of memory media at healthcare organizations; maintaining control of their whereabouts is a significant challenge for IT staff.
Even hard drives, which are wired into computing devices, can be hard to track when they’re removed. Centene, a health insurer offering coverage through the Medicaid, Medicare and health insurance exchange markets, recently announced that it could not account for six hard drives after it conducted an inventory of its information technology assets. Those hard drives contained personal health information or other data from about 950,000 individuals.
The company will offer protective services and is reviewing its IT asset management procedures. However, it isn’t alone in the struggle to track IT assets, says Tom Walsh, president and CEO at tw-Security, a healthcare consultancy. “It’s almost impossible to have true accountability of media in an organization,” he notes.
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The doctor will see you now—on your phone

Published January 29 2016, 5:45am EST
TouchCare, a Durham, N.C.-based telehealth company founded in 2013, is striving to make telehealth more intimate.
“Most third-party telehealth services assign patients to random doctors they don’t know,” says Dov Cohn, TouchCare’s senior vice president of products. “We focus on connecting patients with their own doctors and healthcare providers. Our approach builds on existing relationships, trust and access to previous health records. Those things are all shown to improve health outcomes.”
TouchCare offers more than just connectivity to patients; it helps doctors connect with each other, too. Providers to conduct HIPAA-compliant video consults with each other, talking face-to-face privately or sitting alongside a patient to present the case to a specialist anywhere in the world.
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National patient identifier: Exploring the pros and cons

January 29, 2016 | By Katie Dvorak
The debate about creating a national patient identifier is a contentious one--some think it can help protect privacy, others think it won't bring any added benefits to healthcare.
A national patient ID could help alleviate worries patients have about the security of their health information, Douglas Fridsma, M.D., Ph.D., president and CEO of the American Medical Informatics Association, tells STAT.
He adds that the conversation has been too focused on how it will help the American health system, and not Americans themselves.
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How to design a hospital with health IT in mind

January 29, 2016 | By Susan D. Hall
Building a new all-digital hospital in Los Angeles county required creating a vision, selecting technologies that supported that vision and staying laser-focused on the goal, according to an article at Healthcare Dive.
The 131-bed Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Hospital opened last July to serve a population of 1.3 million residents in the area, many of whom were low-income and lacked insurance. Of the $158 million budget provided to build the hospital, nearly half--$70 million--was devoted to IT.
The facility boasts smart beds that track patients' movements, a patient interactive system and phones that allow doctors and nurses to communicate and share patient information on a secure internal network even outside the hospital, according to the article.
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Fear of lost privacy costs lives

  • By Joy Hwang, Peter L. Levin
  • Jan 28, 2016
Avoidable medical errors -- so-called preventable adverse events, or PAEs -- contribute to the deaths of approximately 400,000 Americans each year. That makes PAEs the third leading cause of fatalities in the United States, behind heart disease and cancer. They are responsible for four times as many deaths as the number of people who perish from gun violence, breast cancer and automobile accidents combined.
We think that personal electronic health records, sometimes called PHRs, are an underutilized antidote to this problem; and that a perceived barrier to their adoption is a disproportional fear -- actively and cynically promoted in some circles -- that patients are at great risk of losing their privacy if their records are electronic, interoperable, accessible and shared.
Unfortunately, the discussion about poorly digitized medical practices and their contribution to the demise of nearly half a million lives annually is confined within the walls of hospitals, research institutions and the merchants of electronic medical records. And the first defense of inaction raised is almost always the well-flogged piƱata of lost privacy.
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How healthcare systems can become digital-health leaders

The potential of digitization is well understood, yet healthcare systems are struggling to convert ambition into reality. Here’s what we recommend.

January 2016 | byGerardo Aue, Stefan Biesdorf, and Nicolaus Henke
Health systems around the world clearly recognize the potential of digital health: over the past decade, they have invested heavily in national e-health programs. Yet most have delivered only modest returns when measured by higher care quality, greater efficiency, or better patient outcomes. And in some cases, e-health projects have been cancelled due to significant cost overruns and delays, such as the National Program for IT in the United Kingdom’s National Health Service (NHS).1 That’s because such ambitious information-technology initiatives—with a clear focus on IT support for clinical professionals—are typically beyond the core mission of healthcare systems, which also often struggle with legacy systems that impede data integration.
At the same time, the advent of smartphones, cloud computing, and global connectivity has created a universe of consumers accustomed to everything from checking bank balances, making purchases, and watching movies on mobile devices. Increasingly, those consumers wonder why health systems cannot provide similar service innovations. In that respect, digital-health companies would appear to be best positioned: innovation is in their DNA, they have attracted billions of dollars in venture capital, and they have the flexibility to design applications that cater directly to patient groups. Yet digital-health companies have been impeded by a lack of access to health data along with uncertainty about how to distribute the economic benefits generated by smartphone apps.
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Naming the Best in KLAS for HIT software and services

Published January 28 2016, 12:35pm EST
Vendor research firm KLAS Enterprises is out with its annual Best in KLAS awards for health information technology software vendors and service firms. Epic Systems is the top overall vendor for the 6th consecutive year and Impact Advisors is the No.1 IT services firm for the fourth straight year.
KLAS rankings, measuring satisfaction rates, are based on thousands of interviews with hospitals and physician practices during the past year. Health information exchange vendor Medicity scored 20 points higher than it did a year ago, making it the most improved vendor. Vendors with multiple top honors include Epic, Impact Advisors, Merge Healthcare, Athenahealth, CareTech Solutions, CureMD and Galen Healthcare. Here are the Best of KLAS winners:
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New code for open source EHR released

