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."

Wednesday, November 02, 2016

I Have To Say I Think This Is Good News - As Long As The Execution Is Of High Quality!

This appeared last week from the ADHA.

Digital Health Agency responds to calls to fix electronic messaging

Created on Wednesday, 26 October 2016
The Australian Digital Health Agency is launching a major program with the medical software industry and healthcare providers to realise the direct benefits for providers and their patients of using secure, electronic messaging for communicating with other health professionals.
"I have been listening to key partners in the community on their aspirations for the Digital Health Agency and ways it can support key health priorities in Australia," CEO Tim Kelsey said.
"I have had hundreds of conversations with patient and public advocates, leaders in public and private health services, the clinical community, industry, peak bodies and innovators. I have met with frontline professionals and service-users who have taken me through ways in which digital technology can support them better.
"I keep hearing that our healthcare professionals want to talk to each other routinely, securely, electronically – a situation that many currently find themselves unable to do. One of the first priorities for the Agency will be to partner with the industry, jurisdictions and healthcare professionals to solve the daily challenge of not having a way to send electronic messages to others in the health sector in a seamless, secure way."
The lack of an interoperable, sector-wide messaging system takes valuable time away from frontline care professionals and creates difficulties when a provider sending a message does not know if the message was delivered or received at the other end. These problems are forcing most healthcare providers to continue to use fax machines when the majority of other industries replaced them with digital communication technologies over a decade ago.
In the spirit of co-production, the Agency is adopting a model that will hold it to account to the community and deliver the correct outcomes.
The program will be governed by external Senior Responsible Owners – Dr Nathan Pinskier, Chair of the RACGP Expert Committee on eHealth and Practice Systems, Dr Mal Thatcher, CEO eHealth Queensland, and Ms Fiona Panagoulias as a community representative. These people are not part of the Agency itself, but will shape the direction of the program and hold the Agency to account for delivering a program that results in clear benefits for the community.
"I am on the record as stating that the number one issue to be resolved in health care communications is the ability for healthcare providers to electronically communicate with each other directly, seamlessly and securely," said Dr Pinskier.
"Solving the provider to provider secure messaging usability issue will create the potential to leverage these healthcare communications for other purposes including uploads to the My Health Record. The interoperability solution is within our grasp and I thank the Digital Health Agency and its CEO Tim Kelsey for listening to the sector and making this a high priority item."
Dr Thatcher stated, "I believe in the importance of having a secure messaging environment that allows seamless, secure and safe transfer of patient information between providers.
"Connecting healthcare is a key priority outlined in My Health, Queensland’s future: Advancing health 2026 vision and electronic messaging is a part of this.
"Queensland looks forward to working with the Australian Digital Health Agency and industry to progress this important work."
Ms Panagoulias hopes Australia will move quickly to deliver a modern health service that takes advantage of the opportunities technology offers patients and their carers. "We have an amazing health system in Australia," she said. "I've seen others in the world. We really must do our best to make it better."
Ms Panagoulias, Dr Thatcher and Dr Pinskier will be supported by a Program Board with technology industry, healthcare provider, primary health network, hospital and general practice representatives, as well as HealthDirect Australia. This group will ensure the program stays focussed on the benefits to patients and providers, and prevent the program from becoming a purely technology project.
The Agency is working in partnership with the medical software industry to achieve a better experience for system users.
President of the Medical Software Industry Association Emma Hossack stated that, "Members of the Medical Software Industry Association have been willing and able to make this happen for some time, with a number of messaging companies already carrying out test exchanges. However, without addressing the other obstacles, like terminology and identifiers, as well as involving parties like the clinical information systems, success would not be possible. Tim Kelsey is seeing digital health as a digital ecosystem and with this fresh new approach, we are optimistic that past obstacles will be overcome."
The objective of the program is to achieve a trustworthy, seamless process for a message to flow securely from one provider to another; irrespective of the technology platform they are using, the organisation they work for, the other provider they are communicating with, or the home State or Territory of the patient – to create a better experience for healthcare professionals and patients and, ultimately, safer, higher quality care.
Here is the link:
There is some good coverage here:
28 October, 2016

Secure messaging: the great leap forward?

