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, November 05, 2016

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links – 5th November, 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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Patients getting e-prescriptions more likely to get them filled

Published October 28 2016, 7:11am EDT
Patients are more likely to pick up and fill their medications if they are given prescriptions in electronic format rather than traditional paper scripts.
That’s the finding of a retrospective review of medical records among a cohort of new patients prescribed dermatologic medications at a Dallas safety-net hospital’s outpatient dermatology clinic.
The study, published in JAMA Dermatology, included a total of 4,318 prescriptions written for 2,496 patients—803 patients received electronic prescriptions, while 1,693 received paper. Researchers found a 16 percent reduction in primary non-adherence when the prescription was electronically prescribed.
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Big Data and Healthcare Analytics Forum top takeaways

Health org's trekking deeper into analytics should expect a new information wave, understand that crowdsourcing can pay off, know machine learning is real right now, buckle down on governance. And don’t hold out for perfection. 
October 27, 2016 06:44 AM
We have to make better use of health data.
That was the final sentence spoken at the HIMSS and Healthcare IT News Big Data and Healthcare Analytics Forum this week.
Sree Chaguturu, vice president of population health management at Partners HealthCare spoke those words, which served as something of an ideal, if unplanned, conclusion to the two-day event in Boston.
Indeed, that sentiment permeated through many of the discussions ranging from hype and disappointment to lessons learned and success stories by providers large and small. 
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How to ensure OpenNotes is a positive experience for patients

Oct 28, 2016 10:15am
With more than 6 million Americans now with access to their doctor’s notes through a patient portal, one doctor offers several suggestions for using them in a positive way.
Some doctors are apprehensive about patients reading their notes and have become “less candid” in their written assessments, according to a previous article in the Journal of the American Medical Association. However, the OpenNotes initiative aims to make doctor notes available to 50 million patients nationwide over the next three years.
To that end, brevity and clear language are keys to making open notes work for everyone involved, this writes Jared Klein, M.D. of Harborview Medical Center in Seattle in a commentary published in the American Journal of Medicine. He urges doctors to discuss what they write with patients, then write what was discussed.
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Predictive analytics fuel Johns Hopkins 'command center'

by Dan Bowman 
Oct 28, 2016 1:03pm
Predictive analytics are at the heart of a control center launched this year by The Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore that aims to improve patient safety and provider efficiency.
The system, housed at The Judy Reitz Capacity Command Center, monitors 14 IT systems at the hospital simultaneously, and receives roughly 500 messages per minute from those tools, according to Johns Hopkins. Twenty-four staffers from disparate departments around the organization man the command center, which was built in collaboration with GE Healthcare Partners.
Since its February launch, the system has helped to drastically improve Johns Hopkins' ability to accept transfer patients with complex medical conditions, as well as the speed of assigning emergency room patients to beds who have been admitted. The hospital also says that delays in transferring patients from operating rooms have plummeted, and that patients increasingly are being discharged in a more timely manner.
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How to better prepare for inevitable cyber attacks

Published October 28 2016, 3:48pm EDT
Any healthcare company or provider knows the obvious—hackers are working hard to get into their networks.
The industry has long been in the top 10 for the number of records compromised in data breaches, and now has moved to first place, with more than 100 million records compromised, according to the 2016 IBM X-Force Cyber Security Intelligence Index.
Part of the reason—and perhaps the major driver—is economics. Experts believe that a stolen medical record is worth more than 10 times a stolen credit card.
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Cleveland Clinic names top 10 medical innovations 2017

FHIR makes the list. As do other innovations ranging from better treatment for depression to disappearing stents. Read about all ten here. 
October 26, 2016 01:07 PM
CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Clinic today revealed it’s top 10 medical innovations to expect in 2017.
The top 10 innovations were unveiled to more than 1,600 doctors, entrepreneurs and other industry leaders at the 14th annual Cleveland Clinic Medical Innovation Summit here.
Here they are:
1. The microbiome. The microbiome is made up of trillions of helpful bacteria that make a home inside the human gut – to prevent, treat and diagnose disease.
2. Diabetes drugs that reduce heart disease and death. People with diabetes are twice as likely to have heart disease or stroke than someone without the chronic condition, according to the National Institutes of Health. Two new drugs recently approved recently approved to treat diabetes. Novo Nordisk’s liraglutide, sold as Victoza, and Eli Lilly’s empagliflozin, sold as Jardiance, have shown promise in reducing these heart-related complications.
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Despite persistent training, Baystate Health suffers a breach

Published October 26 2016, 1:49pm EDT
Regular cybersecurity training and the placement of a button on email to enable employees to report suspicious messages to the IT department for investigation—rather than clicking on the message—helped mitigate a recent phishing attack on five-hospital Baystate Health in Massachusetts.
Baystate has nearly 13,000 employees, and many received the malicious email—designed to look like an internal Baystate memo to employees—but only five of them clicked on it, a spokesperson says. That still put protected health information at risk for 13,112 patients.
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End-of-life shared systems face 'immense challenges' - paper

Ben Heather
26 October 2016
Attempts to set-up end-of-life electronic care systems are falling short, with many failing to reach the dying patients that need them, a new paper says.
The paper, published in quarterly BMJ Supportive and Palliative Care, reviewed the development and use of electronic palliative care coordination systems in England.
The government has committed to rolling out EPaCCS or equivalent shared end of life digital records across England by 2020.
The researchers found there was little guidance about what an EPaCCS should look like and weak evidence that the systems that were operating were delivering benefits for patients.
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Special Report: VNA and Data Storage

