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, September 10, 2016

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links – 10th September, 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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Unauthorized inside access caused SCAN Health breach

Published September 01 2016, 7:52am EDT
The cyber attack on Medicare prescription drug plan vendor SCAN Health Plan affecting 87,000 beneficiaries raises questions about how the organization didn’t know that its data was compromised for four months after its systems were breached.
The answer is not a simple one, says Dana Simberkoff, chief compliance and risk officer at AvePoint, a vendor of onsite, cloud-hosted and software security services. “I would love to say they are in the minority, but we know that’s not the case,” Simberkoff adds.
Healthcare organizations typically focus security efforts on protecting the network perimeter from an outside attack. But this breach was an inside job, at least in part, and those defenses are not being given enough security attention.
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End users not following all data safety rules

Published September 01 2016, 3:20pm EDT
At a time when ransomware and other attack methods that exploit insider negligence are becoming rampant, only 39 percent of end users think they take all appropriate actions to protect corporate data accessed and used in the course of their jobs, according to a new survey by the Ponemon Institute.
The survey of 1,371 end users and 1,656 IT and IT security professionals across the U.S. and Europe was conducted in April and May 2016 by Ponemon Institute, with sponsorship from security software provider Varonis Systems. It showed that 52 percent of IT respondents think policies against the misuse or unauthorized access to company data are being enforced and followed. But only 35% of end users say their organizations strictly enforce those policies.
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How EHR data can bolster quality improvement process review

Sep 2, 2016 11:03am
Electronic health record data can identify gaps in maps used for quality improvement for high-risk processes such as hospital discharge when using the Failure Mode and Effects Analysis (FMEA) approach, a new study has found.
FMEA uses process maps of clinical workflows for risk assessment to identify ways a particular process might fail and where those points of failure might be. It relies on topic experts and clinical representatives who map out each step and who is expected to perform it, according to the research published in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association.
The researchers, from Northwestern University and elsewhere, extracted data on admissions to a cardiology unit and formed a mock committee to develop a FMEA process map for patient discharge. They then compared who was expected to perform each task with what the EHR data revealed about it.
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Wed Aug 31, 2016 4:16pm EDT

Online tools help people improve their health but need more study

(Reuters Health) - Mobile apps and web-based programs do help people reach health goals like exercising more, losing weight and quitting smoking, but studies need to follow-up longer to see how sustainable these interventions are, according to a recent review of existing research.
Lifestyle choices like poor diet and smoking are a major cause of death and disease worldwide, the researchers write in the Journal of the American Heart Association, and digital tools may be a low-cost and more accessible option for people looking to improve their health.
“Our results suggest internet-based and mobile-based interventions can be effective tools for behavioral modification,” said lead author Dr. Ashkan Afshin, the Assistant Professor of Global Health at the University of Washington in Seattle.
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How Tech Giants Are Devising Real Ethics for Artificial Intelligence

SAN FRANCISCO — For years, science-fiction moviemakers have been making us fear the bad things that artificially intelligent machines might do to their human creators. But for the next decade or two, our biggest concern is more likely to be that robots will take away our jobs or bump into us on the highway.
Now five of the world’s largest tech companies are trying to create a standard of ethics around the creation of artificial intelligence. While science fiction has focused on the existential threat of A.I. to humans, researchers at Google’s parent company, Alphabet, and those from Amazon, Facebook, IBM and Microsoft have been meeting to discuss more tangible issues, such as the impact of A.I. on jobs, transportation and even warfare.
Tech companies have long overpromised what artificially intelligent machines can do. In recent years, however, the A.I. field has made rapid advances in a range of areas, from self-driving cars and machines that understand speech, like Amazon’s Echo device, to a new generation of weapons systems that threaten to automate combat.
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How precision medicine will support population health management

Published September 02 2016, 3:16pm EDT
In the world of medicine, trial and error is largely the norm today. Doctors make a "most likely" diagnosis consistent with symptoms and prescribe treatment accordingly -- treatment that might include drugs, devices or surgery. If the treatment doesn't work, the doctor most likely alters dosage or prescribes something else. This iterative cycle is repeated until the diagnosis and treatment present the desired clinical outcome.
The bad news is that this paradigm has reached a point of diminishing returns, as evidenced by the fact that most drugs prescribed in the United States today are effective in fewer than 60 percent of treated patients. The good news is that new technology could transmute trial-and-error medicine, replacing it with an evidence-driven paradigm—one where each patient receives care, medication and treatment predicated on his or her unique genomic profile.
Precision medicine is essentially the ability to tailor treatments, as well as prevention strategies, to the unique characteristics of each person. The closest real-world analogy to this process would be a recruitment system that matches a person’s job to his or her education, experience and skill sets as laid out in a profile or resume to ensure the best fit for the job.
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ONC Interoperability Standards Advisory: Must-have tool or academic exercise?

Sep 1, 2016 8:21am
It’s that time of year again. The Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT has published the latest version of its Interoperability Standards Advisory for public comment.
The advisory is a “key element” of ONC’s national interoperability roadmap and the agency's first deliverable for it. According to ONC’s website, the advisory process “represents the model by which [ONC] will coordinate the identification, assessment and public awareness of interoperability standards and implementation specifications that can be used by industry to fulfill specific clinical health IT interoperability needs.”
The first advisory was published in 2015, and has been updated each year. The biggest changes from the 2016 version to the 2017 draft are largely related to the Advisory’s content and framing. These include:
  • The beginning of the transition of the advisory from a standalone document to an interactive,web-based resource
  • Discontinued use of the label “best available” in order to be more inclusive
  • Links to active projects listed in ONC’s “interoperability proving ground”
  • Better representation of pairing of standards for observations (questions) and observation values (answers)
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How to close the disconnect between developers, users of HIT