Rebecca McBeth
27 January 2016
IMS Maxims has released the latest version of its open source electronic patient record, including all of the enhancements made for Taunton and Somerset NHS Foundation Trust.
Taunton was the first trust to go live with openMaxims in September last year and has been working closely with the company on developing new functionality, which is now available on the open source website GitHub.
New features of openMaxims 10.5 include; clinical triage of referrals; elective list management; clinical coding; appointment outcomes; and pre-operative assessment for theatres.
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Texas hospital's EHR system suffers ransomware attack

January 27, 2016 | By Marla Durben Hirsch
Mount Pleasant Texas-based Titus Regional Medical Center (TRMC) is the latest victim of a cyberattack of its electronic health record system, with ransomware making it inaccessible, according to an article in The Daily Tribune.
The ransomware virus has encrypted files on several of TRMC's data base services, blocking TRMC's ability to enter or retrieve patient data in EHR. TRMC has implemented a conditional Hospital Incident Command System, and brought in a forensic specialist to deal with the problem. However, there was no indication if or when the virus neutralized. It also was not revealed how much money was demanded in ransom in order to unlock the cyberthief's encryption.
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Despite repeated warnings, pervasive EHR fraud vulnerabilities remain

January 25, 2016 | By Evan Sweeney
The push for healthcare providers to adopt electronic health records (EHRs) has been fueled by promises of improved efficiency and usability, greater accessibility to health information, and in some cases, better patient care.
But the implementation of EHRs has produced mixed results. Despite repeated warnings from government watchdog agencies, vulnerabilities within EHR systems continue to provide a conduit to improper billing and sometimes shockingly brazen fraud schemes.
This is not a new issue. For years, researchers and experts have been pointing to vulnerabilities with EHRs that could contribute to upcoding or facilitate outright fraud. A 2012 report by the Center for Public Integrity found that the rapid implementation of EHRs led to aggressive billing by providers. That same year, a New York Times article revealed similar concerns about a rise in Medicare payments from providers that adopted EHRs.
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CDC: Almost three-fourths of docs using certified EHRs

January 28, 2016 | By Marla Durben Hirsch
The percentage of office-based physicians implementing certified electronic health records climbed to 74.1 percent in 2014, up from 67.5 percent in 2013, according to a new data brief published this week by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS).
The data brief, based on the National Electronic Health Records Survey, found that EHR adoption varied widely by state, with 58.8 percent of physicians in Alaska using the systems, but 88.6 percent of those in Minnesota doing so, exceeding the national average. Other states where adoption was greater than the national average included Iowa, North Carolina, Oregon, Vermont and South Dakota.
Primary care physicians were more likely to use the EHRs (72.1 percent in 2013 and 78.6 percent in 2014) compared to specialists, with adoption rates of 63.1 percent in 2013 and 70.3 percent in 2014, respectively.
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Telemedicine market value to rocket to $35B value by 2020

Written by Carrie Pallardy | January 27, 2016
The global telemedicine market was valued at $14 billion in 2014, but as adoption continues to increase, this value is projected to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 14 percent until 2020.
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Major health IT groups to partner on cyber defense

Published January 27 2016, 2:45pm EST
As cyber attacks increasingly buffet the healthcare industry, two prominent organizations are coming together to facilitate the sharing of threat data.
The National Health Information Sharing and Analysis Center has aligned with the Electronic Healthcare Network Accreditation Commission, which certifies healthcare vendors and business associates for meeting best business practices, will harmonize efforts to reduce the growing threat of HIPAA breaches, incidents and cybersecurity attacks.
The agreement was formalized through a memorandum of understanding, says Denise Anderson, president of NH-ISAC. The collaboration is significant, because there’s growing need for healthcare organizations to share threat level data; this information has been ineffectively shared in the past because of competitive pressures and the disjointed nature of the industry. As cyber attacks rise against healthcare organization, it will become increasingly important for threat information to be shared quickly and widely.
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10 trends in cyberattacks in healthcare, other industries, new survey shows

This year the top motivation wasn’t hacktivism or vandalism, but 'criminals demonstrating attack capabilities,' Arbor Networks report claims.
January 27, 2016 04:25 PM
Cyberattacks around the world are growing in size and complexity, according to Arbor Networks 11th Annual Worldwide Infrastructure Security Report, released January 26 by Arbor Networks, the security division of NETSCOUT.
For the first time, nearly half of the respondents were from enterprise, government and educational organizations, with service providers at 52 percent. Healthcare is one of the verticals included in the enterprise category.
The survey garnered 354 responses, up from 287 received last year, from a mix of Tier 1 and Tier 2/3 service providers, hosting, mobile, enterprise and other types of network operators from around the world.
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5 health technologies poised for triple-digit growth in 2016, HIMSS Analytics says