Trusts are starting to find new uses for vendor neutral archives, and the IT architecture for delivering them is evolving in response to new demands, Kim Thomas discovers.
A vendor neutral archive is based on the simple, yet useful, idea of storing all types of unstructured content (for example, image files, video clips and PDF documents) in a single place.
Because a VNA uses the XDS standard, the files can be accessed and used by a range of applications, irrespective of supplier. As demand among NHS trusts for VNAs increases, this simple idea is being put to myriad uses.
From radiology to other ‘ologies’
Three years ago, when the National PACS Programme element of the National Programme for IT ended, many trusts bought VNAs to archive radiology images.
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CHIME: Ransomware top concern for health IT, security execs

Oct 27, 2016 12:46pm
Ransomware and malware attacks rank as the top cybersecurity concerns for hospital IT and security executives who responded to a survey jointly unveiled Thursday by the College of Healthcare Information Management Executives (CHIME) and the Association for Executives in Healthcare Information Security (AEHIS).
In particular, survey respondents (.pdf) indicate they worry most about data exposure, but said that poor authentication was the most common vulnerability. Malware and ransomware were listed as the most common exploits, by the 190 CHIME and AEHIS members who participated in the survey.
Most executives said that because security is not looked at as a patient care or quality of care issue, business strategy did not drive security strategy. Still, almost all respondents indicated that compared to last year, their organization was more prepared to handle an attack.
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EHRs are legal records that can be used against providers in court

Oct 27, 2016 5:49am
Much of the focus on electronic health records has been about their adoption and the requirements of the Meaningful Use program, but many providers may not realize that EHRs also represent legal records that can impact medical malpractice litigation.
While malpractice involving paper medical records often dealt with illegible clinician notes or confusing abbreviations that lead to errors, EHRs often involve other kinds of mistakes, such as those made by hitting the wrong item on a drop down menu, an article in Healthcare IT News outlines.
Another problem with EHRs in malpractice litigation stems from the inability of providers to prove that they made a clinical decision based on information in front of them in the tool. What's more, according to the article, printouts of an EHR, which can run to thousands of pages, do not look the same as when a clinician actually uses the software.
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October 25, 2016

AAP National Conference: Algorithm aids in managing childhood obesity

Carla Kemp, Senior Editor
It’s one thing to tell parents that their child should stop drinking sweetened beverages. It’s another to have the conversation in a way that is practical so parents feel the advice is truly helpful, said Ihuoma Eneli, M.D., FAAP, a member of the AAP Section on Obesity and associate director of the AAP Institute for Healthy Childhood Weight.
When giving families evidence-based messages for healthy living such as to drink more water or eat more fruits and vegetables, “I think the how is really important,” Dr. Eneli said.
She provided examples of how to engage families in such conversations during a session titled “The New AAP Weight Management Algorithm: Evidence-Based Management of Obesity.” Dr. Eneli also introduced the algorithm and explained how pediatricians can use it in everyday practice and determine if they actually made a difference in their patients’ lives.
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With hacking on the rise, physician records at risk

October 25, 2016
The numbers are staggering: Nearly one in every three Americans have had their medical records compromised, with more than 112 million healthcare records breached last year alone.
Yet despite those figures, as reported by HHS’ Office of Civil Rights, a majority of doctors surveyed say they are not worried about the security of the patient health information residing in their electronic health record (EHR) systems.
More than half (58%) of physicians say they are not concerned about the security of the data contained in their EHRs, according to Medical Economics’ exclusive 2016 EHR Report.
Medical Economics asked 2,129 physicians: “Are you concerned about the security of the data contained in your EHR system and the potential for a breach?” Of the 2,111 who replied, 879 said yes while the other 1,232 said no.
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FDA releases draft guidance on clinical management software

Written by Jessica Kim Cohen | October 26, 2016 |
The FDA has released a new draft guidance that outlines how developers should evaluate software used for the clinical management of patients.
This software, called "software as a medical device," is not part of a hardware medical device and does not come into direct contact with patients; however, it may analyze data used to inform clinical decisions and patient care. The guidance, which was drafted by the International Medical Device Regulators Forum, provides recommendations for how developers can prove the effectiveness, performance and safety of this software.
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Why patient engagement will only rise in importance

Published October 25 2016, 2:48pm EDT
From massive medical centers in the heart of major urban areas to small hospitals in rural areas well off the Interstate Highway System, there exists, in one form or another, a patient engagement initiative. Reflective of that are the 1,100 job openings that returned when I typed in “patient engagement” in the Jobs search box on LinkedIn.
Finding ways to engage with patients makes all kinds of sense in this day of high deductible health plans. More of the healthcare dollar must now come from what is increasingly someone referred to as a healthcare consumer. And that consumer is involved in healthcare in more ways than financial responsibility.
Since 1990, average life expectancy in the United States has increased from 71.8 to 76.4 years for men, and 77.8 to 81.2 years for women. During that same period, the uninsured rate has dropped from 13.9 percent to 9.1 percent. And the number of physician visits is increasing at a rate faster than this country’s population growth.
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Big data: Blind man with the elephant?