Posted by Julie Lambert
A team of outsiders, led by Melbourne GP Dr Nathan Pinskier, will oversee the development of secure electronic messaging for the medical profession so that doctors can finally set a bonfire of the faxes.
Australian Digital Health Agency chief Tim Kelsey said interoperable secure messaging was the top digital-health priority to permit healthcare professionals to communicate with each other easily, safely and routinely.
“Many of the problems we have to resolve are not straightforward ones.  I think we all have recognise this is going to be small steps, small steps to build confidence,” Kelsey told the RACGP eHealth Forum last week.
He acknowledged a “history of disappointment” in digital health in Australia, saying he worried that people were fatigued by the overselling of the digital technology in healthcare.
“There has been over-promising and under-delivery. We can’t do that anymore,” the former NHS change manager said.
The program would be driven by a partnership of software suppliers, health jurisdictions and healthcare professionals, taking practical steps towards tangible goals such as development of an electronic directory for clinicians, he said.
Lots more here:
Additionally there was some coverage of an earlier ADHA move here:
24 October, 2016

Can one bloke change the fate of Australian health?

Posted by Jeremy Knibbs
With barely two months under his belt, but a tonne of kilometres already clocked up running around the country listening to stakeholders from all walks of the health spectrum, the new head of the Australian Digital Health Agency (ADHA), Tim Kelsey, is charged up and ready to fire the starting gun on what might be a new beginning for Australia’s health future – one with some semblance of sensible and practical digital health strategy development and execution.
If he could wrangle even half of the  herd of cats that has wandered our digital health landscape in the last few years – the federal regulators, software vendors (eg, patient management systems and secure messaging vendors), health service providers (eg, pathology labs), state government health department empires, the politicians, the GP and specialist lobby groups and the media –  it would be a promising start.
Today he announced the appointments of Associate Professor Meredith Makeham as the Chief Medical Advisor to the ADHA and Dr Steve Hambleton, a key player and digital health influencer and a past AMA president, as the “Senior Responsible Owner” for a number of high-priority clinical digital programs for the ADHA.
Lots more here:
Interestingly I ran a poll a few weeks ago on this:
AusHealthIT Poll Number 339  – Results – 9th October, 2016.
Here are the results of the poll.

Do You Agree It Is A Very High Priority To Fully Electronify Clinical Messaging?

Yes 71% (87)
No 19% (23)
I Have No Idea 10% (12)
Total votes: 122
A useful majority seem to be keen on really working hard to get Secure Clinical Messaging to be ubiquitous.
A great turnout  of votes.
Again, many, many thanks to all those that voted!
David.
Here is the link:
It seems Mr Kelsey and his team are on a winner here if they do it properly, sensibly and get it right! Time will tell I guess. We have all been waiting a good while for a seamless, standardised solution to all this.
David.

Tuesday, November 01, 2016

Things In South Australia Seem To Be Going From Bad To Worse. Something Needs To Change Soon!

In the ongoing saga that is SA E-Health we had two biggies. First – and very sadly – we have this:

No access to records as Socceroo was dying

- on October 28, 2016, 3:12 pm
A former Socceroo who suffered an agonising death in an Adelaide hospital had a "not for resuscitation" status but medical staff had trouble accessing his records and attempted CPR, a nurse says.
Steve Herczeg died in the Queen Elizabeth Hospital on September 19 because his urinary catheter had somehow become attached to an oxygen supply, bursting his bladder and collapsing his lungs.
Enrolled nurse Kayla Woodward has told an inquest that medical staff performed CPR for about 13 minutes before she gained access to the electronic patient records, and efforts to revive Mr Herczeg were stopped.
Ms Woodward had another staff member helping her but the state-wide system, known as the Enterprise Patient Administration System (EPAS), was not working.
"At the time a colleague was trying to help me get into the EPAS system, just trying to get it to load up," she told the South Australian Coroner's Court on Friday.
"But it wasn't loading. We were trying to load on two laptops at the same time."
Ms Woodward was the nurse who administered to Mr Herczeg after he was transferred from the emergency department to the respiratory ward, the inquest heard.
Lots more here:
Surely this is just an awful failure of system training and system design of what is a vital function.
There are many reports covering the Coronial Inquest – with this one, from the local paper, being typical.

SA Health’s EPAS record ‘confusing’, could damage coronial inquests, State Coroner says

Andrew Hough, The Advertiser
October 24, 2016 8:55pm
THE state’s controversial new electronic patient medical system is “confusing” and its complex hard copy records almost indecipherable, the State Coroner has warned.
Mark Johns on Monday raised concerns about the potential negative impacts the Enterprise Patient Administration System could have on important coronial inquests.
The Coroners Court heard that among medical blunders was the contentious EPAS system failing during critical moments.
The court later heard the “confusing” system was almost impossible to decipher. Registered nurse Suvas Kc struggled at times to explain its codes, described later by Mr Johns as “bizarre”.
Raising concerns about its complexity, Mr Johns told the court he had written to Health Minister Jack Snelling more than a year ago outlining his longstanding concerns.
“If this is an indication what we are going to end up in the Coroner’s Court when EPAS is more widely used I have concerns for the way (we) will be able to cope,” he said.
More here:
At the same time that all this was unfolding I saw this….

