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, March 19, 2016

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links - 19th March, 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.
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FHIR, the hottest topic at HIMSS16, sets stage for population health

CMS, ONC promise to not only accelerate adoption of the interoperability spec but also have some providers looking ahead at ways they can put it to use.
March 11, 2016 08:26 AM 
The emerging protocol known as FHIR has been most closely associated with interoperability so far. The acronym, after all, stands for Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources. But if the standard succeeds in its mission of enabling widespread data exchange, FHIR might soon have a higher calling to serve as a foundation for population health management.
"FHIR is a better-designed Lego," said Doug Dietzman, executive director of Great Lakes Health Connect, a self-sustaining health information exchange in Grand Rapids, Michigan. "I'm looking forward to having it in my toolbox."

Feds back FHIR, big-time

There is certainly no lack of public support for FHIR right about now. National coordinator Karen DeSalvo, MD, started the fire at HIMSS16 by launching a $625,000 triptych of developer challenges. One focuses on patient-facing apps, the second on software geared toward providers and for the third ONC is hoping the funding and recognition inspire someone to create what essentially would be an app store for housing these FHIR-based apps and making them available for download.
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Small providers increasingly likely to be hack targets

Published March 10 2016, 2:24pm EST
Too many small hospitals and small or mid-sized physician practices believe defending against cyber attacks is pointless and they’re just hoping to be saved by being obscure.
That’s a risky approach, because hackers are not just looking for big targets; rather, they’re setting their sights on easy targets.
Banking on obscurity “is something that’s not going to happen,” says Chase Cunningham, director of cyber threat research and innovation at Armor Defense, which sells a healthcare secure cloud platform.
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Using Data To Help Home Health Workers Manage Patients’ Conditions

By Julie Appleby March 9, 2016
BALTIMORE — There is little in Ruby’s life that is easy. Nearly blind and unable to walk more than a step or two, the 39-year-old struggles to raise three sons while dealing with a daunting array of health conditions, from diabetes that recently landed her in the hospital to pain from bulging spinal disks.
Without support, odds are she’ll end up back in a hospital. But Ruby, who asked that her last name not be used to protect her family’s privacy, is part of a growing effort to reduce those odds by arming home care aides and other non-medical workers with the power of data.
On a recent Monday, health coach Nhaomie Douyon visited Ruby in the small, rented two-story row house where she lives with her children. Douyon works for the Coordinating Center, a Maryland-based nonprofit that helps organize medical and social needs for clients like Ruby, who live in designated medically underserved areas.
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4 keys to data-driven hospital quality improvement

March 10th, 2016
by Warren Strauss
From required Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reporting to Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) indicators, hospitals now track and report large volumes of data on a daily basis. But how can hospitals use these data to drive improvement initiatives, predict performance for value-based purchasing and improve patient outcomes? For many healthcare IT professionals, these are critical questions that play a big role in shaping the effectiveness (or ineffectiveness) of their hospital’s quality improvement program.
The data-driven healthcare movement is premised on the idea that better data will lead to better patient outcomes. By looking at patterns in adverse events, for example, hospitals can determine where they need to focus quality improvement efforts and track the results of those efforts over time. However, many hospitals find it difficult to cut through the clutter and find actionable, meaningful information among the data points.
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Frustrations linger around electronic health records and user-centered design

Experts say healthcare providers need to turn up the pressure on tech vendors to create more intuitive products.
March 10, 2016 10:29 AM
Electronic health record usability might not have been the hottest topic at HIMSS16 this past week – our polling shows big data and interoperability tied for that honor, with privacy/security just nudging population health for the second spot – but it was certainly top of mind for many.
The multi-day User Experience Forum, for instance, explored the human factor and design choices that can directly impact the use and efficacy of health information technology, examining UX from the perspective of physicians, nurses, patients, vendors and more. Sessions gave voice to end-user frustrations, looked to tear down the barriers to innovation and tracked the clinical and financial return that can be gained from improved software interfaces.
In a provocative prime-time speech, meanwhile, Acting CMS Administrator Andy Slavitt threw down the gauntlet: "I'm certainly not bashful about what we need to do better, and I'm not going to be bashful here, even in the face of some very good reasons for optimism, about ways we need to take our game up across the board.”
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Wellcome Trust issues new data sharing report

Lyn Whitfield
9 March 2016
The Wellcome Trust has returned to the debate about the use of health data with a report that finds hostility to sharing information with insurers and marketers and a need for companies and researchers to show 'public benefit' for this to be acceptable.
The trust has been involved in this area since its then-director, Dr Mark Walport, now the government’s chief scientific advisor, co-authored a data sharing review that strongly backed information sharing with researchers.
The review also floated the idea that the members of the public who used the NHS had a duty to allow their data to be shared, and that they should be assumed to have given ‘implied consent’ for this to happen.  
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£55m to increase e-Referral uptake

Rebecca McBeth
10 March 2016
NHS England has set aside £55 million to reward GPs and hospitals to increase the uptake of electronic referrals to 100% by 2018.
Around half of all patients are currently referred for hospital appointments electronically using the new NHS e-Referral Service.  NHS England wants to see this increase to 60% by this September, 80% by 2017 and 100% by 2018.
Planning guidance released by the national commissioning board in December 2012 set the target of paperless referrals by March 2015, but this date was later pushed back by three years. 
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ONC unveils Million Hearts EHR Optimization guides