Predictive analytics are not going to be perfect. But that’s okay. Experts explain the sweet spot to target today.
October 24, 2016 04:47 PM
BOSTON — Big data means different things to different people. But as providers increasingly apply analytics tools to growing data sets, some realities are at least starting to become clearer. Among them: reasons why the technology need not be perfect to be effective now.
"We’re kind of like the blind man with the elephant," said Richard Finley, director for medical analytics at the University of Mississippi Medical Center, at the HIMSS Big Data and Healthcare Analytics Forum. "We’re all dealing with the same thing but we all see it a little differently."
Indeed, hospitals and networks are investing analytics for similar reasons, including value-based care, risk sharing, improving clinical quality, patient satisfaction, population health and overall performance.
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A framework to boost security at healthcare organizations

Published October 26 2016, 2:11pm EDT
The number of patient records breached in healthcare organizations across the United States to date is about 200 million, which is staggeringly close to three-quarters of the entire insured population. The reasons for these breaches range from hacktivism to personal/criminal/political gain to militarism.
The Office of Civil Rights (OCR) at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) only started maintaining the breach list in July 2009. At a cost estimate of $400 per breached record in 2015, the total cost estimate of all breaches since 2009 is more than $75 billion. Just within the past 18 months, the total number of breached records has been close to 150 million. Note that only breaches covering more than 500 records per incident had to be reported to OCR until August 2016; we may therefore have been missing a very “long tail” in the breach curve.
In 2015 alone, the number of records breached was 112 million; the numbers for 2016 to date is far below that amount. Patient records used to have much higher financial value than credit card information; they now have much higher military and political value as we warily look to the future of cyber and biological warfare.
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Doc groups lobbied against telemedicine expansion in DoD funding bill

Oct 26, 2016 10:22am
Both the American Medical Association (AMA) and the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) have put a lot of effort into urging the Defense Department to kill a section of language in its funding bill expanding telehealth.
The 2017 Defense authorization bill (S. 2943) mandates the availability of real-time virtual visits in its TRICARE healthcare program. However, the medical groups oppose language in Section 705(d) that bases reimbursement, licensure and liability on the location of the doctor, rather than the patient, Politico Morning eHealth reports.
“Allowing physicians with a single license to treat TRICARE beneficiaries in any state via telemedicine would create episodes of medical care that the state in which the patient resides cannot readily regulate, if at all,” AAFP wrote in a letter last month to leaders of the House and Senate Armed Services committees.
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Digital health: 3 doc worries

by Dan Bowman 
Oct 26, 2016 2:00pm
Despite the growing use of digital tools in healthcare, not all providers are confident that technology can have a positive impact on their efforts, according to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center’s Brennan Spiegel.
In a recent blog post, Spiegel, who serves as the hospital’s director of health services research in academic affairs and clinical transformation, discusses some of the top “fears” he’s heard over the years from doctors hesitant to embrace IT with open arms. Here are three of those fears, and his response to each:
Fear 1: There is no time to account for all of the data created by digital health tools.
Spiegel says that, perhaps, the answer is training a new specialist--the “digitalist”--who specifically focuses on monitoring and acting on remote patient data. “This provider does not yet exist, just as ‘The Hospitalist’ did not exist prior to 1996, when Robert Wachter and Lee Goldman coined the term to describe a much-needed clinician to fill an unmet need for inpatient care,” he says. “The Digitalist will reside in an e-coordination facility and remotely track data from biosensors, portals apps, and social media, then combine the data with clinical parameters and knowledge about the patients’ medical history.” Such a specialist, he says, would also work to prevent crises and cut avoidable readmissions.
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Oct 26, 2016 @ 11:56 AM 403 views The Little Black Book of Billionaire Secrets

The Future Of Health Care Is In Data Analytics

I write about the many issues technology entrepreneurs confront.
Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.
Every minute of the day, eCare21, a remote patient-monitoring system, collects thousands of pieces of health data about more than 1,000 senior citizens. The telehealth system uses smartphones, Fitbits, Bluetooth and sensors to collect information about things like blood pressure, physical activity, glucose levels, medication intake and weight. The information is then compiled on a dashboard so that the patients’ doctors, loved ones and caregivers can keep an eye on them and provide proactive care, even from hundreds of miles away.
This is proving to be a valuable service for individuals managing complicated health situations. But Vadim Cherdak, CEO and president of eCare21, says we are only scratching the surface. Once his company partners with a big data analytics service, it will be able to glean even more useful insights from the intense amount of data flowing in.
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Information governance, informatics are top priorities for AHIMA

Published October 25 2016, 7:04am EDT
As the healthcare industry transitions from fee-for-service to value-based care, health information professionals are on the frontlines of these momentous changes helping clinicians leverage technology to achieve better patient outcomes while reducing costs.
The American Health Information Management Association’s mission is to advance data analytics, informatics, and information governance in support of these goals. AHIMA, which held its annual national conference last week in Baltimore, is ramping up its resources, tools, and education/accreditation programs to ensure that the more than 100,000 health information professionals it represents are prepared for this unprecedented healthcare transformation.
Health Data Management sat down with AHIMA’s Lynne Thomas Gordon (Chief Executive Officer), Melissa Martin (President/Chair of the 2016 Board of Directors) and Ann Chenoweth (President Elect/Chair of the 2017 Board of Directors) to discuss the state of the industry and the association’s priorities for the coming year.
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Data 3.0 is coming to healthcare - experts foretell what that means

Hospitals that haven't started making data actionable, explainable, trusted and contextualized should start now. Why the urgency? In two or three years, finding talented data scientists and other skilled workers is only going to get more difficult.
October 24, 2016 01:10 PM
BOSTON —Health data is now on the verge of a new wave. Call it Data 3.0.
At the core of this new age of healthcare analytics: data that is actionable, explainable, trusted and contextualized.
"Context is everything, especially in data," said Tripp Jennings, chief value and informatics officer at Palmetto Health, speaking Oct. 24 at the HIMSS Big Data and Healthcare Analytics Forum.
To achieve that necessary context, health data has to be explainable so clinicians can understand why it's important, according to Terry Sullivan, chief medical information officer of OnPointe. Ken McCardle, senior director of clinical data and analytics at Mount Sinai Health System, added that the information also has to be trustworthy.
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Data governance: Make analytics 'an amazing asset'