EPAS Program Manager

  • Department for Health & Ageing, Adelaide CBD
  • Indicative Total Remuneration: $126,911 – Temp F/T (up to 29/12/2017) – MAS3
You will be directly responsible for managing the delivery of specific projects that relate to critical Enterprise Patient Administration System (EPAS) priorities and goals. You will be required to plan, lead, coordinate, control and manage timely, high quality and cost effective projects and provide expert advice and consultancy services. You will also be required to lead, manage and monitor staff as required such as IT contractors, suppliers and consultants. As the Program Manager, you will provide authoritative advice, leadership, and manage the coordination of the operational outcomes for the EPAS Program, including management of outcomes, milestones and associated documents required to successfully complete this project of work. This position provides the critical conduit to enable and facilitate high level communication channels, collaboration and coordination of functional and operational streams within SA Health, as well as providing the key interface between SA Health and Allscripts.
To be successful in this role, you will have extensive experience in managing projects, staff, business plans and multi-million dollar budgets within a large and complex organisation. You must have exceptional ability to plan, lead, implement, evaluate and manage multiple, complex projects within the framework of the corporate objectives and in consideration of operational, political, financial and strategic issues. You must also be confident in providing expert advisory and consultation services at a senior level, including interpretation and application of policies and legislation. In addition, your high-level research and analytical skills will equip you to identify and exploit emerging technical and business opportunities and provide high level strategic advice.
Appointment will be subject to a satisfactory Criminal History Check.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander applicants are encouraged to apply. Job Ref: 609320
Here is the link – rather suggesting major job losses!
(There are others as well on the same site).
I wonder is all this linked in any way. One has to feel pretty sad for all those involved.
David.

Monday, October 31, 2016

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 31st October, 2016.

Here are a few I have come across the last week or so.
Note: Each link is followed by a title and a few paragraphs. For the full article click on the link above title of the article. Note also that full access to some links may require site registration or subscription payment.

General Comment

This week has essentially been ‘stuff-up’ central with all sorts of bad things happening all over!
Additionally we have the pharmacists saying the myHR is hardly up to scratch and hospitals blowing poor patients up with oxygen connected to the wrong tubes….heavens above….
Read and be amazed!
Thank heavens for some apparently good news on secure messaging!
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Why pharmacists are saying no to the e-health system

25 October, 2016 Tessa Hoffman 
The government’s $1 billion e-health record system could be heading for white-elephant status in community pharmacy – with fewer than 5% using it in any given week.
Only about 1250 pharmacies are registered for the system, previously known as PEHCR and now called My Health Record. And only 20% of these view or upload information in any seven-day period, according to the department of health.
It says that once fully rolled out, the system will enable automatic uploading of dispensing information to a patient’s e-record. Pharmacists will be able to view a patient’s medical history – including shared health summaries and hospital discharge documents.
This would improve efficiency and reduce the risk of medicines misadventure, says the health department. But it admits that only 45% of pharmacies have software that’s compatible with the system.
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  • October 28 2016 - 9:30PM

Red Cross data leak: personal data of 550,000 blood donors made public

Tom McIlroy
Fergus Hunter
Rania Spooner
The private lives of half a million Australians – including sexual and medical histories – have been made public in what could be one of the country's largest data breaches.
Australian Red Cross Blood Service staff are contacting more than 550,000 blood donors whose personal information was contained in a file accidentally placed on an unsecured, public-facing part of their website.
The information relates to donors from 2010 to 2016 and includes names, addresses and dates of birth as well as sensitive donation eligibility questions concerning sexual activity, drug use, weight and medical conditions.
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Australia's biggest data breach sees 1.3m records leaked

By Allie Coyne on Oct 28, 2016 12:00PM

Medical data exposed.