Mar 09, 2016 | Beth Walsh
The Office of National Coordinator for Health IT has released the  Million Hearts EHR Optimization Guides  which will "help healthcare professionals use their EHR systems to identify at-risk patients and protect them from heart attacks, strokes and other cardiovascular events," according to a  blog post  written by the agency's chief medical officer, Thomas A. Mason, MD.
The EHR Optimization Guides offer step-by-step instructions on how providers can use their EHR products to find, use and improve data on the “ABCS”:
  • Aspirin therapy when appropriate
  • Blood pressure control
  • Cholesterol management
  • Smoking cessation
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Wed Mar 9, 2016 2:25pm EST

Electronic records lag at hospitals U.S. doesn’t pay for tech upgrades

(Reuters Health) - Psychiatric, long-term care and rehabilitation hospitals that don’t qualify for U.S. subsidies to adopt electronic medical records aren’t upgrading to this technology as quickly as hospitals that receive cash incentives, a recent study suggests.
The Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act of 2009 set aside incentive payments through the government health programs Medicare and Medicaid for eligible hospitals and providers that adopted electronic health records (EHRs).
Four years later, roughly 59 percent of hospitals eligible for subsidies had adopted at least basic EHR systems, the study found.
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Industry under the gun to quickly optimize EHR use

Published March 08 2016, 2:50pm EST
If anyone has a global perspective of the changes occurring within federal policy on healthcare IT, it’s probably Paul Tang, MD.
Tang, as vice president and CMIO for the Palo Alto Medical Foundation, has made it a mission to stay deeply involved with healthcare IT initiatives that federal agencies have created to get private input on healthcare IT.
In addition to Tang’s day job with the Palo Alto Medical Foundation, he carries a heavy load on various federal panels, including chair of the Advanced Health Models and Meaningful Use committee, vice chair of the Health IT Policy Committee, member of the Health IT Strategy and Innovation committee and chair of the Clinical, Technical, Organizational and Financial Barriers to Interoperability task force.
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Cyberattacks increase in sophistication, breaches go 'unchecked,' survey finds

March 9, 2016 | By Katie Dvorak
Cyberattacks throughout all industries are growing more sophisticated and the number of breaches at organizations "continues to go unchecked," according to a survey of cybersecurity managers and practitioners.
Seventy-five percent of the 461 respondents to the RSA Conference and ISACA survey said they expected to see an attack on their organization this year. About 6 percent of the respondents work in the healthcare industry, which is one of the most targeted and least prepared sectors when it comes to cybersecurity.
The Ponemon Institute recently released a report that found healthcare organizations could face about one cyberattack per month.
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Inappropriate use of 'notes' field in e-prescribing can cause patient harm

March 9, 2016 | By Susan D. Hall
Doctors' use of the free-text "notes" field in e-prescriptions to communicate additional prescription-related information to pharmacists can create confusion and even patient harm, according to research published in JAMA Internal Medicine.
The researchers evaluated 28,002 e-prescriptions transmitted over the Surescripts network in November 2013. The researchers found 14.9 percent included information in the notes field, with 66.1 percent of that data seen as inappropriate content for which an available standard, structured data-entry field should have been used.
The researchers deemed 19 percent of the field's content, including inappropriate content, a potential safety concern since it may conflict with information in the "directions" field.
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Writing the future

Over the past year, there has been an explosion of frameworks, declarations and charters supporting interoperability.
But are they promoting the right things? Is action happening fast enough? Do they have the levers to engage suppliers? And are trusts asking the right questions? Daloni Carlisle asks the experts.
Interoperability used to be the territory of the techie. Now it’s a buzzword bandied about by everyone who is anyone in health policy and clinical leadership; not least because the last 12 months have seen an unprecedented flurry of activity.
A year is a long time in interoperability
A year ago, in March 2015, a new GPSoC framework specified that principal system suppliers must provide interface mechanisms to allow suppliers of subsidiary services to integrate with them.
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Analyst: add 'social determinants' to Big Data to improve health risk predictions

Jeff Rowe
Mar 09, 2016
There’s been no shortage of buzz around the potential of “Big Data” to transform the way many sectors, including healthcare, conduct their business.  Despite that potential, however, healthcare organizations still “largely depend on the analysis of traditional data sources to understand and predict patient and population health risk.”
That’s according to one risk analyst, who says the time has come for healthcare providers and policymakers to begin to take advantage of newly available types of data in order to better predict the health of both individual patients and entire populations.
Writing for Executive Insight, Kathy Mosbaugh, vice president of clinical solutions for LexisNexis Risk Solutions, argues that traditional data sources, including billing, laboratory, pharmacy, medical claims and patient health risk assessments, “are no longer enough to provide accurate risk and outcome predictions.”
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HIT Think Getting a glimpse of virtual and augmented reality in healthcare

Published March 09 2016, 3:20pm EST
Virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR) will be the next big computing platforms after PCs and smartphones.
Today, most people think of these technologies as an interface for games and entertainment, but virtual reality will soon be woven into all aspects of society, business, commerce and education—including healthcare.
The VR/AR market is predicted to reach $80 billion in sales by 2025, according to a new VR market report by Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research. Market penetration will be heavy in the healthcare sector, where VR applications are forecast to top $5.1 billion in sales by 2025, with 3.4 million active users. Goldman Sachs estimates that 8 million physicians and EMTs worldwide could use VR/AR technology, including 1.5 million medical professionals in the U.S. alone.
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Patient portal use varies among seniors