While some are still playing meaningful use catch-up, many other hospitals are charging ahead with new IT buys, with big increases in purchasing plans this year.
January 27, 2016 04:55 PM
Electronic data interchange and in-house transcription are just two of the five emerging health IT applications that will surge in 2016, according to a new report by HIMSS Analytics.
Simply put, there's "tons and tons of activity" forecast for the year ahead as hospitals look to install or upgrade technologies, said Matt Schuchardt, HIMSS Analytics' director of market intelligence solutions sales.
The report examines the tech that will be shaping hospitals' buying plans in 2016, with these five technologies poised for growth of 200 percent or more compared with 2015.
Clinical data warehousing/mining (500 percent more hospitals with plans this year than last year). The huge increase indicates that a critical mass of providers are now moving to the next phase of IT maturity, understanding that electronic medical records are just the basic building blocks for care improvement.
"EMR systems are, at a very base level, sophisticated billing systems," said Schuchardt. "They capture a lot more data and allow you to bill more effectively. But they're just the very beginning of what the big data revolution is going to do to health. Hospitals are starting to realize that: The EMR is not the end of the transformation but the very, very beginning."
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The sharing economy

Joining up healthcare services and integrating with social care is now a major focus for national policy; but the IT architecture and the systems needed to do it are still being developed.
Fiona Barr hears about the growing sophistication of information and record sharing models, and about some of the different systems that are being put through their paces by vanguards and pioneers.
The desire to deliver integrated care has been around for a long time. In 2016, however, the pace of change is accelerating as it becomes a focus for national policy.
And while integrated care is far more than an IT system, record sharing capability is an essential component. Choosing the right model may not be easy, however, when it can sometimes feel as if everybody claims to have the answer – and all the answers are subtly different.
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Digital healthcare: from revolution to evolution

Alex Pelletier
Jan 27, 2016
Galvanized in large in part by the Affordable Care act and payment reform from fee for service to value based payment, provider organizations are reacting and preparing for seismic change. Everyone agrees these changes must happen in order to ‘bend the cost curve’ and provide better outcomes for the cost of care being delivered.
The hope, of course, is that  the churn of patients entering and exiting the system will no longer be profitable to provider organizations. Instead, they will be incentivized to provide the quality care patients demand.
As healthcare costs continue to rise, patients’ wallets are being hit with high deductible insurance plans and rising out of pocket costs. What’s emerging is an active healthcare consumer actively assessing the value and cost of medical care. Quality care will be just one facet that determines value for patients in the value-based era.
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athenahealth joins early adopters of data sharing framework

Jeff Rowe
Jan 26, 2016
Prospects for nationwide interoperability got a big boost last week when five leading health IT organizations announced they will implement the interoperability framework launched in December by the health health information network collaborative known as Carequality.
Under the framework – which consists of legal terms, policy requirements, technical specifications, and governance processes – the new partners have agreed to provide health information exchange services for their customers. The five companies include athenahealth®, eClinicalWorks, Epic, NextGen Healthcare and Surescripts.
"The adoption of the Carequality Framework represents a major leap forward for nationwide interoperability," explained Dave Cassel, director of Carequality, in a statement at the time of the announcement. "By these organizations committing to unified Rules of the Road, they are simplifying system-to-system connections to make data exchange easier for a significant portion of the healthcare ecosystem.”
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Intermountain 's March Probst: Take thoughtful approach to national patient ID

January 27, 2016 | By Susan D. Hall
A national patient ID could improve privacy and security, but if a person is linked to the wrong records, the outcomes could be very serious, Marc Probst, CIO of Intermountain Healthcare, said in an interview at HealthcareInfoSecurity.
The issue led to a congressional ban of creating a national patient ID, said Probst, a member of the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT's HIT Policy Committee and CHIME board chair. However, the sentiment in changing, he added.
Just the other day, the College of Healthcare Information Management Executives (CHIME) launched a  $1 million challenge to find innovative ways to match patients to their records. In addition, draft legislation in the U.S. Senate's Health, Education, Labor & Pensions (HELP) Committee would require the Government Accountability Office to conduct a study reviewing patient matching methods.
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DARPA Challenges Researchers to Link Human Brains With Computers

By Richard Adhikari
Jan 26, 2016 7:00 AM PT
The United States Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, last week announced a new program that aims to build a connection between the human brain and the digital world.
To achieve the goals of the Neural Engineering System Design program, DARPA has invited proposals to design, build, demonstrate and validate a human-computer interface that can record from more than 1 million neurons and stimulate more than 100 thousand neurons in the brain in real time.
The interface must perform continuous, simultaneous full-duplex interaction with at least 1,000 neurons -- initially in regions of the human auditory, visual, and somatosensory cortex.
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What’s the real value of EHRs?

Published January 26 2016, 5:31am EST
Adoption of electronic health records since 2009 has been rapid and pervasive in the healthcare industry. Using meaningful use as a barometer, 95 percent of all eligible hospitals and 54 percent of office-based physicians have installed the systems to an extent enough to qualify for incentive funding under the federal EHR Incentive Program.
But there’s mixed opinion on whether those systems have delivered real value. Much depends on the measuring stick that researchers hold against EHRs.
For example, the ability to derive value from the systems has been limited by ease of use issues, contends the American Medical Association. The national professional association for physicians is becoming more vocal in its message that the very incentives intended to drive widespread adoption of EHRs have exacerbated and, in some instances, directly caused usability issues.
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NHS eyes modern tech to help patients stay healthy at home