More than one million personal and medical records of Australian citizens donating blood to the Red Cross Blood Service have been exposed online in the country’s biggest and most damaging data breach to date.
A 1.74 GB file containing 1.28 million donor records going back to 2010, published to a publicly-facing website, was discovered by an anonymous source and sent to security expert and operator of haveibeenpwned.com Troy Hunt early on Tuesday morning.
The database was uncovered through a scan of IP address ranges configured to search for publicly exposed web servers that returned directory listings containing .sql files.
The contents of the 'mysqldump' database backup contains everything from personal details (name, gender, physical and email address, phone number, date of birth and occasionally blood type and country of birth) to sensitive medical information, like whether someone has engaged in at-risk sexual behaviour in the last year.
-----

Contractor behind Australia's biggest-ever data breach revealed

By Allie Coyne on Oct 28, 2016 4:25PM

Exclusive: How human error exposed 550,000 donors.

Over four frantic days that must have felt like mere minutes, the Red Cross Blood Service has been battling to deal with a data breach that exposed the sensitive personal and medical records of 550,000 of its donors online.
An anonymous individual stumbled across the 1.74GB file containing 1.28 million records while scanning IP address ranges for publicly exposed web servers containing .sql files.
The Red Cross Blood Service became aware of the blunder on Tuesday morning through a chain of communications that included security researcher Troy Hunt and Australia’s computer emergency response team AusCERT.
-----

Veteran's Affairs races to stave off IT catastrophe

By Paris Cowan on Oct 25, 2016 10:53AM

Overhaul to cost 'hundreds of millions'.

Department of Veteran’s Affairs boss Simon Lewis says his agency’s pending IT transformation is expected to cost “hundreds of millions” of dollars, as the department races to get its IT shop in order before legacy applications collapse.
DVA is currently working with PriceWaterhouseCoopers on a business case to convince cabinet to fund the overhaul, which it estimates will take around five years.
The $8 million paid to the consultants comes out of $24.8 million DVA got in the last budget to fund a blueprint for its “veteran-centric reform”, to be underpinned by a fundamental modernisation of the department’s IT systems and business processes.
-----

Are GPs ready to embrace ultrasound technology?

Antony Scholefield | 28 October, 2016 | 
Due to ultrasound's shrinking price and size, the technology is being touted as a good option for general practice. But is real change afoot?
Some machines that go ‘ping' have proven revolutionary in medicine, and perhaps none more so than the ultrasound.
Ultrasound's first use on patients came via 1940s' quackery — ultrasonic energy administered as a therapy for a variety of common ailments, from arthritis, eczema and asthma to haemorrhoids and urinary incontinence.
But scientists in Europe at the time were also recognising its possibilities as a diagnostic tool, with early experiments attempting to locate exudates and abscesses, and even brain tumours although this was less successful.
-----

Thodey, Bassat back UHG health info bridge technology

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM October 25, 2016

Damon Kitney

Seek chief executive Andrew Bassat and former Telstra CEO and now CSIRO chairman David Thodey have taken strategic stakes in a Melbourne health technology company allowing corporations, doctors and insurers to share medical records online.
Unified Healthcare Group, whose “medEbridge’’ online platform is used to send requests for medical reports and files from insurers to doctors, is now preparing to launch a multi-million-dollar capital raising to bankroll its growth plans after securing the support of Mr Bassat and Mr Thodey.
In June the company secured the exclusive support from the Royal Australian College of GPs for the exchange of health information from GPs to businesses and government agencies.
“The support of the RACGP, the peak body representing the 30,000-plus GPs, is very important for UHG to achieve its objectives to improve the interactions between businesses and healthcare providers,’’ said UHG chief executive Brandon Carp.
-----

HFC Catalyst health-tech accelerator programme returns

If you are a health entrepreneur, expert or specialist, the HFC Health-tech programme may help start-ups and others to accelerate their use of technology in the healthcare industry.
HFC’s Catalyst programme has returned for a second year, building on the success of the pilot programme developed with Slingshot last year. iTWire has a report on its launch here and the results here.
HCF Catalyst is now accepting applications from health entrepreneurs, experts, and other specialists to participate in a 12-week structured programme designed to develop compelling business models and secure the traction, viability, and investment needed to succeed.
-----

Disease threat unchecked as School vaccination register faces a delay

Sue Dunlevy, National Health Reporter, News Corp Australia Network
October 30, 2016 12:00am
VITAL immunisation information that will help prevent killer disease outbreaks may not be available because of a delay in awarding a tender for the new Australian School Vaccination Register.
Two months before it’s due to start the federal government has yet to award a tender for the register that will remind high school students about key school based vaccines and identify areas with low immunisation.
The $26.4 million program was meant to begin on January 1 2017 and is a fundamental part of the government’s No Jab No Play policy introduced in response to News Corp’s campaign to improve immunisation rates.
-----