Written by Akanksha Jayanthi (Twitter | Google+)  | March 08, 2016
When it comes to accessing and using patient portals, not all seniors do so equally.
Researchers conducted a study of patient portal usage by seniors between 65 and 79 years old who were members in the Kaiser Permanente Northern California health plan. Results were published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research.
They found adults between 70 and 79 were significantly less likely to be registered to use the patient portal than adults between 65 and 69 years old.
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ONC taps Accenture to create patient-generated health data framework

March 08, 2016
At the HIMSS16 annual conference in Las Vegas last week, Accenture Federal Services announced a two-year consulting contract with the ONC to help the federal government create a framework for collecting and using patient generated health data in both research and clinical care. Accenture executives told MobiHealthNews that this framework is an important first step toward creating standards that would make patient generated health data more interoperable.
MobiHealthNews has interviewed informaticists before who have pointed out that, for the most part, all healthcare data is patient-generated in the end, but the term has come to refer to health data that is often collected from or by the patient while outside of clinical care settings.
Mary Edwards, who leads Accenture's work with federal civilian health agencies, explained to MobiHealthNews during an interview at HIMSS16, that this type of data increasingly is collected by consumer devices, like Fitbits, and is rarely a part of a clinical or claims record.
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Providers must boost vigilance to limit EHR risks

Published March 08 2016, 6:12am EST
When it comes to electronic health records, a lack of planning could lead to patient death, which is why hospitals must implement policies and procedures to reduce EHR risks.
While the health IT movement is gaining traction across the nation, it still has a long way to go and issues still exist within electronic health records, says Trish Lugtu, associate director of research at MMIC Insurance.
Speaking at an educational session at HIMSS16 last week, Lugtu said that in the past, people were not paying attention to health IT and it “scared her.” As an example, she shared research on two patients who died as a result of errors within their records, including a patient who died following an anaphylactic reaction to known allergies because notifications were turned off in the patient record, and a patient who died following a failure to diagnose and treat a small bowel obstruction when an X-ray was not routed correctly.
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Quality reporting costs doctors more than $15.4 billion a year, Health Affairs says

Nearly 75 percent say they waste time and money with measures that aren't clinically relevant.
March 08, 2016 11:17 AM
Medical practices spend an average of 785 hours per physician and $15.4 billion annually reporting quality measures to Medicare, Medicaid and private payers, according to a new report in Health Affairs.
The study, led by researchers from Weill Cornell Medical College, looked at the quality reporting efforts of primary care, cardiology, orthopedic and multi-specialty practices, polling 1000 of them (250 of each type), drawn at random from the membership rolls of the Medical Group Management Association.
Their findings suggest that, while "much is to be gained from quality measurement, the current system is unnecessarily costly, and greater effort is needed to standardize measures and make them easier to report," researchers said.
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Apple Mac computers hit with first ransomware attack, researchers find

The malicious code, which spread through a file-sharing program, waits three days before connecting with hackers' servers.
March 08, 2016 10:00 AM
Cyberattackers targeted Apple users over the weekend with the first known ransomware written specifically for Apple software, according to security firm Palo Alto Networks.    
Ransomware is a fast-growing threat that encrypts data on infected machines and demands that users pay a ransom in digital currencies, such as Bitcoin, to receive an electronic key so they can retrieve their data.
The most high-profile ransomware attack happened just last month when attackers struck Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center and held its data hostage, effectively reverting the hospital back to a pre-digital state in which employees used paper records and fax machines.
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E-consults improve communication between clinicians, specialists

March 8, 2016 | By Katie Dvorak
When it comes to improving access to specialty care, especially for underserved populations, e-consultations are a viable solution, according to a recent study published in the Annals of Family Medicine.
As the number of ambulatory care visits that lead to a referral to another clinician grows, so does the need for communication between clinicians and specialists. However, only 34 percent of specialists routinely get information from referring primary care clinicians, according to the study's authors.
The researchers conducted the study at Community Health Center Inc. (CHCI) in Connecticut, a patient-centered medical home that provides medical, behavioral and dental care to medically underserved patients. E-consultations were submitted by the clinician via the electronic health record system and messages were received by specialists as an incoming message in the EHR.
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Health wearables market to hit $17.8B by 2021

March 6, 2016 | By Judy Mottl
The healthcare wearable device market is projected to hit $17.8 billion in revenue by 2021 as the industry undergoes what a new report describes as a big transformation.
Digital health will be a driver in more efficient, affordable and wide ranging healthcare and wearables are pushing healthcare into the digital age, according to a new Tractica market forecast. The top device leaders will be fitness trackers and smartwatches.
The 2015 wearables market saw a 139.4 percent growth rate, from 35.5 million shipments in 2014 to 85 million last year; that figure is expected to hit 560 million by 2021. The No. 1 device revenue generator is the Apple Watch, which, despite lower than projected unit sales, hit $5.5 billion in revenue for 2015.
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Feedback loops on patient health data key to engagement