Governance isn't always fun. But it is the most important building block for a healthcare analytics strategy. How the University of Mississippi Medical Center and Dartmouth-Hitchcock are turning the tedious work into an indispensable boon to productivity.
October 24, 2016 06:25 AM
Elizabeth Stedina, director of the Dartmouth Analytics Institute, said the system is breaking new ground and no single policy can cover all of its needs. 
There is no glory in governance. There are no sparkling data clusters to admire. There are no dazzling 3D images. There is nothing that makes people step back and say: "That is so cool!"
Instead, governance is decidedly unsexy. It is tedium. It is drudgery. It is painstaking diligence. It is conscientious review. It is checking, double checking and checking one more time for good measure. It is an exercise in patience that challenges even the most imperturbable people. It is a seemingly endless chore.
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FDA seeks to intervene in device harm reporting

Oct 25, 2016 12:07pm
In the wake of a series of antibiotic-resistant infection outbreaks caused by contaminated medical devices, the Food and Drug Administration is stepping up its efforts to improve hospital reporting of device-associated deaths or injuries.
Inspections of 17 hospitals found serious deficiencies in adverse event reporting, according to a blog posted on the agency’s website. The inspections uncovered numerous events that were never reported in violation of agency requirements, according to Jeffrey Shuren, M.D., who heads the FDA’s device division. In many cases, failure to report came down to simple ignorance or lack of training in reporting requirements on the part of hospital staff, according to the post.
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AHA to ONC: Provide info on readiness of standards for real-world use

Oct 25, 2016 12:37pm
The American Hospital Association wants the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT to provide more information to healthcare industry stakeholders in its 2017 Interoperability Standards Advisory (ISA) about how it differentiates between the maturity levels of disparate health IT standards.
In a letter sent Tuesday to National Coordinator Vindell Washington, AHA Senior Vice President of Public Policy Analysis and Development Ashley Thompson says that the draft ISA, made public in August, fails to include links to any maturity assessments for standards. AHA also calls on ONC to publicly release feedback received about adoption experiences of standards and implementation specifications.
Additionally, AHA wants ONC to provide information on “the readiness of standards for provider use” in the real world, as opposed to just information on the adoption of standards. “[E]xperience to date indicates that a standard may have a high adoption rate as a result of a health information technology certification requirement, although it does not meet provider needs,” Thompson says.
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Global computerized physician order entry systems market to reach $1.5B by 2020: 7 key trends

Written by Anuja Vaidya (Twitter | Google+)  | October 24, 2016 |  Print  | Email
The global computerized physician order entry systems market is anticipated to see strong growth over the next four to five years, according to a Persistence Market Research report.
Here are seven trends:
1. The global CPOE systems market is expected to be valued at $1.5 billion by 2020.
2. The market was valued at $999.4 million in 2014.
3. It is slated to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 6.8 percent from 2014 to 2020.
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IT Adapts to MACRA, ONC Final Rules

Scott Mace, October 25, 2016

While providers praise flexibility, work is just beginning on which technology will work best, and whether regulations are too little or too much.

Mari Savikis
As the final days of the Obama administration tick down, a flurry of final rules from CMS and ONC promise to reduce the reporting burden which the meaningful use program imposed on providers.
The final rule on MACRA and Merit-based Incentive Program legislation provide more flexibility on how physicians enter the value-based payment world of CMS' new Quality Payment Program.
John Halamka, MD, chief information officer of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, praised the final outlines of the Merit-based Incentive Payment System and Advanced Alternative Payment Models (APM).
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How to raise defenses to defeat phishing attacks

Published October 21 2016, 2:15pm EDT
Phishing attacks are an effective and profitable form of crime. This helps explain why these types of attacks continue to increase according to the recent Anti-Phishing Working Group (APWG) Phishing Activity Trends Report, 2nd Quarter 2016.
The total number of unique phishing sites observed in the second quarter of 2016 was 466,065 which is an all-time high. The second quarter’s total rose 61 percent from the 289,371 phish found in the first quarter of 2016, which was the previous high.
Phishing attacks occur when cybercriminals use false emails or websites to extract confidential information from unsuspecting online users such as Social Security or credit card numbers or account and identity information. Users have a reason to be cautious—phishing attacks undermine the confidence in the authenticity of e-mails and websites.
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Apple, Google, IBM Watson, Intel and WalMart are ushering in new era of rapid transformation in healthcare, study finds

Disruption is already starting. Hospital and IT vendor executives should pay close attention to innovations and emerging business and care models, Frost & Sullivan says.
October 21, 2016 07:06 AM 
Healthcare CIOs take note: Prepare now for the onslaught of crowdsourcing, open source, mass customization as well as innovative and disruptive business models that are coming your way.
The ongoing shift toward value-based and customer-centric care delivery will spark innovative solutions and add value for healthcare customers. Such digitization of products, services and commerce models, in fact, are already beginning to democratize healthcare systems in disruptive ways, according to global research firm Frost & Sullivan.
"CEOs should pay attention to developing innovative business models to monetize emerging opportunities,” Frost & Sullivan  analyst Kamaljit Beher wrote in a new report. “Companies such as Apple, Google, IBM Watson and Intel will continue to compete outside their domain, forcing traditional healthcare companies to change their dominant business models.”
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ECRI: Be vigilant to prevent copy-and-paste errors

Oct 24, 2016 10:22am
Clinicians and their staff must be vigilant to prevent using copy-and-paste functions in electronic health records in ways that propagate errors, speakers from the ECRI Institute told attendees last week at the American Health Information Management Association's (AHIMA) annual conference in Baltimore.
A doctor might not have a true picture of the progression of an ailment if the initial assessment is copied forward into records of subsequent visits and might consider the record untrustworthy, co-presenters Lorraine Possanza and Robert Giannini told the group, according to coverage of the talk reported in Physicians Practice.
"If I pasted information and it's incorrect and I repeatedly paste that information that is incorrect, I now have errors that are propagated," Possanza said.
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How early data governance paves the way for advanced IT efforts