Sep 1, 2016 11:10am
The disconnect between the developers who create health IT tools and those who use them is a roadblock to true innovation in the industry, according to a trio of health and technology experts.
The creators of apps, wearables and IT systems don’t interact often, if at all, with patients and clinicians, which can lead to little understanding for how their tools will be used and what they are needed for most, Robert S. Rudin, Ph.D., David W. Bates, M.D., and Calum MacRae, Ph.D., write in The New England Journal of Medicine.
The disconnect doesn’t end there, the authors say. Physicians also are not always able to properly express to engineers and developers what changes or additions to systems and software they need.
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‘Significant problems’ with data access in public health

Ben Heather
1 September 2016
Public health services have been denied access to health data vital to doing their job, a report from the Commons health select committee says.
In the report into public health post-2013, released on Thursday, the committee argues that funding cuts to services since responsibility for public health shifted to local authorities are “a false economy, as they not only add to the future costs of health and social care but risk widening health inequalities”.
The committee says there have been real-terms cuts to public health since the transition, including a £200m reduction last year.
It also says this means there is a “a growing mismatch between spending on public health and the significance attached to prevention in the NHS ‘Five Year Forward View’ [the plan to close a £30 billion gap between funding and demand by 2020-21, issued in October 2014]”.
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Epic and Cerner link information exchanges

Laura Stevens
31 August 2016
Two major NHS trusts are preparing to exchange information on shared patients from their different electronic patient record systems.
West Suffolk and Cambridge University Hospitals NHS foundation trusts are in the final phases of testing to share data from their Cerner and Epic systems respectively. Two-way technical connectivity between the EPRs is already in place.
In a joint statement to Digital Health News, Afzal Chaudhry, Cambridge University Hospitals’ chief medical information officer, and Dermot O'Riordan, chief clinical information officer at West Suffolk, said: “To our knowledge this is the first working example in the UK of interoperability between two major providers using different electronic health record products.
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How Telemedicine Is Transforming Health Care

The revolution is finally here—raising a host of questions for regulators, providers, insurers and patients

By
Melinda Beck
June 26, 2016 10:10 p.m. ET
After years of big promises, telemedicine is finally living up to its potential.
Driven by faster internet connections, ubiquitous smartphones and changing insurance standards, more health providers are turning to electronic communications to do their jobs—and it’s upending the delivery of health care.
Doctors are linking up with patients by phone, email and webcam. They’re also consulting with each other electronically—sometimes to make split-second decisions on heart attacks and strokes. Patients, meanwhile, are using new devices to relay their blood pressure, heart rate and other vital signs to their doctors so they can manage chronic conditions at home.
Telemedicine also allows for better care in places where medical expertise is hard to come by.
Five to 10 times a day, Doctors Without Borders relays questions about tough cases from its physicians in Niger, South Sudan and elsewhere to its network of 280 experts around the world, and back again via the internet.
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‘Clunky’ EHRs get in the way of optimal patient care

Published August 31 2016, 6:53am EDT
Physicians are being hamstrung by the limits of current electronic health record systems, which are missing valuable opportunities to harness available data and predictive analytics to individualize treatment, while sophisticated advances in technology are going untapped.
That’s the conclusion of three Stanford University School of Medicine researchers who railed against the shortcomings of EHRs in a recent commentary in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
Although EHRs have many virtues, they contend that the systems have “not kept pace with technology widely used to track, synthesize and visualize information in many other domains of modern life.”
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Precision medicine gaining momentum, HIMSS Analytics says

As hospitals shift into patient risk assessment from disease prevention, the need for precision medicine will expand in the marketplace, HIMSS Analytics 2016 Essentials Brief: Precision Medicine Study found.
August 31, 2016 10:46 AM
HIMSS Analytics Director of Research Brendan FitzGerald said that precision medicine tools are being implemented throughout healthcare which is helping to bring the industry closer to more specific treatments for certain diseases. 
While current implementation and adoption of precision medicine programs are limited, precision medicine is beginning to expand in the healthcare market, according to a recent HIMSS Analytics 2016 Essentials Brief: Precision Medicine Study.
Many organizations currently focusing on precision medicine are large academic medical centers or multi-system hospital health systems with both internal and external resources, as it requires a high-level of expertise.
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Research: Remote monitoring no better than usual care for heart failure patients

Aug 31, 2016 7:02am
Remote monitoring failed to reduce hospitalizations or death in heart failure patients with implanted electronic devices, according to two studies presented early this week at the European Society of Cardiology Congress 2016.
The Remote Management of Heart Failure Using Implantable Electronic Devices (REM-HF) trial covered 1,650 hospital patients who had cardiac implantable electronic devices.
The patients were divided into two groups: usual care, which included remote monitoring three to six times a month plus usual heart failure follow-up, or consistent remote monitoring sent to the doctor weekly. The median follow-up period lasted 2.8 years, according to an announcement.
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Google's DeepMind Health, radiologists to treat head, neck cancer

Aug 31, 2016 9:54am
Google aims to find out if machine learning can help radiologists better plan treatments for head and neck cancer.
The tech giant’s DeepMind Health company will work on the effort in partnership with the radiology department at University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, according to an announcement.
Cancer located in the mouth or sinuses can be difficult to treat with radiotherapy without damaging other organs or nerves, and Google wants to use artificial intelligence to create more detailed outlines of areas that need treatment.
It can take up to four hours to create such a detailed outline, but by using computers to analyze scans from hundreds of former patients, Google hopes it can reduce that process to an hour.
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Security Risk Assessments: Critical regardless of practice size

September 01, 2016
In small- to-medium sized practices, there are necessarily fewer resources available for implementing the policies and procedures that will insure compliance with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA). The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) offers resources for smaller practices, where legal counsel is unlikely to be on staff, and security experts are more likely to be contracted than employed.
In 2014, the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC) in collaboration with HHS’ Office for Civil Rights (OCR) released a downloadable security risk assessment (SRA) tool to help guide practices through the assessment process.
Jordan Cohen, JD, an attorney with Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky, and Popeo in New York, New York, says the HHS tool is a good first step for smaller practices that want to conduct a risk assessment. He cautions, though, that the SRA is “only one tool, and the risk assessment is only one aspect of HIPAA compliance.”
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Global cybercrime costs will exceed $6T annually by 2021