March 8, 2016 | By Susan D. Hall
Feedback loops connecting patients and their doctors are key to engaging and helping consumers, according to an article at NEJM Catalyst.
What patients really want is better health, not more health services, writes author Kevin Volpp, M.D., director of the Center for Health Incentives and Behavioral Economics at the Perelman School of Medicine and the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.
Wearables and other consumer devices hold the potential to improve self-management, but feedback loops help sustain consumer interest in using them, Volpp says.
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Verily looks to create 'Google of human systems biology'

March 8, 2016 | By Katie Dvorak
Verily, Google's life sciences arm, is looking to create a library that uses machine-learning technology to help medical professionals search for medical information, according to a Fast Company report.
Andy Conrad, head of Verily, said in the article that the new venture will be the "Google of human systems biology."
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HIE market to hit $980M value: 5 things to know

Written by Carrie Pallardy | March 07, 2016
High demand is expected to spur growth in the global health information exchange market, according to a Research and Markets report.
Here are five things to know about the market.
1. The global HIE market is projected to reach a value of $980 million by 2019.
2. The market's growth factors include incentives from the federal government, increased investment, an aging population and demand for reduced healthcare costs.
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Longer term research required for telehealth

Mar 07, 2016 | Beth Walsh
In contrast to claims that telehealth can solve numerous healthcare problems, including access to care, a paper published in the  Journal of Medical Internet Research  says research on the practice is overly positive because it is often based on short-term projects.
Written by members of the Transatlantic Telehealth Research Network, the paper calls for future research to study the impact and effective use of telehealth.
"Future research is needed to identify additional factors that promote telehealth acceptance, such as human-technology interaction, organization of the healthcare system and social factors," the authors, led by Birthe Dinesen, MS, PhD, of Denmark’s Aalborg University, wrote.
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Tech Tactics for the Long-Term

Scott Mace, March 7, 2016

With growing emphasis on postacute care, leaders are looking for solutions that enhance information exchange and patient safety.

This article appears in the January/February 2016 issue of HealthLeaders magazine.
Technology is driving a new wave of care coordination into long-term postacute care and home settings to enable improved outcomes at lower cost.
In July 2015, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services published a proposed rule that incorporates encouragement for LTPAC facilities to adopt electronic health records, even though the meaningful use incentive payment program provided zero dollars for purchasing EHRs.
Many LTPACs are still using paper records at this point.
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HealthNet records system enables quality care for the poor

Published March 07 2016, 7:43am EST
A decade ago, HealthNet Community Health Centers was looking at an aging practice management system that no longer was delivering what the Indianapolis-based organization needed.
The journey to replace that system led to an electronic medical record implementation in 2009, and a HIMSS Davies award in 2015 for using EHR to both improve outcomes and reduce costs.
“We knew many of the payers and other organizations we worked with increasingly wanted us to be on an EMR, and we knew we really should be looking at a unified practice management and EMR system,” says Lauren Borgmann, HealthNet's clinical information systems/EMR program manager. “That sparked the conversation about what else we could get out of the technology—the goals.”
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The need for a culture of security compliance

Published March 04 2016, 1:17pm EST
As the threat of cyber attacks hangs over the healthcare industry, providers increasingly understand that lost laptops or other data memory devices are no longer the greatest breach threat.
The most worrisome threat now is social engineering by hackers to trick employees into giving access to an organization’s information network, said Chris Bowen, founder and chief security officer at cloud-hosting and security services firm ClearDATA, during an interview at HIMSS16. “We’ve seen an uptick in investments of social engineering simulations. If an employee clicks on a link they should not, it takes them to a training page.”
ClearDATA sells software to monitor compliance with encryption, access control, back-up, patching, login system log retention and security screening policies, among others. While employees are the biggest threat to an organization’s network, they also can be the best defense, said Scott Whyte, a senior vice president at ClearDATA and former IT leader at Phoenix Children’s Hospital and Dignity Health.
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CIO says VA should rethink VistA, consider other off-the-shelf EHRs

In reaction to GAO recommendations, the department’s undersecretary for health also said the agency is challenging all of the assumptions that have made VistA an underperforming part of the department.
March 07, 2016 11:24 AM
U.S. Department of Veterans' Affairs CIO LaVerne Council said last week that the VA needs to reconsider whether its proprietary Veterans Information Systems and Technology Architecture is the best electronic health record for its more than 1,200 healthcare sites.
Council explained during testimony to U.S. House appropriators that changes in the VA's healthcare delivery plan, such as emphasis on mobility, security and women's health, as well as connections with private sector providers, are forcing the reconsideration of VistA.
Specifically, Council said it was time to "take a step back" from the planned modernization of the VistA health record and announced VA plans to review whether it should continue upgrading VistA or turn to a commercial off-the-shelf product, much the way the Department of Defense elected to forego its in-house Armed Forces Health Longitudinal Technology Application, aka AHLTA, and is replacing it with a Cerner EHR.
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Elderly black, Latino patients less likely to use health organization's online portal

March 7, 2016 | By Katie Dvorak
Patients who are over the age of 69 and black or Latino are less likely to use a health organization's online patient portal, and organizations that serve elderly populations should be aware of such disparities, according to a recent study.
Researchers at Kaiser Permanente locations in California and Oregon found that adults older than 69 were "significantly" less likely to have access to a patient portal, according to the study published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR). Older patients who did have portal access were less likely to use the tool to send messages, view lab results and refill prescriptions.
The study also found that black and Latino consumers were less likely to use a portal. Only about 26 percent of black members between the ages of 75 and 79 used a portal once, compared to about 56 percent of non-Hispanic white patients.
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Adoption of Health Apps, Wearable Devices Grows

By Nathan Eddy  |  Posted 2016-03-05

An Accenture report found that the vast majority of consumers and doctors believe wearables help patients engage in their health.