Oct 24, 2016 11:00am
University of Mississippi Medical Center Chief Health Information Officer John Showalter says he gets strange looks when he tells people his organization worked 18 months on data governance without producing a single report.
“You want unsexy? All that time was spent on procedures and protocols with no analytics,” he explains in a Healthcare IT News article.
But in the 14 months since, his organization has produced 40 data visual apps and 1,200 reports with just five report writers because that work so clearly defined the governance rules, he says.
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Visual dashboard brings together key clinical data in ICU

Published October 21 2016, 7:06am EDT
Electronic health records bring many benefits to clinicians, but Rondel Albarado, MD, did occasionally miss one benefit of the clipboard hanging at the end of the patient’s hospital bed—a one-glance look at various charted information.
“The clipboard at the base of the bed was where the nurse had trended information overnight,” says Albarado, who works for UT Physicians, part of UTHealth, teaching in a variety of programs and also is a trauma medical director for the intensive care unit at Memorial Hermann.
There, he oversees 23 beds that handles trauma and surgical intensive care, and a variety of physical conditions are monitored in real-time as clinicians work closely to preserve the lives on some of its most critically ill patients.
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Survey: Cryptographic issues, information leakage top list of 2016 healthcare security concerns

Written by Jessica Kim Cohen | October 21, 2016 
Cybersecurity concerns vary by industry, according to Veracode's seventh annual "The State of Software Security" report.
While government industries are most vulnerable to information leakage and financial services industries are most vulnerable to code quality issues, the healthcare industry is susceptible to a unique set of cyberattacks.
Here are the industry's top five cybersecurity vulnerabilities, ranked by prevalence:
1. Cryptographic issues
2. Information leakage
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Athenahealth, Allscripts websites down amid nationwide hack

By Shelby Livingston  | October 21, 2016
The websites of EHR software providers Athenahealth and Allscripts were down for some parts of the country Friday during the same time hackers launched an attack against the servers of Dyn, a major Domain Name System host.
Twitter, Spotify, Reddit, and Shopify were down most of Friday morning and afternoon, but healthcare companies seemed to be largely unaffected.
Dyn posted on its website Friday that it experienced an attack early that morning but restored services a few hours later. A second attack occurred around 11 a.m. Central time. Dyn is still investigating and mitigating the attacks, it said.
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Enjoy!
David.

Friday, November 04, 2016

If Ever There Was A Reminder That Private Information Security Is Vital – This Is it!

This broke late last week:

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.
The database collected information submitted when an individual books an appointment - either on paper or online - to donate blood. The process requires donors to enter their personal details and fill out an eligibility questionnaire.
It does not contain data on blood reports or analyses, or responses to the full donor questionnaire all blood bank visitors are required to fill out at the time of their donation.
The database was published on the webserver of a Red Cross Blood Service technology partner that maintains the service's website, not the organisation’s www.donate.blood.com.au site where online bookings are made.
"This is a seriously egregious cock-up - this should never happen," Hunt told iTnews.
More here:
There were more details published here:

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.
That was also the day its website maintenance and development contractor, Precedent, found out about the giant breach it had inadvertently caused.
Precedent was engaged by the blood service to redesign and maintain its core website, www.donateblood.com.au, in 2015.
It created a Drupal 7-based responsive site to make it easier for people who have never donated blood to find out more about the process, and to make bookings for donors much simpler.
The new site was launched to the public in November last year.
However, a human error made by one of Precedent’s technical team meant a database backup containing all the information donors enter as part of their booking process was exposed online for almost two months from September 5 this year.
More here:
There is also coverage in all the mainstream press.
It is hard to know what to say – other than to agree with the commentator that said this sort of thing should simply not happen.
There is a warning here for all who hold patient private data!
David.

Thursday, November 03, 2016

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

November 3  Edition.
Parliament  is due back on the 7th of November. I wonder what mess we will have emerged by the time we all get to be reading this.
Both here and overseas one gets the feeling we might be heading into a soft patch. Time will tell if I am right. Certainly the looming US election is beginning to cause some issues for the world!
In Australia we do seem to be a bit demoralised with the share-market having fallen 2.7% last week and bond yields have risen significantly.
Interest rates now seem to be so low that it is doing harm.
COMMENT
  • October 29 2016 - 9:19AM

Why ultra-low interest rates are on the nose

Clancy Yeates
People making a miserable return on their savings accounts aren't the only ones losing patience with very low interest rates.
In the last month, heavyweights from the International Monetary Fund and Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, and some central banks themselves, have all been banging on about the growing dangers created in a world of very cheap debt.
Even our own Reserve Bank has flagged concerns about how low interest rates globally are affecting investor behaviour.
Why the outbreak of concern? How come we are hearing more about these risks now, some eight years after rates were slashed to combat the global financial crisis? And do these risks apply here in Australia?
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Thursday Update:

The prospects for a Trump victory and all that involves (wall, no trade, nuclear risk etc.) means all share markets have fallen big time! Ours more than most.

On another tack we now seem to have political chaos in our Senate. Its all pretty sad!

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Here are a few other things I have noticed.
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Budget Issues.

EXCLUSIVE
  • October 25 2016 - 6:43AM

Coalition's housing affordability inquiry scrapped amid growing market fears

Peter Martin
James Massola
The government is sitting on hundreds of pages of evidence and scores of submissions about housing affordability it is unable to use because it let its inquiry into the subject lapse.
News of the quashed inquiry emerged as Treasurer Scott Morrison delivered a speech in which he declared housing affordability to be an "important policy focus" of the Turnbull government in the new parliamentary term.