A recent Cybersecurity Ventures report, sponsored by security firm Herjavec Group, also found global cybersecurity defense costs will exceed $1 trillion over the next five years.
August 30, 2016 10:49 AM
The cost of cybercrime around the globe will exceed $6 trillion annually by 2021 – more than double the annual cybercrime costs of 2015, according to a recent Cybersecurity Ventures report, sponsored by security firm Herjavec Group.
These costs include data damage and destruction, stolen money, loss of productivity, intellectual property theft, personal or financial data theft, fraud, embezzlement, business disruption after the attack, investigation, restoration and deletion of hacked data and systems.
The healthcare industry topped the list of most cyber-attacked industries in 2015, followed by manufacturing, financial services, government and transportation agencies.
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Drug Data Standards Needed for EHR Clinical Decision Support

By Sara Heath on August 29, 2016

Supporting drug data for EHR clinical decision support could help improve patient safety.

Drug-drug interactions are an integral patient safety component to EHR clinical decision support and computerized physician order entry (CPOE) are likely to benefit from data standardization, recent research shows.
According to a new study published in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, drug-drug interactions (DDIs) are the way in which two different medications combine while taken at the same time by an individual patient. DDIs often lead to adverse drug events, which are a major patient safety concern.
EHR systems, through CPOE and clinical decision support, can alert providers of potential DDIs by providing alerts. However, according to researchers, these supports aren’t always successful.
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ONC challenge winners weigh in on how blockchain can improve healthcare

Aug 30, 2016 11:00am
White papers on improving claims processing, patient-reported outcome measures and the doctor-patient relationship are among the winners of a national blockchain challenge.
The challenge, from the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT and the National Institute for Standards and Technology, asked for innovative healthcare uses for the technology, the most widely known example of which is Bitcoin. Blockchain provides an easy-to-see trail of transactions, but does not require an intermediary for data exchange.
Peter Nichol, former IT chief of the Connecticut state health information exchange, has said the technology will grow in importance in the coming years because it’s difficult to hack and only points to the location of records.
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How to use ransomware best practices to shore up defenses

Published August 30 2016, 3:21pm EDT
An international study reports nearly 40 percent of businesses experienced a ransomware attack in the past year. Add to that a recent U.S. government interagency report indicates that, on average, nearly 4,000 daily ransomware attacks have occurred since early 2016, representing a 300 percent increase over the 1,000 daily ransomware attacks reported in 2015.
In our digital healthcare world, this extortion threat to hospitals and health systems is escalating as professional cybergangs intensify their efforts. These hackers are ever evolving creative encryption schemes to hold electronic protected health data (ePHI) hostage until a ransom is paid. Proactive security measures have never been more critical.
Before your provider organization finds itself in a position of vulnerability at a hacker’s hand, implement these three phased steps to prepare for and manage ransomware (or any malware, for that matter).
  1. Proactively implement ransomware attack best practices (see below).
  2. Activate your incident response plan to tackle the ransomware incident as it happens.
  3. Analyze shortcomings, post incident, spotted during the investigation to better understand and communicate the “lessons learned” and to enact new action steps in advance of future attacks. For instance, your “security awareness” team can visually demonstrate to employees how the opening of phishing email scams automatically downloads ransomware onto the server.
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3 Reasons for Optimism on Healthcare Data Interoperability

Scott Mace, August 30, 2016

The ability to share data among providers has been hobbled by obstacles large and small. But as technologies mature, real-world models of workable interoperability are emerging.

As the summer doldrums wind down, there are some reasons to be optimistic about the state of data interoperability in healthcare.
While no one development signals that we've turned the corner on this predominant technology shortcoming standing between healthcare providers and data-driven value-based care, when taken as a group, they are encouraging signposts.
1. The Argonaut Project's progress means more rapid interop development.
Launched in late 2014, the Argonaut Project was the unprecedented collaboration of traditional healthcare rivals Epic and Cerner, as well as many others, to develop a set of implementation guides for HL7 Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR), basically a series of shortcuts to allowing EHRs and other apps to interoperate between providers.
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Image sharing grows in importance

Published August 29 2016, 7:01am EDT
Despite the importance of developing an enterprise medical imaging approach, the strategy requires the easy exchange of images, and achieving that interoperability is a major challenge, according to results of a recent survey.
Still, more than half of 100 surveyed IT leaders in healthcare organizations say their facility has an enterprise imaging strategy—a major component supporting the move to interoperability—and 54 percent say specialists at their facility can electronically exchange images with patients, providers and referring sites.
The College of Healthcare Information Management Executives, which represents IT leaders, recently surveyed 100 executives overseeing IT departments, with 76 percent of respondents using Epic, Cerner or Meditech electronic health records.
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Hurdles remain to comparing EHR usability

by Dan Bowman 
Aug 29, 2016 12:14pm
Despite doctors’ continued concerns about the usability of their electronic health records, comparing those experiences remains a highly difficult proposition, say researchers with MedStar Health and the Georgetown University School of Medicine.
In an article published in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, the researchers, led by Raj Ratwani of MedStar’s National Center for Human Factors in Healthcare, say the current federal regulatory framework and implementation process doesn’t allow for “meaningful comparison” of EHR design processes, certification testing results and usability testing by providers.
Regarding the design processes, the authors say while two EHR vendors may attest to following a specific standard, their paths for getting to that point might not be the same. For instance, one vendor might choose to conduct several iterations of early-user testing with a number of clinicians, while another might only conduct such testing once using nonmedical users.
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Ransomware locks experts in debate over ethics of paying