The number of U.S. consumers using wearables and mobile apps for managing their health has doubled from 16 percent in 2014 to 33 percent today.
The findings are part of a seven-country Accenture survey of roughly 8,000 consumers, including 2,225 in the United States.
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National Quality Forum: 3 considerations for health IT & patient safety

Written by Carrie Pallardy | March 04, 2016
The National Quality Forum has released a new report outlining guidance on safe use of health IT.
The report was created by a NQF panel of 22 health IT and patient safety experts. The committee highlighted these three high-level concepts for health IT users to consider when creating health IT patient safety measures:
•    Safe health IT. Ensure health IT is accessible to all members of a care team, and ensure data are secure, accurate and complete.
•    Using health IT safely. Ensure health IT features and functionality are effective and implemented as intended. Also put in place processes for safe use of health IT.
•    Improving patient safety. Use health IT to reduce patient harm and improve patient care.
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Enjoy!
David.

Friday, March 18, 2016

This Is A Very Important Study Which Has Huge Relevance For The Hoped For Success Of The mHR.

This study appeared last week.

Elderly black, Latino patients less likely to use health organization's online portal

March 7, 2016 | By Katie Dvorak
Patients who are over the age of 69 and black or Latino are less likely to use a health organization's online patient portal, and organizations that serve elderly populations should be aware of such disparities, according to a recent study.
Researchers at Kaiser Permanente locations in California and Oregon found that adults older than 69 were "significantly" less likely to have access to a patient portal, according to the study published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR). Older patients who did have portal access were less likely to use the tool to send messages, view lab results and refill prescriptions.
The study also found that black and Latino consumers were less likely to use a portal. Only about 26 percent of black members between the ages of 75 and 79 used a portal once, compared to about 56 percent of non-Hispanic white patients.
The researchers survey portal use by 183,565 non-Hispanic white members, 16,898 black members, 12,409 Latino members, 11,896 Filipino members and 6,314 Chinese members, all between 65 and 79 years old.
A recent study in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association also found differences in the use of portals by various consumer groups. Of 534 older adults with online patient portal access in the Chicago area, almost all had the access code to register for the portal, but only 57.5 percent actually registered. Men, whites and those with fewer chronic conditions were more likely to register. In addition, the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT found that while the number of people using IT for their health needs increased "significantly" between 2013 and 2014, socio-demographic disparities remain.
The JMIR study also found that only 31 percent of participants had a smartphone; however, about 80 percent had access to a desktop or laptop computer.
Lots more here:
What this confirms is that in all likelihood  many of the elderly and the disadvantaged are going to be very challenged to make use of a portal, even which is more useful and functional than the mHR is ever planned, or can be. Even if you inflict a record on all these people I suspect they will never use it and even if they do, probably won’t understand what they are looking at in many cases.
Given this older population is a key target of the mHR and it is really unlikely it will help many of them this is yet another reason for Government to stop the mHR nonsense and maybe try some properly evidence based approaches to the use of e-Health to assist the care of the elderly.
David.

Thursday, March 17, 2016

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

March 17 Edition
The macroeconomic stresses seem to have eased a little more with markets rising around the world.
In Australia, things are also looking up for the present. However we also are now see a set of continuing bun-fights on pathology funding, health insurance costs as well as negative gearing and superannuation. Will be fun to watch. Mr Trunbull and Mr Morrison seem to have disappointed with the lack of a clear plan.
Three weeks ago we heard there would be a before the Budget announcement of  tax proposals so that will happen soon. Now we are hearing the Budget date may move and we might have an early election. Stay tuned!
Here is a summary of interesting things up until the end of last week:
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General Budget Issues.

Time to take a stand against misleading modelling

Date March 7, 2016 - 6:16AM

Ross Gittins

The Sydney Morning Herald's Economics Editor

Call to end misuse of economic modelling

The Australia Institute wants a code of conduct introduced for economic modelling following the BIS Shrapnel report into negative gearing.
Many people have been left with red faces following their part in last week's disastrous intervention into the negative-gearing debate by forecasters BIS Shrapnel. Let's hope they all learn their lesson.
This isn't the first time that "independent" modelling purchased from economic consultants has been used by vested interests to try to influence government decisions. Nor the first time the questionable results have been trumpeted uncritically by the media and misrepresented by the side of politics whose case it happens to suit.
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From tax feast to tax famine

Shane Wright, Economics Editor, COMMENT
March 7, 2016, 9:07 am
COMMENT: Five months ago everything was on the tax table. The smorgasbord offered every tax delicacy imaginable. From a gorgeous suckling GST to a wafer of brandy excise, the table was groaning under the weight of scrumptious options.
Malcolm Turnbull and Scott Morrison gazed upon the spread with wide-eyed wonder as they weighed up whether to be careful with their calories or dive straight into heart attack-threatening tax meals.
Five months on and the table offers little nutrition.
The Prime Minister and the Treasurer are looking at a bowl of thin gruel and hoping they might get a second helping.
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  • Mar 7 2016 at 6:12 PM
  • Updated Mar 8 2016 at 5:54 AM