January 26, 2016 | By Susan D. Hall
Britain's National Health Service has announced pilot projects in seven locations to test how technology can help monitor people with long-term conditions, according to an article in The Telegraph.
Introducing the trials, NHS England Chief Executive Simon Stevens said: "Over the next decade, major health gains won't just come from a few 'miracle cures,' but also from combining diverse breakthroughs in fields such as biosensors, medtech and drug discovery, mobile communications, and AI computing.
"Our new program aims to cut through the hype and test the practical benefits for patients when we bring together some of these most promising technologies."
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AHRQ urged to consider more studies on telehealth's benefits

January 26, 2016 | By Susan D. Hall
HIMSS and the Personal Connected Health Alliance are urging the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) to consider conducting additional studies that provide more data on the benefits of telehealth and remote patient monitoring.
In a letter, the two organizations provide comments to an AHRQ technical brief on telemedicine issued in December. That effort, based on 44 systematic reviews and interviews with key stakeholders, determined telehealth interventions produced "positive results," primarily through improved communication, but called for more research on its effectiveness in chronic disease management.
Sens. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) and John Thune (R-S.D.), in December 2014, had asked AHRQ to review the value of telehealth and remote patient monitoring, particularly for the chronically ill.
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How Public / Private Accelerators are Fostering eHealth Innovation

Scott Mace, for HealthLeaders Media , January 26, 2016

It is no surprise that a growing number of healthcare institutions are seeking partnerships to fund and nourish innovative startups. Massachusetts and New York are at the forefront of fostering such relationships.

Earlier this month, I attended CES 2016 (formerly known as the Consumer Electronics Show) in Las Vegas, walking aisle upon aisle of digital health technology offerings. I do this every couple of years to take the pulse of a consumer phenomenon that continues to attract millions in venture capital funding: mobile health and wellness trackers, sensors, monitors, appliances, and personal medical devices.
I'm mindful that every time I attend, there will be plenty of new startups, but scant clinical evidence to support the worthiness of their efforts, and often not a trace of the promising startups that made the trek to Vegas just two years prior.
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HIT Think A stubborn problem: How to increase patient access to health data

Published January 22 2016, 4:22pm EST
There’s a debate raging in healthcare about whether patients should have control over their own health data. It’s the kind of transformational discussion upon which the future of medicine depends.
Proponents argue that patients must be empowered with information if they are ever to manage their own health and if the industry is to truly realize the Triple Aim of improving patient experience, improving population health and reducing the per capita cost of care.
However, patient-controlled data remains an elusive goal—at least in the current healthcare environment dictated by the information hegemony of providers. As pressures grow on healthcare organizations to optimize care, CIOs and other HIT executives will be involved in data ownership debates within organizations, and then face the challenge of executing each organization’s strategy.
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The key ingredient to cybersecurity: Layers

January 25, 2016 | By Katie Dvorak
As cyberthreats grow, the best way for providers to ensure their systems are as secure as possible is to implement multiple layers of protection.
In addition, according to an article in Health Data Management, those layers of tools must also be backed by systems that can detect hackers before they break into the system.
It's not just enough to have firewalls; providers should also have intrusion detection and prevention inside those firewalls, especially for specific servers, David Reis, vice president of IT governance and security at Lahey Health, Burlington, Massachusetts, tells HDM.
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Market for connected health to hit $117B by 2020

January 4, 2016 | By Judy Mottl
The next four years will bring a seismic shift in connected healthcare technology, with an increased emphasis on chronic condition management, personal fitness and wellness and remote patient monitoring, according to a new report.
What's more, the market is projected to hit $117 billion by 2020 and 86 percent of clinicians believe mobile apps will be central to patient health in that time frame, according to the newly released "State of the App Economy," report from ACT | The App Association.
"Over the next few years, there will be a transition to much more focused products in this space," ACT Executive Director Morgan Reed tells FierceMobileHealthcare in an interview.
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Study: mHealth impact negligible on healthcare costs, patient benefits

January 24, 2016 | By Judy Mottl
A research trial evaluating mobile healthcare technology versus traditional disease management reveals "little evidence" digital medicine intervention reduces healthcare costs or drives greater consumer healthcare interest, though some improvement in health self-management was reported.
The six-month Scripps Translational Science Institute trial provided 160 participants managing hypertension, diabetes and/or cardiac arrhythmia with iPhone-enabled biosensors, blood pressure monitors, blood glucose meters or a mobile ECG device. Participants were provided data aggregation and visualization tools to track and view data via an online dashboard accessible to caregivers. The goal was to ascertain if mHealth utilization impacted healthcare insurance claims.
"Overall we found little in terms of differences in health insurance claims between individuals enrolled in the control and monitoring arm," the Scripps researchers said, noting that they expected a moderate impact--approximately a doubling of insurance claims dollars. "This suggests that while there may be small, short-term increases in healthcare utilization as a result of mobile health monitoring, there is likely not a major effect. "
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Meaningful use declaration mixed among rural healthcare providers, Health Affairs finds

Study finds 38 percent of rural providers skipped at least one year after initial meaningful use achievement, compared to 34 percent of urban counterparts.
January 25, 2016 04:36 PM
While rural providers have adopted health IT at the same time or at greater rates as their urban counterparts, meaningful use varies dramatically among them, according to a recent HealthAffairs study.
About 97.2 percent of rural hospitals with fewer than 100 beds initially achieved meaningful use; a rate consistent with larger hospitals with more than  400 beds, at about 97.4 percent. Critical access hospitals had slightly lower meaningful use achievement rates at about 92 percent.
However, many rural providers failed to continue achieving meaningful use after the initial year, which leads to a greater financial disadvantage.
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Cybersecurity Sector Will See Huge Growth in 2016