When ransomware victims pay to restore their data, it encourages cybercriminals to carry out additional attacks. But do infected organizations have much of a choice?
In yet another sign that business is booming in the underworld of ransomware, Trend Micro has reported that the number of new ransomware families it observed in the first half of 2016 has already surpassed the total number observed in 2015 by 172 percent.
Such explosive growth shows that infected individuals and organizations continue to pay up, not only making these schemes profitable, but also encouraging more criminal activity. As ransomware's extended family of malicious code continues to multiply, experts are once again debating if victimized organizations have an ethical responsibility to refuse cybercriminals' demands.
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Physicians rate top EHRs for use, satisfaction, vendor support

Written by Akanksha Jayanthi
More often than not, physicians report frustration and dissatisfaction with EHRs. They indicate EHRs are challenging to use, not user-friendly, introduce extra workflows and administrative burdens into their practices and detract from patient care. A Medscape survey sought to find what physicians liked about their EHRs.
The survey gathered responses from more than 15,000 physicians across 25 specialties. It asked questions about EHR usage, specifics on platforms, vendor satisfaction and more. Ninety-one percent of respondents said they currently use an EHR, 2 percent are currently installing/implementing one, 3 percent plan to use one within the next two years and 4 percent don't use one and don't plan to use one within the next two years.
The majority of respondents (63 percent) said they work in a hospital or health system with an EHR, 33 percent work in an independent practice with its own EHR system and 5 percent work in an independent practice but use a hospital or health system's EHR.
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Enjoy!
David.

Friday, September 09, 2016

IBM Strikes Again With A Government Payroll Yet Again Reminding Us Of The Qld. Health Debacle.

This appeared a few days ago:

80,000 people suffer pay crisis in Canada after IBM system debacle

By freelance correspondent Susan Delacourt in Ottawa
September 1, 2016
No-one in Canada can accuse public servants of being overpaid these days.

Key points:

  • The crisis affects 80,000 employees or almost one third of Canada's federal public servants
  • IBM provided the payroll system for Queensland Health, and the severs for Australia's census
  • Bureaucrat responsible says 'the system is working'
Thanks to a massive breakdown of the Federal Government's new, privatised pay system, tens of thousands of Canadian public servants have been going weeks, even months with reduced pay — or in many cases, no pay at all.
It is a crisis on a huge scale for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's new Government, and the cause of thousands of crises on an individual level, with people forced to borrow money or max out their credit cards to make ends meet.
In Ottawa, the nation's capital, local radio stations have featured daily reports from public servants grappling with serious financial hardship: a cancer survivor who had not been paid since returning to work from her treatments; a young mother forced to quit her job because she could not afford to keep paying for child care without a salary.
"It's an unacceptable situation," Mr Trudeau has admitted, but the mess may not be sorted out until the end of October, at the earliest.
The story may ring eerily familiar to Australians after the recent census debacle: an IBM program, brought in to do a government job, collapsing in the face of its monumental new task.
It mirrors an earlier spectacular failure in Queensland, when IBM was contracted in 2007 to implement the government pay-roll system.
Thousands of health workers suffered underpayment or no payment, and the cost to taxpayers is in the realm of $AU1.2 billion.
In Canada's case, the program is called Phoenix, but unlike its mythical namesake, it has not yet been able to rise above the flames of the controversy it has created.
At first, reports of the payroll problems were sporadic and isolated.
The Government switched over to Phoenix in early 2016, not long after Mr Trudeau assumed power late last year, and initially the problems were believed to be minor adjustment issues.
But by July, the Government announced that 80,000 employees were affected by the Phoenix meltdown — that is almost one third of the 300,000 federal public servants in the country.
Lots more is found here:
Who was it who said that history does not repeat but often rhymes! What a classic rhyming repeat! I hope this get sorted out more quickly that the issues were in Queensland!
David.

Thursday, September 08, 2016

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

September 8 Edition.
The big issue for this week will be just what a mess politics seems to have become. One week back and already the 45th Parliament is seeming rather like a childlike rabble. Heavens knows just how we can get sane government from all this.
Globally things seem to be rather fragile with no one quite sure what is going to rock the boat.
If you really want to be depressed try this from Alan Kohler.
“Here is a fantastic presentation by Richard Koo, the chief economist of Nomura Research Institute, about what’s wrong with monetary policy – “Surviving in the Intellectually Bankrupt Monetary Policy Environment”. It’s an hour and a half long, but worth it!”
Here is the link.
I have watched it through and have the deep sense we might all be living in a fool’s paradise. Time will tell I guess.
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Not good news from Australia also.
  • August 30 2016 - 11:09AM

Australia's growing debt a 'ticking time bomb', says TD Securities

Jens Meyer
Australia's fiscal position is becoming increasingly untenable, even if current debt and deficit metrics remain low by global standards, TD Securities has warned in a strongly worded note to clients.
"The government is borrowing record amounts to consume, not invest - a ticking fiscal time bomb," the investment firm's chief Asia-Pacific macro strategist Annette Beacher said on Tuesday.
Treasurer Scott Morrison welcomes Moody's decision to maintain Australia's credit rating at AAA. Courtesy ABC News 24.
TD Securities expects $100 billion of new bonds to be issued every year over the next three years at least, as the inability to fix the budget due to populist stonewalling sparks an "explosion" of government bonds.
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Here are a few other things I have noticed.

General Budget Issues.