Early budget talk increases as election options narrow

Bringing forward the federal budget by a week remains a live option being considered by the Turnbull government as it narrows the possibilities for a federal election to either a double dissolution on July 2, or a half-Senate election in August.
Either date for an election would still leave the government – if it won – enough time to then organise and hold a plebiscite on same-sex marriage before the end of the year.
Treasurer Scott Morrison said on Monday that the outcome of the plebiscite would be binding on the Parliament and he would be using his status to argue against legalising same-sex marriage.
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  • Mar 8 2016 at 7:20 PM
  • Updated Mar 8 2016 at 7:20 PM

Business Council tax reform fit for purpose

Catherine Livingstone and Jennifer Westacott at the Business Council of Australia have provided a workable framework for tax reform, but their core demand for cutting the corporate tax rate will struggle to gain political traction.
Livingstone and Westacott were smart to abandon the very ambitious tax reform package put forward last year during a summit that pre-dated the demise of the Abbott government.
They released a new strategy on Tuesday, which involves relatively modest changes at first, with the big personal and corporate tax reforms put off for five years and changes to the rate and/or base of the GST for about a decade.
Even though the corporate tax cut target is a modest one the fact is corporate tax cuts are an extremely hard sell.
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Iron ore spike a boost for govt budgets

Shane Wright, Economics Editor
March 8, 2016, 6:12 am
The nation’s miners and the Federal and WA governments may have their bottom lines saved after a surge in key commodity prices overnight led by iron ore.
The spot price of iron ore enjoyed its single largest jump on record, leaping by $US10.20 a tonne or more than 16 per cent to hit $US62.20 a tonne.
It was the fifth consecutive daily lift in the price of Australia’s most important export and followed signs out of China that authorities there are planning a stimulus program to underpin the local economy.
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Risks for Malcolm Turnbull in July 2 double dissolution election

  • The Australian
  • March 9, 2016 12:00AM

Paul Kelly

The idea of a July 2 double dissolution election is generating its own momentum, with the Turnbull government actively preparing this option — yet it is plagued with immense difficulties that would add dangerous unpredictability to this decision.
In recent days the government has been consumed by a tactical uncertainty. This is superimposed on the confusion over taxation policy. Labor takes great heart from two successive Newspolls showing a 50-50 split. Malcolm Turnbull struggles to impose order and discipline on his ranks.
Meanwhile the government is even confused about the list of bills that would provide grounds for the double dissolution election, a somewhat critical point. Some cabinet ministers peddle the nonsense that surrender of the pivotal Australian Building and Construction Commission bill from the list — thereby abandoning any guarantee of its passage post-election — will not be a major campaign embarrassment.
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  • Mar 10 2016 at 9:30 PM
  • Updated Mar 11 2016 at 5:52 AM

Morrison doesn't plan to spend any iron ore windfall

Every dollar from a rebound in the iron ore price will be used to reduce the deficit, not spent on election bribes or boosting what are now looking to be meagre tax cuts.
Amid fears the extra tax revenue could be obliterated by global financial market volatility, senior sources told The Australian Financial Review that ministers should not bother putting their hands out for some of the extra revenue, which could be as much as $15 billion over four years.
The iron ore price, which recorded its biggest increase ever on Monday, remained volatile, could not be relied on over the long term and to do anything with any extra money other than reduce deficit would be "completely stupid",' said a senior Coalition figure.
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Centrepiece of Tony Abbott's last budget fails to deliver promised economic 'turbo-boost'

Date March 12, 2016 - 8:45PM

Gareth Hutchens

The former prime minister tells Sky News he advised Tony Abbott that Peta Credlin should have been removed.
The small business package central to Tony Abbott's final budget does not seem to have delivered the promised turbocharge to Australia's economy.
The so-called "Tony's Tradies'' package, which is set to cost the budget $5.5 billion over four years, was designed to provide a platform for the Abbott government's re-election plans. 
It included a cut in the small business tax rate of 1.5 per cent, and the ability for companies with revenue under $2 million to claim an unlimited number of tax deductions for items that cost less than $20,000 each.
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Health Budget Issues.

All the dumb things: If it doesn't work, don't just try it again

Date March 6, 2016 - 9:23PM

Tim Dick

Columnist

Of all the many dumb things Australians insist on doing which do not work, invasive surgery is the hardest to fathom. Why would you have a surgical intervention to fix tennis elbow if that fix is no better than time?
A new book by orthopaedic surgeon Ian Harris shows how common it is for people to ignore evidence and demand surgery. People prefer to have an expensive operation to inject stem cells into their arthritic knees, even though a placebo makes people feel just as good.
Surgery, the Ultimate Placebo reports that some 6 million unnecessary caesareans are performed each year around the world. It reports that removing the appendix can be worse for the patient than treating appendicitis with drugs, yet few patients opt for the drugs.
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MEDIA RELEASE
Monday, 7 March 2016

A primary solution to Australia’s greatest health problem

The time is ripe for Australia to adopt more effective measures to prevent and treat chronic and complex disease in the community through reforms that would save lives and many millions of dollars, a new report from the Grattan Institute has shown.
“Our greatest health challenge in Australia – reducing chronic disease and treating it more effectively -  is well within our capabilities and what it requires is smarter, better use of existing workforce, financial incentives and infrastructure rather than huge amounts of new spending,” says Consumers Health Forum CEO, Leanne Wells.
“The health debate has to shift away from its preoccupation with hospitals and hospitals financing to fundamental, lasting reforms that are in the long term interests of consumers, taxpayers and a sustainable, responsive, affordable health system – that means investment in a stronger, integrated primary health care system”.
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Avoidable hospital visits cost more than $320 million per year