By Sephi Shapira Follow | 01/22/16 - 08:51 AM EST
Some big names, including Donald Trump and Ashley Madison, fell victim to cybercrime in 2015, along with hundreds of millions of individuals and organizations. A single attack on insurer Anthem left almost 80 million customers and employees exposed. An attack on The United States Office of Personnel Management resulted in 18 million U.S. citizens' records and 5.6 million sets of fingerprints being stolen.
"Given the ongoing, evolutionary nature of cyber attacks, coupled with the relatively low share of total IT spend security accounts for, we believe industry growth rates will remain stronger than industry forecasts," said the investment bank Columbia Threadneedle Investments. Those rates are 10%-to-15% over the next three to five years, according Columbia Threadneedle, or 8%-to-10%, according to industry analysts at Gartner.
In a $75 billion market, growth rates such as these create immense opportunities for innovative cybersecurity companies, as well as potentially outsized investment returns for those capitalizing on market demand. 
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Targeting EHR Workarounds

by Bonnie Darves, iHealthBeat Contributing Reporter Monday, January 25, 2016
Many in the health IT sector and the health professional community view electronic health records as both a blessing and a curse. EHRs have significantly improved documentation and dissemination of patients' clinical information, streamlined certain tasks and improved safety in areas such as medication management. But EHRs also have made some aspects of health care providers' workload more time consuming than in the "paper" days and sometimes compromise patient safety.
EHRs' negative effect on workflow is a chief reason why clinical users are tempted to devise and use workarounds to simplify or expedite task completion.
Those workarounds, depending on the system and the user, might be harmless in some cases but potentially dangerous in others.
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Enjoy!
David.

Friday, February 05, 2016

So The Gateway To The PCEHR Needs Some Serious Work. What A Surprise!

This turned up last week:

Troubled myGov website to be taken from Human Services and given to Digital Transformation Office for streamlining

Date January 28, 2016 - 10:30PM

Noel Towell

Reporter for The Canberra Times

The federal government's troubled myGov website is set to be taken over by the Prime Minister's pet public service project the Digital Transformation Office.
Fairfax understands that moves are already under way for the DTO to take over the management of the web portal from Commonwealth service delivery workhorse the giant Department of Human Services.
Neither agency would confirm that a takeover was under way but one government IT expert said the move would be a chance to make a real difference for the digital change project which has so far produced little more than "wishy-washy" statements.
The myGov site was launched in 2013 and is used by several million Australians as a portal to access their Centrelink, Medicare, Child Support, Department of Veteran Affairs, e-health, and DisabilityCare accounts.
But serious problems have emerged with the security and operability of the site, with users complaining of being locked out of their accounts, outages and other glitches.
A storm of criticism was aimed in mid-2015 at the myTax portal, linked to the myGov system, for its performance at the end of the 2014-2015 financial year as millions of taxpayers tried to finish their tax returns.
In July, the DTO's high-profile boss Paul Shetler warned the Australian government was failing in its online service delivery effort and that it was "not good enough in the age of Uber and Airbnb".

Now Mr Shetler, who did not respond to requests for comment for this article, looks set to get the chance to see if his agency can better do better than the much maligned DHS.
A DTO spokeswoman would not answer questions about the looming takeover but replied with a statement.
"The Digital Transformation Office is responsible for digital service delivery across government," she said.
But government IT expert Matthew Sorell of the University of Adelaide who believes myGov is "not appalling", says that running myGov would be a chance for the DTO to prove itself.
More here:
Other links that are on the same topic:
All we can think is that it is a good idea for some experts to see if they can fix things up a bit. Right now the whole thing is pretty clunky. Of course they could save themselves a whole lot of pain by just giving up on the PCEHR etc.
David.

Thursday, February 04, 2016

The Macro View - General And Health News Relevant To E-Health And Health In General.


February 4 Edition
Here is some other of the recent other news and analysis.
Clearly the big news in the last few weeks has been macroeconomic. Last week we saw Japan decide to move to negative interest rates on some deposits in an attempt to force more economic activity. The markets saw this as good - but I fear it may be the opposite!
This week - we have seen a bit of a rally in markets - so what happens next week will be interesting.
Out of the blue we now see a bun-fight on health insurance costs. Will be fun to watch.
In OZ we are sort of stuck in a rut and seeking direction. With Parliament back all may (or may not) become clearer!
Here is a summary up until the end of last week (and zilch seems to have changed since up till the time of posting):
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General Budget Issues.