  • August 29 2016 - 12:00AM

Turnbull leaves the door ajar on super changes as Shorten steps up banks, same-sex pressure

James Massola
Prime Minster Malcolm Turnbull appears to have left the door open to dropping the most controversial element of his government's  $6 billion superannuation package, while pointing out the "vast bulk" of it had been accepted. 
Liberal MPs are expected to raise their concerns about the proposed $500,000 non-concessional lifetime cap on contributions, which is the most controversial element of the package, during a party room meeting on Monday that comes after a wipe-out result for the Country Liberal Party in the Northern Territory.
Mr Turnbull said the super package had, overall, been "very well received" and criticised Mr Shorten's decision to hold back details of Labor's alternate proposal – which also includes blocking three other measures in the package and lowering the income threshold at which point a 30 per cent tax on a person's super would apply – until after the election.
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  • Opinion
  • Updated Aug 29 2016 at 12:15 AM

Fiscal repair is not about banks and Medicare

by The Australian Financial Review
Add the eight-week federal election campaign to the eight weeks since the the July 2 poll and Bill Shorten has been running a four-month Mediscare and anti-big business campaign. That's a full third of the year spending peddling the political lie that the Turnbull government has had some plan to "privatise", dismantle or cut Medicare. Now Mr Shorten has sought to elevate the non-existent privatisation of Medicare to the top of the nation's parliamentary priorities. While the opposition would work on "fair" budget repair, this was not the chief concern for the new parliament. "If you ask me," Mr Shorten says, "this week in Parliament, Medicare remains the number one issue." Forget about about the budget deficit, the rising public debt, the creaking tax system and falling national income. Fighting a make-believe policy designed to scare sick voters is Mr Shorten's No.1 priority. As our political correspondent, Phillip Coorey, quoted a Labor source in summarising the party's basic approach as Parliament sets to resume this week: "Banks and Medicare mate."
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  • August 29 2016 - 9:06PM

Malcolm Turnbull echoes Kevin Rudd on 'massive moral challenge' over budget

James Massola
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has declared budget repair the "massive moral challenge" of the new Parliament, challenging Labor, the Greens and the crossbench to tackle the nation's ballooning debt "head-on" while echoing Kevin Rudd's stark warning about climate change a decade ago.
And Fairfax Media has obtained a leaked copy of a "backbenchers brief" that sets out the details of the so-called omnibus savings bill, which largely contains measures that Labor agreed to, or indicated it could agree to, during the election campaign.
The leaked document reveals the omnibus bill is designed to save $6.1 billion over four years and includes 24 measures - up from the 21 that had initially been foreshadowed.
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Shades of Dr Evil in Morrison

- on August 29, 2016, 6:31 am
Austin Powers fans will understand.
Dr Evil stared at the camera and told the world that he was holding it to ransom — for one million dollars.
To his left, a lackey pointed out that one million dollars wasn’t exactly a lot of money.
So Dr Evil ramped up his demand to one hundred billion dollars.
Scott Morrison is no Dr Evil but his speech last week warning of Australia facing gross debt of $1 trillion if nothing was done to fix the Budget was straight from The Spy Who Shagged Me.
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Nasty Budget measures resurrected in omnibus Bill

August 30, 201612:35pm

Turnbull outlines new parliament battle plan

authorBlockSingleTHE door to the Budget crypt has been wrenched open and measures you might have thought dead and buried two years ago have emerged as live legislation.
They are among 24 items in an omnibus Bill of spending cuts worth $6.1 billion — most backed by both the government and Labor.
They will cut a range of payments from the dole to pensions to student loan concessions, which are wrapped in a 600-page document now being studied by the Opposition.
Manager of Opposition business Tony Burke today warned there was no guarantee all elements of the government Bill would be accepted.
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We must prepare for economic shocks: GG

August 30, 20164:11pm
Colin Brinsden, AAP Economics Correspondent Australian Associated Press
Governor-General Sir Peter Cosgrove has warned the new parliament that failure to prepare against any shocks in the global economy will leave the Australian economy and living standards vulnerable.
Opening the 45th parliament on Tuesday, Sir Peter said it was prudent for the government to strengthen the economy's resilience while committing to maintaining strong fiscal discipline and supporting policies to encourage jobs, growth and investment.
"My government will continue to bring the budget back into balance, by controlling expenditure growth and by strengthening economic growth," he said in an address prepared by the prime minister's office to a joint sitting of MPs and senators.
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  • September 1 2016 - 7:18AM

Australia has an underemployment problem

·         Michael Heath
The strength of Australia's jobs market is being overstated by a surge in casual positions and an inability by workers to secure more hours.
While the unemployment rate fell to 5.7 per cent in July from 6.3 per cent a year earlier, 87 per cent of the jobs created in that period were part-time: a definition that covers anything from 1 hour a week to 35 hours. At the same time, the underemployment rate is stuck near a record high of 8.5 per cent.
The changing labour market reflects more jobs generated in services industries -- which rely less on full-time employees -- amid the waning of a mining-investment boom. The resulting lift in part-time jobs, along with a rise in underemployment, has seen a sharp slowdown in wage growth. The flow-on effect: weak inflation that spurred the Reserve Bank of Australia to cut rates to a record-low 1.5 per cent last month.
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Parliament given first budget repair task

Australian Associated Press
August 31, 2016 7:00pm
The federal government has launched into its "moral challenge" to repair the budget, introducing a $6.1 billion savings bill as parliament finally got down to business after a near four-month absence.
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull chose the new parliament's first question time on Wednesday to remind every MP and senator of their responsibility to support the task of budget repair.
"Failing to do so betrays our children and grandchildren," he said.
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COMMENT
  • September 1 2016 - 8:26PM

Scott Morrison's $6 billion 'omnibus' savings bill: the devil in the detail

Jessica Irvine
I don't expect you've had time to read the 260 pages of legislation, plus 403 -age explanatory memorandum, detailing the government's $6 billion "omnibus" savings bill.
Much has been made of Treasury's $100 million calculation error. But ignore that. That's the sideshow.
The substance of the 24 individual measures that comprise the bill is far more concerning in the way it targets some of the most vulnerable groups in society.
So here's the fine print. Read it and weep if you are someone, or love someone, who falls into one or more of the following groups: 
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  • September 2 2016 - 2:05PM