Date March 7, 2016 - 10:30PM

Anna Patty

Workplace Editor

Failure to prevent illness and better manage chronic heart disease, asthma and diabetes is costing more than $320 million a year in avoidable hospital admissions, a national report has found.   
The Grattan Institute found GPs provide only half the care recommended for patients with chronic conditions.
Of the nearly one million people with type 2 diabetes, only one-quarter are properly monitored and treated.
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Daniel Andrews demands care fund payback

  • The Australian
  • March 8, 2016 12:00AM

Rick Morton

Victoria is owed tens of millions of dollars raised by the increase in the Medicare Levy which it says was promised by Tony Abbott before his government was rolled, adding another layer to a national squabble that threatens the $22 billion disability insurance scheme.
Victorian Premier Daniel ­Andrews has written to Malcolm Turnbull following Friday’s icy disability ministers meeting demanding money from the Disability Care Australia Fund but rejecting an offer to share more of the financial risk of cost overruns.
Victoria was to have received at least $44 million from the DCAF fund in 2016-17, $45.6m the next year and $129.7m in 2018-19.
“The Victorian government’s strong commitment to the scheme is evidenced by our willingness to quickly reach agreement on transition arrangements with the commonwealth to give certainty to clients (and) the sector,” Mr ­Andrews wrote.
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Painful fees at heart of health reform push

  • The Australian
  • March 10, 2016 12:00AM

Sean Parnell

Privately insured patients being lumbered with high out-of-­pocket costs — which in some specialties average $2000 for just one item on a hospital bill — have prompted Health Minister Sussan Ley to focus key reforms on “empowering” consumers.
Ahead of insurance premiums rising by an average of 5.59 per cent next month, and amid concerns over policy coverage and the impact of restrictions and ­exclusions, new data reveals the biggest gap fees after Medicare ­rebates and health fund contributions are taken into account.
Specific Medicare item numbers in plastic and reconstructive surgery — such as eyelid pro­cedures and removal of tissue — carried the highest average gap in the December quarter of $1960.
The Australian last month revealed that Medibank Private and Bupa had sought to contain costs by asking doctors to sign a declaration before surgery that the procedures were clinically necessary and not purely cosmetic.
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AMA calls for urgent health funding as Nepean and Wagga Wagga hospitals reach breaking point

Date March 10, 2016 - 3:15PM

Harriet Alexander

Hospitals are limiting surgery hours and forcing patients to wait longer for elective procedures as an "economic disaster" looms for them, doctors have warned.
The Australian Medical Association is calling for an urgent injection of funds for public hospitals, which will come under increased pressure from next year when annual funding increases that had been promised are severed.
The call comes as hospitals in western Sydney and rural NSW claim they are at breaking point.
Nurses at Wagga Wagga Hospital have said they will have to suspend elective surgery unless the state government closes beds that have not been funded.
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Pathology co-payment ‘to cover bulk billing cuts’

  • The Australian
  • March 11, 2016 12:00AM

Sarah-Jane Tasker

St John of God, a not-for-profit health organisation, will introduce a co-payment of up to $50 for pathology services, warning that bulk billing had become “unsustainable” under the government’s funding model.
Australia’s fourth largest pathology provider this week launched a co-payment pilot in select areas in Western Australia and Victoria before planned government cuts to bulk billing incentives.
Michael Hogan, chief executive of St John of God’s pathology division, said if the proposed bulk billing cuts came into effect in July, it could push small and independent providers to close.
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Human cost of $57 billion in federal government hospital cuts exposed

March 11, 2016 12:00am
Sue Dunlevy National Health Reporter News Corp Australia Network
IF you are waiting for eye surgery, a hip replacement or a colonoscopy get yourself a comfortable chair because the already long queue is about to get longer.
Public hospitals will lose more than a $1 billion in federal funding next year — the equivalent of employing 20,000 fewer nurses or providing tens of thousands fewer hip replacements and heart bypass operations.
And over the next eight years those federal budget cuts will amount to $57 billion.
Already one in 10 patients are waiting over 250 days to get into a hospital for elective surgery.
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$2.7 billion dental program likely to get the chop, say dentists

Date March 12, 2016 - 1:09PM

Julie Power

Reporter

A $2.7 billion dental program that has provided 1 million Australian children with free dental care could face the chop in the next budget, warns Australia's peak dental body. 
As a result of the two-year-old program, many children who have never seen a dentist before are presenting with decayed teeth requiring holes and extractions, say dentists.
More than a million children – far fewer than the anticipated 3 million – have received care under the means-tested scheme since it was introduced in 2014 by the Coalition. Nearly all those children had been bulk-billed, and 80 per cent were treated by private dentists.
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Health Insurance Issues.