The vanishing Australian dream

The commonwealth of home ownership is being replaced by a new feudalism of negative-gearing investment, says Peter Martin.
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  • October 24 2016

Scott Morrison puts states on notice over house prices

James Massola

Treasurer Scott Morrison has put the states on notice over booming house prices, flagging a major push by the Turnbull government to increase supply and help first home buyers own their own home.
And Mr Morrison will promise the next meeting of state and federal treasurers, to be held in December, will focus on how state governments can do away with planning rules that stop, or delay, new houses being built.
He will also leave the door open to incentives for state governments to reform their laws and release more land, in a broadening of one of the key recommendations of the Harper review of competition policy.
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  • Updated Oct 25 2016 at 9:33 AM

States say CGT and neg gearing must be part of housing price fix

The states have welcomed the prospect of federal government payments in return for increasing housing supply but argue Canberra must also do its bit for affordability by looking at curbing capital gains tax exemptions and negative gearing.
As Treasurer Scott Morrison launched another debate with the states on Monday about removing impediments to supply and flagged incentive payments as rewards, the Labor Treasurers of South Australia, Queensland and Victoria said Commonwealth policy must also play a role.
"If you want to have an honest discussion about housing affordability, you've got to put everything on the table, not just land availability," said SA's Tom Koutsantonis.
"Confident governments aren't afraid of debate," he said.
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EDITORIAL
  • October 25 2016 - 12:05AM

Scott Morrison ignores the average property punter

Now he is making states the scapegoats instead of looking at tax breaks.
Punters accept that some horses in the Melbourne Cup next Tuesday will wear blinkers to keep them focused on the job at hand. The blinkers stop the nags shying away from a noisy, desperate mob on the fence. The privileged few in the members stand, by contrast, are winning in the financial race of life no matter which horses greets the judge first.
Treasurer Scott Morrison, it seems, cares more about preserving the members' benefits than giving the punters a fair go. He has blinkered himself on housing affordability in a way that locks in a two-tier access to the property market.
While it's good news that the Treasurer is talking about house prices and wants states to help tackle lack of supply, Mr Morrison is letting politics and vested interest blind his judgment. A mix of solutions is needed for a problem created by a complex interplay of factors beyond housing supply.
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Treasurer Scott Morrison urges business tax cuts to drive South Australian jobs growth

Paul Starick, CHIEF REPORTER, The Advertiser
October 26, 2016 12:36am
JOBS growth in some of South Australia’s most important businesses is at risk unless they are given tax cuts, Treasurer Scott Morrison will tell an Adelaide forum today.
In an interview with The Advertiser, Mr Morrison argued that prominent firms like Golden North, d’Arenberg and others with a turnover up to $50 million deserved tax relief to drive jobs and wages growth.
SA Senator Nick Xenophon has declared he will back a tax cut for 27.5 per cent for businesses with a turnover up to $10 million.
But Mr Morrison, who is in talks with Senator Xenophon, argues this blocks tax cuts for medium-sized businesses with turnovers up to $50 million which are the engine room of the SA economy.
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OMMENT
  • October 27 2016 - 7:32AM

Who's to blame for rising house prices? We are, actually

Peter Martin
If only we had a clue why home prices are soaring out of reach. On Monday Treasurer Scott Morrison offered half a clue. He told the Urban Development Institute it was all about supply. The more houses and apartments that developers were allowed to build, he said, the more residents would be able to buy.
That's true, if you avert your eyes from some of the more immediate reasons residents are unable to buy. And they're growing.
Morrison said over the past 20 years the proportion of households either owning outright the homes in which they live or buying them with a mortgage has slid from 71 to 67 per cent. For Australians aged 25 to 34 the proportion has dived from 39 to 29 per cent, and for those between 35 and 44, from 63 to 52 per cent. These days only 13 per cent of new home loans go to first home buyers, down from 19 per cent.
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Morrison tells NXT don't squib budget duty

October 26, 201610:48am
Australian Associated Press
Scott Morrison has told Senate powerbroker Nick Xenophon and his team not to "squib" their responsibility to back tax cuts for businesses in their South Australian state and support measures to repair the federal budget.
"When the Labor Party is going to vote against improving the budget ... (the Xenophon team) sit in the box seat here and they can't squib it," Mr Morrison told 5AA Adelaide radio on Wednesday.
The treasurer is holding a business roundtable in Adelaide on Wednesday about the government's plan to give tax cuts to firms that have an annual turnover of up to $50 million as part of its 10-year company tax plan.
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Negative Gearing Is Positively Absurd

Here's how Scott Morrison can REALLY fix housing affordability.

27/10/2016 5:42 AM AEDT | Updated 5 hours ago
There are significant policy levers available for the Treasurer to pull.
Scott Morrison finally wants to talk about housing affordability. Good.
After years of pretending there isn't a problem, the Abbott/Turnbull Government has opened Pandora's Box, let the genie out of the bottle and, at long last, admitted that it is nigh on impossible for young Australians to buy their first home.
There are significant policy levers available for the Treasurer to pull, genuine actions that he could take within the remit of his portfolio, which would ease the unprecedented financial pressure on first home buyers. The problem is that he's refusing to even touch them.
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  • Updated Oct 27 2016 at 11:45 PM

Morrison told not to bank terms of trade spike

The federal government is unlikely to factor into the coming budget update a long-term revenue boom from spiking commodity prices despite the temptation to do so to keep restive credit ratings agencies at bay.
With the government due to release its mid-year budget update in seven weeks,Treasurer Scott Morrison is being urged to maintain a sober outlook for the future direction of commodity prices or risk being caught short if the price surge turns out to be fleeting.
As the nation's most important commodity export – iron ore – traded above US$63 a tonne,  official figures showed the terms of trade jumped around 4.5 per cent in the September quarter.
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Budget to gain from rising export prices