Apartment correction to cause Australia-wide recession: report warns

Simon Johanson
A "correction" in the apartment market could see sharp falls in all Australian home prices and a nationwide recession, a gloomy bank analyst report on the housing market warns.
The report by analysts CLSA paints a "base case" scenario which says Australia's housing cycle has "peaked," with household debt now extending the country's property bubble.
The shift by big banks to tighten lending standards is likely to cause a "correction" and "crisis" in cheap apartments which will spread, leading to defaults among smaller developers and a sharp contraction in construction, CLSA says.
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Government debt: Turnbull, Morrison can’t delay budget repair

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM September 3, 2016

Judith Sloan

It’s a big call by Malcolm Turnbull to say “one way or another, at the end of the 45th parliament, I want Australians to be able to say that this parliament has come to terms with the budgetary challenges we face”.
One of the problems he faces is that there is no consensus that we do have budgetary challenges, even though Scott Morrison has outlined the basic, incontestable facts in a recent speech.
“As a government we inherited $240 billion in accumulated deficits and a debt of $317bn, projected to increase to $667bn within the next 10 years,” the Treasurer says. “We have so far acted to reduce that projected debt by $55bn. However, we are still a long way from where we need to be, and time is running out to get there.
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Health Budget Issues.

Bill Shorten’s Medi-scare campaign undermined by new figures

index&t_product=DailyTelegraph&td_noGallery=true&td_device=desktopSAMANTHA MAIDEN, National political editor, The Sunday Telegraph
August 28, 2016 12:00am
OPPOSITION Leader Bill Shorten’s Medi-scare campaign has been undermined by new figures that reveal there were 17 million more bulk-billed GP visits last year than under Labor.
During the bitter election campaign, Labor advertisements and text messages warned voters: “Time is running out to Save Medicare.”
Labor accused Malcolm Turnbull of introducing a GP tax by stealth because he maintained a freeze to GP payments that is forcing more doctors to abandon bulk billing.
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  • August 29 2016 - 7:10AM

Lack of competition allows specialist doctors to charge according to patient income

Harriet Alexander
Rally car driver Bruce Garland was happy with the results of his prostate surgery but was left with a feeling he had been ripped off.
The costs associated with the surgery were listed to show the fees for the equipment and the surgeon, but a disclaimer said there may be other fees for assistance.
"We looked at it and said, 'Maybe at worst it's $12,000'," Mr Garland said. "It ended up being $18,000 after everyone else charged their fees as well.
"There was nothing wrong with the job, but it was just the cost of it, and we had to pay upfront."
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More than 100k patients waiting for dental care in Sydney

By 9NEWS
The list of those needing dental treatment in NSW has blown out, with residents in Sydney's western suburbs suffering the most.
More than 100,000 adults and children are waiting to receive general dental care in Sydney, new figures have revealed.
The latest figures from NSW Health show around 100,000 adults and more than 13,000 children are waiting for general dental care.
The biggest queue is in Sydney's south-west, with more than 20,000 people waiting for treatment, followed by the western suburbs, with about 12,000 on the list.
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  • September 1 2016 - 8:17PM

Drug companies paying doctors millions for 'educational' events, consultancies

Daniel Burdon
Drug companies have paid Australian doctors and nurses more than $64 million since April 2015 to attend "educational events", advisory group meetings and to act as consultants to the industry.
Thousands of doctors and nurses shared in about $8.5 million in payments from 35 drug companies between October 2015 and April this year, new data from Medicines Australia has revealed.
Drug companies paid doctors and nurses more than $8 million in the six months to April this year, new data shows. 
The $8.5 million for the six months to April this year comes on top of about $56 million the companies paid health professionals between April 2015 and October 2015, including travel and accommodation and hospitality to attend events, speaking and consultancy fees.
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SkyGen, CosMediTour and others offer cheap surgery in Asia

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM September 2, 2016

Sean Parnell

The best way to explain what Daniel Donner and his colleagues offer is by using one of their earliest clients as an example.
Ra Herangi is a fly-in, fly-out worker who provides for his family and is proud of his Polynesian roots. At 59, Herangi is out working in remote Western Australia while his wife Lee keeps home base in Perth. Yet two years ago, his osteoporosis had him wondering how long he could keep it up. Hauling his heavy frame up 300 stairs each day at the mine site was taking a toll on his hip, and the doctors and specialists, partly funded by his health insurer, agreed a hip replacement was needed.
Herangi took long service leave to have the operation in a Perth private hospital, and do the necessary rehabilitation to allow him to keep working. Astonishingly, only 12 hours before he was due to be admitted, his insurer notified him he was not covered.
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Cheaper prescription drugs to slash bills for chronically ill

http://pixel.tcog.cp1.news.com.au/track/component/article/4eede4c45987f5d9805a51d3f11c3909?esi=true&t_template=s3/chronicle-tg_tlc_storyheader/index&t_product=DailyTelegraph&td_noGallery=true&td_device=desktopExclusive, Samantha Maiden, Herald Sun
September 4, 2016 5:00am
CHRONICALLY ill patients will save up to $400 a year when the costs of prescription medicines are slashed from next month.
The federal government has predicted one-in-three medicines will drop in price as a result of better bargaining with drug companies.
Sufferers of common ailments including diabetes, anxiety, high blood pressure and high cholesterol are the big winners, saving up to $20 a script.
As the government moves to blunt Labor’s attacks over Medicare, some of the biggest price cuts the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) has ever delivered to patients will come into force on October 1.
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Scott Morrison's car-crash logic and the real story behind the 'taxed-nots'

There is a new divide in treasurers – those who simplistically view the world through ill-thought out binary oppositions, and those who don’t
Last week, in the lead up to the new parliament, the treasurer Scott Morrison sought to outline his economic vision. Unfortunately, rather than provide any clear ideas of where he sees the nation’s economy heading, the speech was a mishmash of internal inconsistencies, statistical misreadings, and statements which made less sense the more you paid attention to them.
The big take away from the speech was Morrison’s desire to ape Joe Hockey’s outlook of the world as being divided into two types. Where Joe Hockey talked of “lifters and leaners” Scott Morrison has decided that “there is a new divide – the taxed and the taxed nots”.
Sigh.
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COMMENT
  • August 30 2016 - 10:14PM

Scott Morrison is attacking the old when he puts down the 'taxed-nots'

Ross Gittins
It's a sad day when economic commentators like me have to spend so much time explaining what's wrong or misleading about the things the federal Treasurer says, rather than backing up his efforts to educate the public on economic realities and helping him fight for sensible though unpopular policies.
To be fair, Scott Morrison did have useful points to make in his big speech last week, his first major contribution since the election.
But then he veered off onto reinforcing the mythology of the greedy well-off, who resent being taxed to help those less fortunate than themselves.
He announced there was a new divide in the community – "the taxed and the taxed-nots".
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Health Insurance Issues.