SA Health’s EPAS record ‘confusing’, could damage coronial inquests, State Coroner says

Andrew Hough, The Advertiser
October 24, 2016 8:55pm
THE state’s controversial new electronic patient medical system is “confusing” and its complex hard copy records almost indecipherable, the State Coroner has warned.
Mark Johns on Monday raised concerns about the potential negative impacts the Enterprise Patient Administration System could have on important coronial inquests.
The Coroners Court heard that among medical blunders was the contentious EPAS system failing during critical moments.
-----

Former Socceroo Stephen Herczeg died after oxygen tube connected to catheter caused bladder to burst, coroner hears

A former Socceroo died in an Adelaide hospital last month after his oxygen supply was connected to his catheter causing his bladder to burst and lungs to collapse, a coronial inquest hears.
Stephen Herczeg, 72, was South Australia's first World Cup qualifying Socceroo in 1965, but his death on September 19 this year at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital is now the subject of a coronial inquest.
The inquest, being held before State Coroner Mark Johns, also heard hospital staff could not access Mr Herczeg's resuscitation status because of problems with SA Health's new electronic records system, EPAS.
The court heard Mr Herczeg suffered from a number of health problems, including lung disease, and had a catheter in place due to urinary retention problems.
-----

No access to records as Socceroo was dying

- on October 28, 2016, 3:12 pm
A former Socceroo who suffered an agonising death in an Adelaide hospital had a "not for resuscitation" status but medical staff had trouble accessing his records and attempted CPR, a nurse says.
Steve Herczeg died in the Queen Elizabeth Hospital on September 19 because his urinary catheter had somehow become attached to an oxygen supply, bursting his bladder and collapsing his lungs.
Enrolled nurse Kayla Woodward has told an inquest that medical staff performed CPR for about 13 minutes before she gained access to the electronic patient records, and efforts to revive Mr Herczeg were stopped.
-----

How rural health practitioners are using e-health for palliative care

27 October, 2016 Carmel Sparke  
Rural health practitioners are using Skype to care for terminally ill patients who wish to die at home.
The innovative palliative care scheme in Queensland aims to provide rural patients with the same quality of care they would receive in the city, says Olivia Carey, clinical nurse manager of the medical palliative care unit at St Andrews Hospital, Toowoomba.   
Ms Carey set up the program two years ago and presented details on more than 20 case studies at the Rural Doctors Association of Australia annual conference in Canberra last week.  
-----

Google just made GP-led telehealth a whole lot easier

Antony Scholefield | 25 October, 2016 | 
Some GPs wish there was a magic word that could dispel all the technical issues that are preventing telehealth from taking off. Could that magic word be “gRPC 1.0”?
GP and software developer Dr Joe Logan has helped develop a telehealth system called Air Health — a system that is sold as more secure than Skype.
He says a big positive during its development was when Google released open-source software called gRPC 1.0 so that anybody could work with it.
-----

Digital Health Agency responds to calls to fix electronic messaging

Created on Wednesday, 26 October 2016
The Australian Digital Health Agency is launching a major program with the medical software industry and healthcare providers to realise the direct benefits for providers and their patients of using secure, electronic messaging for communicating with other health professionals.
"I have been listening to key partners in the community on their aspirations for the Digital Health Agency and ways it can support key health priorities in Australia," CEO Tim Kelsey said.
"I have had hundreds of conversations with patient and public advocates, leaders in public and private health services, the clinical community, industry, peak bodies and innovators. I have met with frontline professionals and service-users who have taken me through ways in which digital technology can support them better.
-----
28 October, 2016

Secure messaging: the great leap forward?

Posted by Julie Lambert
A team of outsiders, led by Melbourne GP Dr Nathan Pinskier, will oversee the development of secure electronic messaging for the medical profession so that doctors can finally set a bonfire of the faxes.
Australian Digital Health Agency chief Tim Kelsey said interoperable secure messaging was the top digital-health priority to permit healthcare professionals to communicate with each other easily, safely and routinely.
“Many of the problems we have to resolve are not straightforward ones.  I think we all have recognise this is going to be small steps, small steps to build confidence,” Kelsey told the RACGP eHealth Forum last week.
He acknowledged a “history of disappointment” in digital health in Australia, saying he worried that people were fatigued by the overselling of the digital technology in healthcare.
-----
24 October, 2016

Can one bloke change the fate of Australian health?