Tax reform: Morrison pours cold water on adding GST to health and education

Date January 24, 2016 - 7:23PM

James Massola

Political correspondent

Treasurer Scott Morrison has pledged Australians will be "winners" when the Turnbull government finally reveals its election-year tax reform package, while effectively ruling out imposing the GST on health or education. 
In a pitch to households and the Liberals' core small business constituency, Mr Morrison said the government would seek a strong mandate for tax reforms that are likely to include changes which reduce personal and business tax rates to drive economic growth.
And in a sign the federal government will attempt to limit the scope of direct compensation paid to households arising from any tax changes, as recommended in modelling leaked to Fairfax Media last year, Mr Morrison pointed out the carbon tax compensation package put in place by Labor had been kept by the Coalition, despite the repeal of the tax, and therefore a "lag compensation" was already in the system.
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  • Jan 24 2016 at 8:19 PM
  • Updated Jan 24 2016 at 8:19 PM

Australia can't tax its way to surplus, Scott Morrison says

Scott Morrison has said Australia should aim for a "desirable" surplus. Andrew Meares
by Primrose Riordan
Treasurer Scott Morrison has warned against aiming for a surplus when spending is higher than a quarter of GDP, saying higher taxes is not a good way to fix the budget.
The Treasurer also said the government needed to get a firmer grip on new expenditure such as spends on infrastructure and security.
"We have to work harder on curtailing the new expenditure because ... there's been spends on infrastructure, increased security requirements, things like this – we have to get that under control," he told Sky News on Sunday.
The most recent budget update revealed the federal budget deficit has blown out by $26 billion over four years since May and the forecast return to balance has been pushed out by at least another year, to 2020-21 at the earliest.
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Tax reform: Economists urge Treasurer Scott Morrison to 'have guts'

By business reporter David Taylor
Posted yesterday at 4:36pm
The Commonwealth Treasurer may be talking about keeping the tax debate open, but economists are calling on Scott Morrison to show some policy "guts" and get real about tax reform.
For a government undertaking a once-in-a-generation economic balancing act, tax reform is a daunting but necessary task.
However complicated it becomes, the Treasurer has it boiled down to just one catch phrase.
"How is the tax system actually stopping people who are actually out there backing themselves, achieving the goals they want to achieve?" Treasurer Scott Morrison said on Sky News yesterday.
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Morrison builds case for GST reform

Scott Morrison has foreshadowed a likely ambitious election-year contest over the GST with his declaration that only a tax package with a major GST reform can deliver the government’s goal of a growth agenda with serious income tax relief.
Setting the benchmarks for the year, the Treasurer said yesterday he wanted a “strong mandate” at the election for a tax reform agenda. He said it was a “fantasy” to think increasing taxes on multinationals or other measures short of a GST package would deliver meaningful income tax and company tax cuts.
Interviewed on Sky News’s Australian Agenda program yesterday, Morrison gave the firmest sign so far that the Turnbull government will seek re-election on an ambitious agenda designed to lay the foundations for a long-run Coalition government.
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Treasury secretary John Fraser: Australia has a spending and a revenue problem

Date January 29, 2016 - 8:59AM

Gareth Hutchens

PM denies triple-A credit rating at risk

Malcolm Turnbull denies Australia's credit rating is at risk from debt, telling 3AW's Neil Mitchell rating agencies had already given the government's fiscal strategy "big ticks". Courtesy ABC News 24.
Treasury secretary John Fraser says it has been getting harder to forecast budget deficits and surpluses, and aggregates like GDP growth, as the global economy becomes more integrated.
He has also challenged the claim by Treasurer Scott Morrison that Australia does not have a revenue problem, saying successive falls in tax receipts have been the "main driver" of every budget downgrade since 2014.
Speaking publicly for the first time in 2016, Mr Fraser has set out the budgetary problems facing the Turnbull government this election year.
  • Jan 28 2016 at 5:27 PM
  • Updated Jan 28 2016 at 9:14 PM

Morrison already sweating MYEFO trade forecast

Australia's terms of trade look to be falling faster than the government forecast in its budget update just six weeks ago, raising the spectre of multi-billion dollar write-downs in projected revenue that would make it even harder for Treasurer Scott Morrison to balance the budget.
Lower prices for iron ore, coal and liquefied natural gas accelerated a five-year-long plunge in the terms of trade in the December quarter.  
The measure of Australia's export income, which is a crucial driver of the budget, is now about half its 2011 peak and at a decade-low. The terms of trade fell between 4.5 per cent and 5.2 per cent last quarter, according to estimates by four analysts based on Australian Bureau of Statistics trade data out on Thursday.
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Australia’s AAA credit rating not at risk says Scott Morrison

  • The Australian
  • January 29, 2016 12:58PM

Rosie Lewis

Scott Morrison says Australia’s prized AAA credit rating is not at risk, as he backed Treasury secretary John Fraser’s call to rein in government spending.
The nation’s top economic adviser last night warned the Turnbull government its credit rating would be in jeopardy unless urgent efforts were made to cut spending, raising the spectre of a federal interest bill of more than $2 billion a month within a decade.
In a landmark speech to the Sydney Institute, Mr Fraser sounded the alarm about Australia’s chronic fiscal malaise, arguing that weaker-than-expected revenues, falling commodity prices and forecasting errors were no excuse for not taking tough decisions about the nation’s budget deficit.
He called for further cuts to the government’s ballooning welfare bill and for spending promises to be offset with new savings. He also signalled that federal government spending of more than 25 per cent of national income was unacceptable.
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Business Day Economic Survey: budget outlook bleak but housing market will have soft landing

Date January 30, 2016 - 1:32AM

Gareth Hutchens and Peter Martin

BusinessDay survey points to major concern over China

The results of the annual BusinessDay financial survey paints a gloomy outlook with startling responses around China's reporting of growth rates.
Treasurer Scott Morrison faces a bleak economic outlook framing his first budget in May with leading economists warning of weakening growth and stagnant wages through the rest of 2016.
More than two dozen economists from leading banks and universities have warned that Australia will face below-trend economic growth this year, a further collapse in mining investment, and a lacklustre 12 months on the sharemarket.
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Health Budget Issues.