Ramsay slams health insurers on reform

  • The Australian
  • 4:36PM August 30, 2016

Sarah-Jane Tasker

The head of private hospital group Ramsay Health Care, Chris Rex, has warned state governments could be forced to pay more for medical devices if the federal government looks after “its friends” the health insurers with new reforms.
Mr Rex, saying he has doubts there will be reform of the Prostheses List, has argued that private health insurers “made a lot of noise” and came up with some “infantile arguments” around the issue.
Health Minister Sussan Ley has promised private health insurers that she will look to reform the Prostheses List, which the government uses to regulate how much health funds pay for prosthetics, human tissues and device implants.
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iSelect, Ley to discuss ‘worrying trend’

  • The Australian
  • 3:20PM August 30, 2016

Sarah-Jane Tasker

The head of comparator website iSelect, Scott Wilson, will head to Canberra tomorrow to meet Health Minister Sussan Ley, to discuss health insurance reform as he warns of a “worrying trend” of younger people not buying insurance.
Mr Wilson, who today delivered a strong second half result including a 34 per cent jump in annual net profit after tax to $12.9 million, said he would meet Ms Ley and her advisers because the company was keen to take an active role in reform discussions.
“This is something iSelect has not done well in the past,” he said.
“There are more than 1.3 million Australians that come and compare health insurance with us each year.
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Private health exodus: Premium rises lead to membership decline

September 2, 20169:54pm
Sue Dunlevy News Corp Australia Network
THE proportion of the population in a health fund has fallen for the first time in 15 years as premiums rises three times the inflation rate threaten to send the industry into a death spiral.
Exclusive IPSOS research obtained by News Corp Australia shows if no action is taken to control premium rises, one in five fund members will downgrade or drop their cover within six years.
Health funds say Health Minister Sussan Ley could save the day and cut premiums by between $150 and $300 a year if she changes to the way the government sets the price for prostheses like hip and knee replacements.
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Pharmacy Issues.

31 August, 2016

Pharmacy review attracts scathing submissions

 Posted by Felicity Nelson
Public submissions to the King Review into pharmacy remuneration and regulation have criticised “shonky” practices and “rampant capitalism” in the industry
The Federal Government created the review, chaired by economist Professor Stephen King, in 2015 to recommend changes to the industry.
The review panel is currently consulting stakeholders through an online questionnaire, public forums and submissions. The panel will provide a final report to Federal Health Minister Sussan Ley by March next year.
Five out of seven submissions from doctors and pharmacists have been published online so far.
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Superannuation Issues.

How much superannuation do you really need?

  • The Australian
  • 8:13PM August 29, 2016

Tony Negline

The government has proclaimed that $1.6 million is enough to provide sufficient income in retirement.
Is it right? This is a good question but before we can answer it, we need to consider some numbers.
One of the good policies in the 2006 Better Super regime introduced by the Howard/Costello government was the removal of Reasonable Benefit Limits or RBLs. Back then we had two RBLs — a lump sum and pension RBLs.
Each July 1 these RBLs were indexed by movements in average weekly earnings. The 2006-07 lump sum RBL was about $680,000 and the pension RBL was $1.35m. If these had been indexed to the 2015-16 financial year then they would have had been worth about $930,000 and $1.87m.
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Scott Morrison needs to rethink public sector superannuation

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

Judith Sloan

It was always going to come out that the real rorts and costs in the superannuation system are the public sector defined benefit superannuation schemes.
Just ignore Scott Morrison’s assurances that “commensurate measures” will ensure the privileged ones on defined benefit schemes will be treated like everyone else; it’s complete twaddle and he knows it.
Or he should know it, unless he has been hoodwinked by his bureaucratic advisers who are, almost to a man and a woman, beneficiaries of these gold-plated schemes.
Let us first consider constitutionally protected employees. They include judges, tribunal members and senior state public servants. As their titles suggest, they won’t be affected at all by the changes to the taxation and regulation of superannuation announced in the budget.
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Tony Abbott’s grenade for superannuation reforms

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM September 3, 2016

Sarah Martin

Tony Abbott has clashed with Scott Morrison over his super­annuation changes, labelling them “deeply unpopular” with the Coalition’s base, as support builds for the Treasurer to ­increase the cap on after-tax contributions to $1 million.
In a “tetchy” private meeting with a group of Liberal and ­Nationals MPs in Parliament House on Thursday, Mr Abbott confronted Mr Morrison and Minister for Revenue Kelly O’Dwyer about their proposed $6 billion super package. He ­argued the government was wrong to offer super concessions to low-income earners.
He also argued for the government to abandon its proposed cap on post-tax contributions.
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  • September 2 2016

Defined benefit fund members still in the dark over changes

Daryl Dixon

While public attention focuses on whether the $500,000 lifetime non-concessional super cap will be legislated, defined benefit fund members are yet to learn precisely how the budget changes will affect them. The greatest area of uncertainty is how the proposed $1.6 million cap on pension fund accounts will be applied to defined benefit pensions.
The proposed arrangements for taxing defined benefit pension income were set out clearly in the budget. The 10 per cent tax offset for unfunded pensions after age 60 will be capped at a maximum annual income of $100,000 increasing the income tax payable on pensions in excess of this amount. Recipients of tax-free funded pensions will be subject to income tax on 50 per cent of their annual pension in excess of $100,000.
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I look forward to comments on all this!
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David.