Posted by Jeremy Knibbs
With barely two months under his belt, but a tonne of kilometres already clocked up running around the country listening to stakeholders from all walks of the health spectrum, the new head of the Australian Digital Health Agency (ADHA), Tim Kelsey, is charged up and ready to fire the starting gun on what might be a new beginning for Australia’s health future – one with some semblance of sensible and practical digital health strategy development and execution.
If he could wrangle even half of the  herd of cats that has wandered our digital health landscape in the last few years – the federal regulators, software vendors (eg, patient management systems and secure messaging vendors), health service providers (eg, pathology labs), state government health department empires, the politicians, the GP and specialist lobby groups and the media –  it would be a promising start.
Today he announced the appointments of Associate Professor Meredith Makeham as the Chief Medical Advisor to the ADHA and Dr Steve Hambleton, a key player and digital health influencer and a past AMA president, as the “Senior Responsible Owner” for a number of high-priority clinical digital programs for the ADHA.
-----

Clinical experts join new digital health agency

By Andrew Sadauskas on Oct 24, 2016 6:27PM

Researcher, former AMA president claim posts.

The federal government has recruited two leading medical professionals to senior roles at the Australian Digital Health Agency to help oversee the revised implementation of personal electronic health records in Australia.
Macquarie University associate professor Meredith Makeham has been appointed as ADHA’s chief medical adviser. The new role is responsible for engaging with researchers in the design, build and evaluation of digital health services.
Makeham is a member of the WHO safer primary care working group and a member of the representative expert committee for e-health and practice systems with the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners.
Separately, Steve Hambleton has been named the first in a series of non-executive ‘senior responsible owners’ who will lead clinical priority programs within the agency, with additional SROs expected to be appointed over the coming weeks.
-----
https://www.digitalhealth.gov.au/news-and-events/news/1173-clinical-leaders-to-join-digital-health-agency

Clinical Leaders to join Digital Health Agency

Created on Monday, 24 October 2016
The Australian Digital Health Agency has today announced the appointments of Associate Professor Meredith
 Makeham and Dr Steve Hambleton.
Leading patient safety advocate Associate Professor Meredith Makeham takes on the role of Chief Medical 
Adviser in which she will lead the development of initiatives to ensure that digital health services are designed
, built and evaluated in partnership with the research community in Australia and internationally.  
 Associate Professor Makeham, a practising GP, will be a member of the Australian Digital Health Agency’s
 executive leadership team and will provide advice in her areas of expertise including patient safety, 
clinical governance, risk management, and digital health and safety research.
“It’s a great honour for me to join the Australian Digital Health Agency.  As a clinician and a researcher,
 I see first-hand the immense value that digital health technologies can offer people and their care 
professionals, and their fundamental importance in our aims to deliver better health outcomes to Australians”, 
she said.
-----

Real-time prescription monitoring can’t work alone

Authored by Nicole MacKee
A LEADING addiction specialist has warned that introducing the proposed Commonwealth developed and funded Electronic Recording and Reporting of Controlled Drugs (ERRCD) system across Australia, without improving access to addiction services and agreement on the “flags” of misuse, has the potential to do more harm than good.
In September 2016, at a Council of Australian Governments Health Council meeting, Federal Health Minister Sussan Ley urged all state and territory Health Ministers to adopt a national real-time prescription monitoring system that alerts doctors and pharmacists to people who are misusing prescription drugs by doctor or pharmacy shopping.
However, Professor Nick Lintzeris, Clinical Professor, Discipline of Addiction Medicine at the University of Sydney, said that prescription monitoring was an important component in a response to prescription opioid misuse in Australia, but warned: “On its own – don’t do it.”
-----

EPAS Program Manager

  • Department for Health & Ageing, Adelaide CBD
  • Indicative Total Remuneration: $126,911 – Temp F/T (up to 29/12/2017) – MAS3
You will be directly responsible for managing the delivery of specific projects that relate to critical Enterprise Patient Administration System (EPAS) priorities and goals. You will be required to plan, lead, coordinate, control and manage timely, high quality and cost effective projects and provide expert advice and consultancy services. You will also be required to lead, manage and monitor staff as required such as IT contractors, suppliers and consultants. As the Program Manager, you will provide authoritative advice, leadership, and manage the coordination of the operational outcomes for the EPAS Program, including management of outcomes, milestones and associated documents required to successfully complete this project of work. This position provides the critical conduit to enable and facilitate high level communication channels, collaboration and coordination of functional and operational streams within SA Health, as well as providing the key interface between SA Health and Allscripts.
-----
HaBIC Seminar Series 2016