October 27, 20164:24pm
Colin Brinsden, AAP Economics Correspondent Australian Associated Press
A rebound in national income suggests Treasurer Scott Morrison will be able to report an improved budget bottom line when he hands down his mid-year review in December.
New figures show Australia's terms of trade grew for a second quarter in a row, after several years of decline in the post-mining boom era.
Export prices grew 3.5 per cent in the September quarter, the fastest growth in three years, and building on the 1.4 per cent increase in the previous three months.
Import prices fell for a fourth straight quarter, according to Australian Bureau of Statistics data released on Thursday.
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  • Updated Oct 27 2016 at 1:46 PM

'Double-dipping' paid parental leave crackdown likely to be delayed

The Coalition's crackdown on parents so-called "double dipping" on paid parental leave due to start January 1 looks closer to getting through parliament but could be delayed under pressure from the crossbench who have slammed Treasurer Scott Morrison's 'megaphone lecturing'. 
Meanwhile the government have hit back at claims they do not understand working mothers, after Social Services Minister Christian Porter said PPL was designed to get women back to work, saying they were sympathetic. 
"We are fathers. We are husbands...Insofar as men can understand these matters, we are absolutely understanding and sympathetic and we are working with our colleagues and we will obviously engage with the Senate to negotiate the passage of this legislation," Mr Turnbull said. 
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  • Updated Oct 29 2016 at 12:01 AM

Pauline Hanson sounds budget warning, defends welfare cuts.

One Nation leader Pauline Hanson has defended her party's decision to back more than $6 billion in welfare cuts, saying unless the country started living within its means it would no longer be able to provide essential services for those who needed them the most.
In an exclusive interview with AFR Weekend, Senator Hanson indicated One Nation would take a hard line in support of budget repair.
"Right across the board, not only in welfare, I see a big waste of money and we actually have to rein it back in."
She said successive governments, in a bid to win votes, had allowed welfare to become a way of life rather than a helping hand and "tough decisions" were needed.
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  • Oct 28 2016 at 5:00 PM

Why the Senate comes down to the Scott Morrison and Nick Xenophon show

When the dust settled after the July 2 election, and the full extent of the new Senate crossbench was laid bare, the orthodox view was that the four One Nation senators would give the government its biggest headache.
But the past few weeks have shown the eclectic quartet led by Pauline Hanson has done anything but. Be it slashing welfare spending, giving big business a tax cut, or cracking down on rogue behaviour by trade unions, One Nation is up for the lot.
Despite the now frequent and often self-inflicted calamities which continue to knock the government off message, such as the solicitor-general saga or the occasional Tony Abbott hand grenade, the government is grinding away at securing Senate support for its legislative agenda in the hope that incremental gains there will translate into a broader momentum.
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  • October 29 2016 - 9:34PM

Myth busted: Stay-at-home parents don't get more than those who work

Peter Martin
Adam Gartrell
Welfare experts have ridiculed a government claim that thousands of parents on government benefits earn more than if they had a job, saying it is built around a mathematical mistake.
The claim, published in The Australian on Friday and backed up by Social Services Minister Christian Porter, is that single parents with four children can get payments totalling $52,523 per year if they don't work but only $49,831 after tax if they work and receive the median full-time wage.
Mr Porter said the data showed taxpayer-funded benefits could be providing a ­disincentive to work, a systemic flaw that required government ­attention. "What is not in any recipients' best interest is to be deprived of the incentives to reduce income from welfare with income from work," he said.
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Health Budget Issues.

Flagship bulk billing company Primary Health Care charges patients $100 to see a doctor

October 23, 2016 9:00pm
Sue Dunlevy
EXCLUSIVE
IT USED to be the champion of bulk billed GP visits — now Primary Health Care is charging patients $100 to see a doctor in one of its clinics.
That fee is $22 higher than the new fee recommended for a standard consultation by the AMA and as a result of the government’s freeze on Medicare rebates it will burn a huge hole in patient’s hip pockets.
Patients will have to cover $63 of this fee because the Medicare rebate is worth only $37.
It calls into question Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s election eve promise that no one would pay more to see a doctor as a result of his freeze on Medicare rebates.
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Federal Government rejects call for special Medicare levy for family violence counselling

So far today police in Australia would have dealt with on average 318 domestic violence matters
The Federal Government has rebuffed Victoria's push for a special Medicare subsidy for family violence counselling services, despite a recommendation from the state's royal commission.
The Andrews Government pledged to implement all 227 of the commission's recommendations following a 13-month inquiry, including encouraging the Commonwealth to consider a special Medicare item number for family violence counselling.
Medicare rebates are available for up to 10 sessions per year, but only if patients are diagnosed with a mental health disorder.
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Experts urged to boycott mental health plan

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM October 27, 2016

Rachel Baxendale

The former head of the Mental Health Council of Australia has called for his colleagues to boycott the Health Department’s Fifth ­National Mental Health Plan, ­debunking it as “mealy mouthed rubbish” and contrary to the policy direction Malcolm Turnbull promised to pursue during the election campaign.
John Mendoza said the plan, which is a collaboration between state, territory and federal governments, was the work of bureaucrats with no institutional knowledge and sought to continue a flawed scheme of funding costly late-term intervention at the ­expense of prevention and early intervention.
Professor Mendoza urged colleagues at the Asia Pacific International Mental Health Conference in Brisbane yesterday to boycott the consultation process.
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GP pathology rent: Is the govt heading for another disaster?