Sometimes You Here From Commentators Who Really Are Not Firmly Connected to Reality!

This popped up last week.

Call to use existing networks to skill CALD seniors for e-health services

By Natasha Egan on September 2, 2016 in Industry, Technology
As digital health services become mainstream there are opportunities to improve care and support for culturally and linguistically diverse seniors, but low levels of digital and health literacy mean they risk missing out, a provider says.
Telehealth and e-health are no longer in trial mode but are fast becoming part of the way older people are looked after in this country, according to Stelvio Vido, CEO of Spectrum Migrant Resource Centre, which provides services including aged care to migrants and refugees in Melbourne.
Cultural norms, language and low rates of health literacy are among the barriers to older Australians from a CALD background accessing aged care services, Mr Vido said. Enabling this group to share in the benefits of ehealth and telehealth required improving their health literacy as well as their digital and e-health literacy, he added.
 “Their low level of health literacy and digital literacy means that telehealth does not become as relevant or accessible mode of care and support for them as it is for the rest of us,” Mr Vido told the Future of Aged Care conference in Sydney this week.
“One of the challenges for these groups is their own cultural norms and those language barriers that need to be overcome so they are comfortable to take in information and understand it.”
More here:
Surely the approach with this and similar groups is to face reality and to make sure there are appropriate alternate channels for access to health information and care. Groups such as this and a range of others such as some disabled patients, those without internet access and so on need to be looked after and given the appropriate support. Isn't this just plain common sense?
Pretending we don’t need to make alternative arrangements for this population is simply doomed to fail!
David.

Wednesday, September 07, 2016

I Found This A Very Interesting Job Advertisement From The ADHA. Worth A Close Read.

I spotted this a few days ago.

General Manager, Executive Office

Australian Digital Health Agency 

General Manager, Executive Office

  • Ongoing / permanent role
  • Sydney, Brisbane or Canberra location
Better use of data and technology can help people live healthier, happier and more productive lives. Digital health can make a real difference to people's health by giving them greater control and better access to information.
Tasked with improving health outcomes for Australians through the delivery of digital healthcare systems and the national digital health strategy for Australia, the Australian Digital Health Agency (the Agency) commenced operations on 1 July 2016.
The Agency is responsible for national digital health services and systems, with a focus on engagement, innovation and clinical quality and safety. Our focus is on putting data and technology safely to work for patients, consumers and the healthcare professionals who look after them.
We have an exciting opportunity for a General Manager Executive Office to join the Office of the CEO to manage high level business support, ensuring the efficient functioning of the Agency.
Reporting directly to the Chief Executive Officer, this role will take responsibility for working collaboratively with all areas of the Agency on behalf of the CEO. You will work in partnership with the Senior Communications and Media Lead to support the development of key messaging and detailed communications, support the coordination and delivery of Agency outcomes, coordinate working groups or management teams, provide project management assistance, collate documentation, provide proof reading and editing of documents.
The role is also responsible for identifying and managing business issues that affect the functional and implementation of the Agency and is responsible for the efficient delivery of information to parliamentary services from a whole of Agency perspective.
Accountabilities in this role:
  • Provide direct support to the CEO on a wide range of matters including but not limited to: coordination and review of papers, briefings, minutes and reports, collation, review and coordination of executive responses and reporting, assistance with chairing of meetings, and high level liaison and coordination both internally and externally.
  • Provide governance support to the CEO as well as strategic direction to each of Executives, coordinates the day to day management of Agency as a whole including human resources support, internal and external communications and Ministerial reporting and communication requirements.
  • Strategic and business planning and management reporting.
  • Prepare high quality and timely briefing notes, house folder notes, speech notes, and Ministerial and parliamentary correspondence. 
  • Provide timely, expert strategic advice and recommendations to the CEO, including identifying and assessing significant emerging risks and governance issues. 
  • Maintain an overview of Agency’s plans/programs/projects that will allow for the identification of synergies across the Agency. 
  • Act as nominated representative for the implementation and management of major organisational initiatives and provide a coordination point for identifying nominees for various forums at the right responsibility level. 
  • Facilitate and sponsor the rollout of corporate programs and initiatives within the Agency.
To be successful you will meet the following selection criteria:
  • High level communication skills and stakeholder and client management, interpersonal and negotiation skills.
  • Proven ability to work under pressure with a sound working knowledge of Ministerial, Parliamentary and Government imperatives, governance and decision making processes and the policy lifecycle
  • Extensive experience in coordinating projects, driving problem solving and decision making in a complex team environment. 
  • Knowledge and experience in business planning, performance monitoring processes, strategic planning, policy development and implementation.
  • Demonstrated capacity to exercise a high level of discretion, confidentiality and initiative and the ability to exercise political sensitivity particularly in liaison with senior executives from both the public and private sectors
  • Ability to deal with a diverse range of complex matters and highly conceptual issues, in order to recommend practical solutions, often within limited time frames
  • Appropriate tertiary qualifications or experience at this level.
  • The right to work in Australia.
Closing date for applications: 18 September 2016 at 11.59pm (Australian Eastern Standard Time)
For further information regarding the position and the Australian Digital Health Agency please visit our careers page at www.digitalhealth.gov.au and apply online.
www.digitalhealth.gov.au
Here is the link to the advertisement:
I was interested to notice that for such a central job did not seem to need any e-Health or technical experience.
Also of interest this week was the announcement of the Executive Team.
Here is the link:

Australian Digital Health Agency Executive Team

Overall, we can see the ADHA starting to get going. I am looking forward to seeing some considered output from all this.
David.