Cancer survivors slam Federal Government pathology cuts

January 26, 2016 12:00am
Chad Van Estrop Moorabbin Kingston Leader
CANCER survivors say Federal Government plans to slash pathology funding will force the needy to choose between the crucial testing and comfortable living.
Government plans to slash bulk-billing incentive payments to pathologies — providing services such as pap smears and blood tests — from July saving $650 million over four years.
Ormond resident Jan Armstrong said an intense round of pathology in 2012, after her breast cancer diagnosis, uncovered kidney cancer.
“If I didn’t have those tests the kidney cancer wouldn’t have been found. It would have killed me,” she said. “I’d hate to see someone else go undiagnosed because of funding changes.”
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Hospital performance getting worse and now facing budgetary 'black hole', says AMA

Date January 28, 2016 - 1:31AM

Harriet Alexander

Health Reporter

The federal government is under pressure to reform taxes following a report card on public hospitals that shows the most urgent patients are waiting longer at the emergency departments, bed ratios are deteriorating and elective surgery waiting times are static.
The Australian Medical Association is using its annual report on the performance of public hospitals to call for an overhaul of health funding, which faces slower growth from July next year when new funding arrangements come into effect.
AMA president Brian Owler said hospitals would be insufficiently funded to meet the rising demand from 2017, when the states and territories were facing a "black hole".
A Treasury analysis found $57 billion would be removed from the health system over 10 years.
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Public hospitals face funding crisis warns AMA president Brian Owler

  • AAP
  • January 28, 2016 10:18AM
Australia’s already overstressed public hospitals are facing a funding crisis, doctors warn.
The Australian Medical Association says its latest hospitals report card points to an imminent crisis due to federal funding cuts.
“Things will get much worse in coming years unless the Commonwealth reverses its drastic cuts from recent budgets,” AMA president Professor Brian Owler said.
“The states and territories are facing a public hospital funding `black hole’ from 2017 when growth in federal funding slows to a trickle.” The report found 68 per cent of emergency department patients classified as urgent were seen within the recommended 30 minutes, while bed number ratios had deteriorated.
Elective surgery waiting times and treatment targets are largely unchanged.
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Public hospitals to be ‘biggest financial challenge’ faced by state governments

Just 68% of emergency department patients classified as urgent were seen within 30 minutes, a report from the Australian Medical Association says
As of next year public hospital funding will become the biggest financial challenge faced by state and territory governments, a report from the peak organisation representing doctors the Australian Medical Association, warns.
The annual assessment of the country’s public hospital system, launched by the association’s president Professor Brian Owler on Thursday, found many hospitals failed to meet key performance benchmarks for emergency department waiting and treatment times in 2014-15.
Only 68% of emergency department patients classified as urgent were seen within half an hour, a reduction of 12% from the previous year and well short of a performance target of 80%, the report found.
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28 Jan 2016 - 4:34pm

Funding crisis for public hospitals: AMA

The AMA is calling for the federal government to fix health funding in the next budget, saying Australia's public hospitals are facing a crisis.
Source:  AAP
28 Jan 2016 - 7:56 AM  UPDATED YESTERDAY 4:34 PM
Australia's already over-burdened public hospitals are facing an imminent funding crisis, doctors warn, as debate continues over increasing the GST.
"The states and territories are facing a public hospital funding `black hole' from 2017 when growth in federal funding slows to a trickle," said AMA president Professor Brian Owler.
"If we want people living their full life expectancy, if we want to see people living longer, being healthier out there in the community, we have to resource our healthcare system."
The AMA's latest public hospitals report has found that overall, performances were "virtually stagnant and even declining in key areas" despite improvements in previous years.
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MEDIA RELEASE
Friday, 29 January 2016

Wise budget should ensure health and wealth

As the Turnbull Government talks of the importance of innovation to all sectors of the economy, it is time to ask what of innovation in healthcare?
Released today, the Consumer’s Health Forum submission to the Federal Budget provides ideas on where we need to centre the debate: investments in prevention, primary health care, new ways of keeping pressure off hospitals and infrastructure that will drive a truly people-centred health system.   
Instead of short-range strategies that see cuts in health as a federal debt-reduction strategy, we need a long-term health plan that looks at how we distribute and get better value out of our existing health dollar, as well as where we need to make wise investments in health as a nation, the Consumers Health Forum says.   
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Health Insurance Issues.