A big-bang EMR implementation at RCH

The Health and Biomedical Informatics Centre is pleased to invite you to this seminar on EMR implementation. RCH was the first hospital in Australasia to implement the Epic system and went live with this fully integrated EMR across the entire hospital in April 2016. We will present details of what was delivered and the implementation process.
Program
Prof Mike South - Chief Medical Information Officer, The Royal Children's Hospital Melbourne
Jackie McLeod - EMR Project Director, The Royal Children's Hospital Melbourne
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Magnetic field to help detect deadly disease

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM October 28, 2016

Paige Taylor

Researchers from Western Australia, Queensland and Brazil have collaborated to invent a simple and cheap prototype that detects the early stages of a globally devastating parasitic disease considered second only to malaria.
The syringe-like device uses a magnetic field to detect tiny amounts of the parasite eggs that cause schistosomiasis in humans.
Schistosomiasis may initially have no symptoms but eventually causes debilitating organ damage and can be deadly if left untreated. It affects 250 million people a year and is most prevalent in poorer and rural parts of Africa, Asia and the Middle East. However, it is curable if detected early.
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  • October 26 2016 - 9:37AM

Census debacle laid bare: Malcolm Turnbull to decide which heads will roll

Peter Martin
Stephanie Peatling
The Prime Minister's special adviser on cyber security has told the Senate the denial of service attacks on the census website were small and predictable and should not have brought it down on census night.
Malcolm Turnbull now has the report Alastair MacGibbon conducted on behalf of the Prime Minister to determine "which heads will roll and when" as a result of the the debacle.

IBM and ABS share census blame

The cyber attacks on census night were minor and should have been easily repelled, says the Prime Minister's cyber security adviser.
"They were indeed small attacks," Mr MacGibbon told a Senate committee on Tuesday. "The attacks were around three gigabits per second. To have some comparison, it's not uncommon now to see attacks of 100 gigabits per second, and some of the attacks against some of the internet infrastructure such as domain name servers are up to 1000 gigabits per second.
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Global IT spending projected to grow 2.9 percent to US3.5 trillion in 2017

October 24, 2016
Gartner forecasts worldwide IT spending to total $3.4 trillion in 2016, a0.3 percent decline from last year. In 2017, global IT spending is projected to grow 2.9 percent and reach $3.5 trillion. Analysts said this growth will be driven by the software and IT services segments. Worldwide spending on software is projected to grow 7.2 percent, and IT services 4.8 percent. Software and IT services will be key to the development of the civilization infrastructure.
Peter Sondergaard, senior vice president and global head of Research, said that this civilization infrastructure will be the most important thing IT accomplishes in the next decade. “Civilization infrastructure will forever change the way people engage socially, digitally, and physically through connected sensors and digital intelligence”, Mr. Sondergaard said.
This civilization infrastructure will be a new digital platform that extends beyond traditional IT infrastructure using new technologies not familiar to the typical IT department. “Your new digital platform will allow you to participate in the evolving world of business, government, and consumer ecosystems because ecosystems are the next evolution for digital. It’s how you compete at scale”, Mr. Sondergaard said.
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Australian IT spending to hit $85b in 2017: Gartner

Growth in the software and IT services market is driving up IT spending in Australia to a forecast total spend of almost $85 billion in 2017 on the back of organisations undertaking major digital platform transformations.
According to Gartner, the forecast figure of $85 billion (A$) represents a 2.8% increase in spending from this year.
Gartner revealed the forecasts for the Australian market at its Symposium/IT Expo on the Gold Coast on Tuesday, while reporting that global IT spending, also driven by growth in software and IT services revenue, is forecast to reach US$3.5 trillion in 2017, up 2.9%  from 2016 estimated spending of $3.4 trillion.
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Enjoy!
David.

Sunday, October 30, 2016

It Seems The Pharmacists Are Not All That Keen On The myHR – What A Surprise!

This appeared a few days ago.