Paul Smith | 27 October, 2016 | 
Moves by the Federal Government to cut millions of dollars in rent currently paid to GP practices for co-located pathology centres could cause some clinics to go bust, or at least that is the claim.
The AMA is warning that $150 million a year in revenue could disappear, halving rents overnight for up to 5000 practices.
So has the government looked at whether its plans will damage the viability of practices?
Australian Doctor has published extracts from a Senate Estimates hearing below, where senior health department officials attempt to explain the government's latest plan.
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Health Insurance Issues.

  • Oct 23 2016 at 12:07 PM

Health funds say billions in savings needed to curb premiums

Health insurers say the federal government needs to find more savings in the healthcare system and step up reform of the private health sector if it is going to take a hard line on how much they can increase their premiums by in 2017. 
Health fund bosses and the industry lobby say further reform of medical device rebates, a crackdown on public hospitals aggressively shifting costs to health funds and other regulatory reforms can deliver billions in savings that can be passed on to members.
"We are very conscious from our customers' point of view that their income is growing at a modest amount and healthcare costs have been growing at 5 to 6 per cent per annum, so affordability is a very big issue," Craig Drummond, chief executive of Medibank Private, said. 
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Pharmacy Issues.

Guild reminds Ramsay on ownership regulations

The Pharmacy Guild has responded to media reports that Ramsay Health Care is set to open a Melbourne pharmacy by pointing out that community pharmacies must be owned by registered pharmacists.

And it is imperative that this requirement be upheld, the Guild says.
A report in Fairfax media on the weekend quoted the large private hospital operator Ramsay Health Care saying that it has “opened its first central-city pharmacy” in Melbourne.
The report said Ramsay had “taken a lease” over 300 square metres in a Melbourne CBD building to establish “a full-line Ramsay pharmacy.”
This is reportedly planned to be a “hyper-store” selling medicines and medical services including Chinese medicine.
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Here’s your chance to tap into $50 million pool

25 October, 2016 0 comments 
Have you got a great idea for a new professional service in your pharmacy?
Grants are now available to run innovative trials to improve patient outcomes through the Pharmacy Trial Program, a $50 million pool set up through the 6CPA.
The federal government has opened invitations for pharmacies to apply for grants to trial programs that cover:
Disease management of appropriate conditions;
Medication management and reconciliation services for patients at the point of transition between care sectors to reduce the potential for medicines misadventure;
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Ramsay denies expansion will flout ownership rules

26 October, 2016 Tessa Hoffman 
Ramsay Health Care has rejected the idea that its foray into community pharmacy will put it breach of ownership rules.
And it says there is no reason for speculation that its planned new hyper pharmacy will push smaller players out of Melbourne’s CBD.
The hospital group’s community pharmacy model is aligned with the ownership rules, says Peter Giannopoulos, the CEO of Ramsay Pharmacy Group.
“We operate under a franchise model. It’s a pharmacist-owned model,” he said in a wide-ranging interview with Pharmacy News.
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Discounters grabbing market share from traditional pharmacies

27 October, 2016 Tessa Hoffman 
Discounters are beating traditional pharmacies in what has become a two-tier marketplace.
That’s the view of market researcher Daniel Bone of IRI Australia. He says the discounters have had a major “disruptive” impact on community pharmacy.
He told delegates at the Australian Self Medication Industry (ASMI) annual conference in Sydney on Thursday that the community pharmacy had grown by 4% overall in the year to July, but discounters had grown sales by 19.3%.
He cited a Canstar Blue survey that asked 3000 consumers what they wanted from a pharmacy. Just over 40% said “cheapest prices”, and a third said “good service”.
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Minister backs medicine downscheduling

More work needs to be done on downscheduling medicines in Australia, the Minister for Health believes.

Meanwhile a final decision on the scheduling of codiene could be delivered before the end of the year
Speaking at the Australian Self Medication Industry (ASMI) Conference in Sydney yesterday, Minister Sussan Ley said there are strong arguments supporting the downscheduling of some prescription medicines to the pharmacist-only (S3) category.   
Looking across the Tasman for examples, the Minister said influenza, urinary tract infection and migraine medicines were among those that were non-prescription in New Zealand, but remained S4 in Australia.
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I look forward to comments on all this!
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David.

It Rather Looks Like The DoH is Getting Itself In Rather A Mess Again. Oh Dear!

This appeared  a few days ago.

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.
However, the Department of Health has stopped short of guaranteeing the new register will be operating from that date.
The policy, announced 18 months ago, will identify people who miss a jab and provide incentives to doctors to provide catch up vaccinations.
At least 166,000 children were recorded as being more than two months overdue for their vaccinations in 2014.
The new registry was to replace the existing cervical cancer vaccine register and will for the first time provide a register of all school based vaccinations including the cervical cancer vaccine, varicella (chickenpox), the diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis (whooping cough) booster.
While parents of young children are prompted to vaccinate their children by the withholding of childcare payments there is no way of checking the vaccination status of older schoolchildren.
High school students must receive a range of booster vaccines to help build herd immunity against killer diseases like whooping cough and measles.
“Further work is required to increase the national childhood vaccination rate so that it is high enough to meet ‘herd immunity’ for most vaccine preventable diseases,” Health Minister Sussan Ley said when she announced the new register in May 2015.
“The Government has approved the expansion of the Australian Childhood Immunisation Register (ACIR) to become the Australian Immunisation Register (AIR), which will capture all vaccines given, from birth to death, through General Practice and community clinics because of the No Jab, No Pay Budget measure,” the government promised in a circular on the new program.
Lots more here:
One really has to wonder why this sort of stuff keeps happening. Creating a register is hardly rocket science.
What is slightly confusing is what relationship, if any, this register has to the Telstra Health cancer screening register.
The delays are really odd.
David.