  • Jan 29 2016 at 5:27 PM
  • Updated Jan 29 2016 at 5:27 PM

Turnbull government urges health funds to reduce premium increases

by Ben Potter
Health Minister Sussan Ley is urging private health funds to pare back premium increases in the $19 billion sector amid a pitched election year battle over health spending.
The federal health department emailed the funds on Friday asking them to resubmit claims for premium increases of about 6 per cent to take effect on April 1.
"The fact that they have come back and asked for a resubmission at this late stage makes the intention very clear," said Rachel David, chief executive of Private Healthcare Australia, the funds' lobby.
"They are seeking a discount on behalf of the consumer and we as an organisation understand that."
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Ley blocks health fund rises

Andrew Tillett
January 30, 2016, 12:45 am
The Turnbull Government is trying to minimise an election-year backlash from health fund members by ordering insurers en masse to scale back their requests for premium increases.
In an unprecedented move, Health Minister Sussan Ley yesterday told all 35 funds to resubmit their applications for premium rises — some of which would have been three times the inflation rate.
But the decision to reject all of the funds’ proposed increases risks opening a new front in her war with medical stakeholders after already getting doctors and pathologists offside.
WA’s main fund HBF criticised Ms Ley for her blanket approach, warning that forcing insurers to absorb rising health costs was unsustainable.
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Fee hikes crackdown on health insurers

  • The Australian
  • January 30, 2016 12:00AM

Sean Parnell

Private health funds have been ordered to open their books and justify their bid to increase premiums, in what the insurance industry last night described as an unprecedented departure from regulatory process.
In an effort to secure a better deal for members, Health Minister Sussan Ley yesterday wrote to insurers formally requesting they either seek a lesser premium increase or provide the financial statements to prove it was necessary to pass on higher costs.
Ms Ley’s intervention comes only a week before health funds have traditionally been notified of the outcome of the application process. Premiums normally increase on April 1.
Annual premium increases of about 6 per cent have prompted many members to claw back their level of cover to reduce costs, inevitably leading to an increase in complaints. Regulators and some industry figures fear the premium increases are unsustainable and last year convinced the government to consider major reforms to prevent members dumping their cover altogether and flocking to the public system.
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Sussan Ley orders private health insurers to justify their premium increases

Date January 30, 2016 - 9:37AM

Adam Gartrell

National Political Correspondent

The Turnbull government has ordered private health insurers to justify their planned premium increases in an effort to secure a better deal for consumers.
In what's being billed as an unprecedented intervention in the normal regulatory process, Health Minister Sussan Ley has written to all private insurers asking for "additional information" regarding possible premium increases this year.
"I have held increasing concerns the current process used to assess and approve premium increases does not allow government a rigorous assessment of an insurer's full financial position," Ms Ley said in a statement on Saturday.
The federal government holds a significant stake in the private health sector by providing about $6 billion in rebates every year, Ms Ley says.
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Health insurers defend premium increases

  • AAP
  • January 30, 2016 1:49PM
Private health insurers are warning the Turnbull government there are no short-term fixes towards achieving affordable healthcare.
Private Healthcare Australia, which represents the insurance industry, also defended premium increases, saying insurers are working to keep them as low as possible.
The comments from the group's chief executive, Dr Rachel David, came in response to an announcement by Health Minister Sussan Ley that she was stepping in to demand insurers justify their increase requests.
Ms Ley has asked all providers to resubmit an application for a lower premium increase or to provide evidence of extenuating circumstances.
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Pharmacy Issues.

Pharmacy under review

29 January, 2016 Chris Brooker 
The Federal government’s controversial Review of Pharmacy Remuneration and Regulation has kicked off.
A number of industry sources have told Pharmacy News the review panel has commenced preliminary consultations with industry stakeholders.
A spokesperson for the Department of Health confirmed that the review "has commenced, including initial stakeholder meetings".
"The Review Panel is committed to consulting broadly to gain an extensive view of the pharmacy sector in Australia and the factors contributing to patient health outcomes and the quality use of medicines," the spoesperson said in a statement.
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Health is also clearly still under review as far as its budget is concerned with still a few reviews underway and some changes in key strategic directions. Lots to keep up with here with all the various pre-budget kites being flown! Enjoy.
David.

Wednesday, February 03, 2016

How Sure Are You This Sort Of Stuff Will Not Start Happening As The Usage Of The PCEHR Rises?

This appeared in the UK last week:

'State snooping' fears as civil servants are handed new power to examine detail in every sick note given out by GPs

·         Government can view data in sick notes and only the name will be hidden

·         GPs say it's snooping because before the data was completely anonymised

·         Civil servants say the new power will help them deal with work sickness  

A new power allowing civil servants to see the detail in all sick notes handed out by GPs has been branded 'state snooping' today.
Critics fear that now the Department for Work and Pensions have access to the data from next month it will be used to name and shame surgeries who issue the most 'fit notes'.
Data on the number of people GPs signed off as 'unfit' or 'maybe fit' used to be completely anonymised.
Now it will include their gender, health problem, location and how long they are off sick for.
GPs will need to inform patients their data is being taken, but cannot withhold information unless their patient has a good reason to object.
Family Doctor Association chairman Dr Peter Swinyard said: 'I think that is state snooping.
'Although I am sure some civil servant thought it was a terrific idea somewhere, I am not entirely sure I agree. I don't know if patients understand that when I write a fit note, some bureaucrat is going to be able to have a look at it.'
GP and data sharing campaigner Dr Neil Bhatia said he was 'not sure why' practice-level data was required, 'other than to compare practices, create league tables, name and shame'.
The data will also say what type of health condition the person has and the location of where the note was issued.
More here:
If people allow all this PCEHR nonsense to proceed - see just what my happen with the DoH having vast fun mining all the data they are collecting.
You can bet this is the sort of stuff they have in mind. I am sure I am going to opt-out of this nonsense before it gets to cause humongous trouble.
If you trust your detailed health information to the Government you deserve all they then do with it!
David.