Inquiry into why private patients are being charged double the cost for medical devices

March 7, 2016 3:37pm
Brad Crouch Medical reporter The Advertiser
PRIVATELY insured patients are being charged up to double the cost for medical devices compared to public patients, adding to pressure on health premiums according to federal Health Minister Sussan Ley.
Speaking in Adelaide, Ms Ley said she had ordered an inquiry into the cost of prosthetics including knee and hip devices which she hoped would lead to easing pressure on private premiums.
She said the situation was “clunky” as she wanted to ensure the highest standard of medical devices and also not deter entrants to the markets, while at the same time ensuring such devices were affordable and accessible.
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Think you’re safe with insurance? Think again

March 10, 2016 12:01am
Jane Fynes-Clinton News Corp Australia Network
Insurance companies are promoted as white knights, there to help when things go awry.
Buy a policy and you buy compassion and concern because they are there for us in our times of need, the warm and fuzzy TV ads and literature suggests.
What a load of bunkum.
Just ask the poor souls treated abominably by CommInsure as shown on Four Corners this week.
Even those that claim to be all for the members are businesses, pure and simple — slow, indifferent, uncompassionate businesses.
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NSW government pushes for private insurance to cover GP visits

Date March 10, 2016 - 7:32PM

Harriet Alexander

Health Reporter

The NSW government is proposing a greater role for private insurance in primary care.
The NSW government will advocate to allow private health insurers to cover visits to general practitioners, in what would significantly extend the power and reach of the industry.
A submission to the federal government's review of the private insurance industry advocates a greater role for private health insurance in primary care, particularly to manage people with chronic conditions and prevent them from going to hospital.
Critics have warned that allowing private health insurers into GP practices will create a "two-tier system", because those with private cover will get longer consultations and preventative care, while those who cannot afford it will get more superficial treatment.
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The surgeons charging ten times the Medicare fee

March 13, 20167:21am
Sue Dunlevy News Corp Australia Network
EXCLUSIVE
SOME surgeons are charging ten times the Medicare fee leaving patients with gaps of up to $17,000 that makes their health insurance almost worthless.
And News Corp has been told some doctors are rorting heath fund no gap schemes by charging patients secret extra fees in the form of booking fees or second invoices.
Health fund peak body Australian Private Health Care has confirmed its aware of health funds who have taken action against doctors for “inappropriate billing”.
The problem is so bad the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons (RACS) has set up a new fee conduct committee with the power to sanction high charging doctors.
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Pharmacy Issues.

Grattan primary care report is 'right up our alley’: Guild

7 March, 2016 David Rowley 
A report that criticises Australia’s primary healthcare system shows there is much community pharmacies can do to help, says the Pharmacy Guild.
Although the Grattan Institute report doesn’t focus specifically on community pharmacy, “it is certainly a useful source document for those of us who believe community pharmacies could and should do more”, says a Guild spokesperson.
The report titled Chronic Failure In Primary Caresays more than 250,000 hospital admissions a year could be avoided with better primary care for chronic health problems.
It says only 15% of diabetes patients have their blood glucose, weight and blood pressure measured by their doctor each year and just 30% have adequately controlled cholesterol.
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Direct-to-consumer S3 advertising: it’s time

It’s time to get serious about direct-to-consumer advertising of S3 products, says Dr Deon Schoombie

Direct-to-consumer advertising of Schedule 3 or Pharmacist Only medicines has the potential to increase self care options for consumers, raise pharmacists’ profile in the delivery of primary healthcare and drive pharmacy growth of this category.
Current restrictions on the advertising of S3 medicines prohibits consumer awareness of these medicines, which means consumers may continue to consult GPs for conditions which could be safely managed by pharmacists.
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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 still being flown - although narrowing it seems to be largely focussed on Super! Enjoy.
David.

What Fun! Even The Communist Party Of Australia Does Not Like The Look Of The mHR!

This appeared last week:
Issue #1722   March 9, 2016
Editorial

e-health: Privatising your medical history

When the Labor government introduced e-health in 2012, it was sold as a personal record of medical conditions, medications and medical history of individuals stored in a centralised data base. The government went to great lengths to reassure the public that the patient would have full control over what information was included and who had access to it.
The Australian Medical Association criticised the intention to allow patients to decide who would access their records and what was included, saying that medical practitioners would be unlikely to rely on the information contained in the records. The organisation considered that records with hidden information would be more dangerous than no records at all.
Patients, privacy groups and other organisations were suspicious whether the storage and sharing of personal data would be secure and where and how it would be used at a later date. Would, for example, private health insurance funds have access. Government bureaucracies are notorious for leaks and mishaps with personal records.
At the time e-health was being debated, the Guardian warned: “It could be highly beneficial for a patient’s medications and medical history to be accessible by doctors and other practitioners. Unfortunately, there are also a number of dangers associated with the scheme being introduced.
“Firstly, how voluntary is voluntary and for how long will it be voluntary?” (Guardian, “Warning: National ID card”, #1457, 02-06-2010) It appears it will not be long. Less than 10 percent of the population and very few medical practitioners opted in. Towards the end of 2015, the Minister quietly presented legislation to rebadge e-health as MyHealth and to change the system from opt-in to opt-out: last week, an opt-out trial was launched involving one million people from Western Sydney and northern Queensland. The legislation rules out access to the data by insurance companies and employers, but for how long before that is changed?
More here:
The editorial really ‘bells the cat’ on at least part of the undisclosed intent of the mHR to be used for purposes other than to assist patient care.
I wonder how many will actually read and take notice of this reasonably clear exposition of what are important issues. Many I hope - despite the source.
David.