Why pharmacists are saying no to the e-health system

25 October, 2016
The government’s $1 billion e-health record system could be heading for white-elephant status in community pharmacy – with fewer than 5% using it in any given week.
Only about 1250 pharmacies are registered for the system, previously known as PEHCR and now called My Health Record. And only 20% of these view or upload information in any seven-day period, according to the department of health.
It says that once fully rolled out, the system will enable automatic uploading of dispensing information to a patient’s e-record. Pharmacists will be able to view a patient’s medical history – including shared health summaries and hospital discharge documents.
This would improve efficiency and reduce the risk of medicines misadventure, says the health department. But it admits that only 45% of pharmacies have software that’s compatible with the system.
The Pharmacy Guild is not opposed to the system, but its King Review submission suggests that the government pays pharmacies to participate.
Currently only general practice is incentivised to use the system.
Kos Sclavos, the Guild’s Queensland vice president, says: “Doctors are getting paid, and pharmacists are saying why should we do anything? We’re not getting paid.
“There needs to be some consistency across the health professions, if they (the government) see pharmacy playing a role,” says Mr Sclavos, who was part of the original consultation group on the system.
He says participation costs pharmacies time, money and effort, and many resent the expectation they will do it for free.
He says pharmacy banner groups are discouraging members from participation until the issue of payments is sorted out, something which they deny.
Terry White Chemists has a policy of neither encouraging nor discouraging participation.
Spokesman Jeff McEvoy says that without payments it would be “very hard” to promote.
“We fully support the Guild’s stance on funding,” he says.
“No one can expect someone to do more for less.”
Health informatics experts say it would make sense to pay pharmacists to use the system if it was working, but it’s a moot point because it is not.
Dr David Glance, director of University of West Australia’s Centre for Software Practice, says despite hefty investment the system has “failed since its inception” and does not enjoy support from GPs or patients.
More here:
This is all a little confusing I must say. Readers will recall that there are two electronic prescription exchanges (Medisecure and eRX) that have been operational for a few years and which, if used, create a record that goes to the myHR.
There is heaps of information here:
and here:
Under the 5th and 6th Pharmacy Agreements there is funding for scanning printed e-prescriptions that is paid to pharmacists and the ePIP incentives are linked to e-Prescribing as well.
Additionally we have automatic feeds of e-prescription information to the myHR where an e-prescription is used.
So it rather seems we have the situation where heaps of information is flowing into the myHR from the PBS System and the e-Prescribing systems but that it is partial and incomplete, and of little apparent use.
Yet again it seems to e-Health ecosystem, centred around the myHR is not seemingly delivering as it was intended.
I wonder might the ADHA stand back for a moment – and map out the e-Health information flows and work out where value can actually be found – and work those conclusions into the planned new National E-Health Strategy.
There have been all sorts of new actors emerge in the private sector that will eventually need to be recognised and integrated practically and functionally for the benefit of patients and clinicians. One recent announcement is here – and it is just one of many:

Thodey, Bassat back UHG health info bridge technology

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM October 25, 2016

Damon Kitney

Seek chief executive Andrew Bassat and former Telstra CEO and now CSIRO chairman David Thodey have taken strategic stakes in a Melbourne health technology company allowing corporations, doctors and insurers to share medical records online.
Unified Healthcare Group, whose “medEbridge’’ online platform is used to send requests for medical reports and files from insurers to doctors, is now preparing to launch a multi-million-dollar capital raising to bankroll its growth plans after securing the support of Mr Bassat and Mr Thodey.
In June the company secured the exclusive support from the Royal Australian College of GPs for the exchange of health information from GPs to businesses and government agencies.
“The support of the RACGP, the peak body representing the 30,000-plus GPs, is very important for UHG to achieve its objectives to improve the interactions between businesses and healthcare providers,’’ said UHG chief executive Brandon Carp.
“We are confident with our strategy and vision to be the go-to platform connecting businesses and healthcare providers.
“And to accelerate the growth we will be raising a multi-million-dollar sum to drive increased sales into new business sectors, expand the healthcare provider marketplace and potential ­bolt-on acquisitions.” An information memorandum for the issue will be distributed to potential investors in the coming months.
 “This is a classic two-sided marketplace, the more traction you have with healthcare providers, the more opportunities there are with businesses and vice versa. There is a real network effect that operates here,” Dr Carp said.
More here:
The need for a rational well-thought out and well consulted strategy could not be greater – before we wind up with an ill co-ordinated and overlapping collection of only partially useful systems.
If this is co-ordinating role is not taken seriously and undertaken sensibly and fairly we are at risk of having more failures and bankruptcies than is reasonable.
David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 342 – Results – 30th October, 2016.

Here are the results of the poll.

Should The Government Be Planning To Outsource The Development And Delivery Of The New Medicare Payments System?

Yes 84% (124)

No 13% (19)

I Have No Idea 3% (5)

Total votes: 148

A large majority seem to think the Government have got is right on this one!

A very large turnout of votes.

Again, many, many thanks to all those that voted!

David.