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."

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Ms Nicola Roxon - An E-Health Report Card.

Yesterday we carried Ms Roxon’s (The Australian Commonwealth Health Minister for those outside Australia) first major foray into the E-Health space.

It can be reviewed here if you missed it.

http://aushealthit.blogspot.com/2009/08/nicola-roxon-speech-health-e-nation-19.html

I think some comments are needed on some of the things that were said. (Ms Roxon’s comments are in italics)

“The report describes the system as at a “tipping point”, and says the time for ‘business as usual’ has passed. The time to act is now.

We simply won’t have the resources to keep doing things the way we are doing them in the future. Our health and aged care costs will grow from around 9 per cent now to 12.4 per cent of GDP – or $246 billion – a little over two decades from now if we don’t change.”

If it remains that low – she, and all of us will be lucky! There are a lot of pressures pushing quite hard to exceed that figure!

On the NHHRC Report and e-Health she says.

“A key theme that emerges from the Report, that is of particular interest to this audience, is the revolutionary potential of e-Health to drive many of the transformative changes needed to meet these goals.

Fast forward 50 years.

Can you imagine our health system without instant access to our medical records? Where you have to carry your x-rays to each appointment, or have test results posted to you, or more commonly your doctor? Where a simple click could deliver so much information – but doesn’t, because we didn’t take action when we should have?

It’s unthinkable.

I want our future health system to be connected, secure and efficient.”

This is what we would have to call a very ‘soft’ objective indeed – it needs to be done in 10 years or the inefficiencies in our system will have us reach unaffordable levels of expenditure well before 50 years.

Remember we have been messing about for over a decade so far trying to work to do.

One wonders why it is it takes almost 2 years to hear the first few serious words on e-Health.

“The NHHRC Report recommends:

- a person-controlled electronic health record for all Australians by 1 July 2012, with unique personal, professional and organization identifiers by 1 July 2010;

- legislative and policy controls to protect patient privacy; and

- encouraging the take up of e-health by making payments to public and private health professionals dependent on e-health compatibility by 2013, starting with hospitals and pathology and diagnostic imaging providers by 1 July 2012.”

Note no “I agree or disagree” with that direction. Would have been nice if she expressed a view.

“We are already moving to implement a new, unique healthcare identifier number, which I shall return to shortly.

The UHI number is important as once they are in place, we can get on with building the vault of information – the medical records – for our health professionals to access, via that unique key.

We are building an e-health system now, because a future without it is unthinkable.”

Giving citizens and providers a number each is far from building an ‘e-health system’! We have been doing that since 2006 or so. Not much in the way of news here!

It is examples such as this which highlight why this debate is so important.

“The decisions we take now on e-health will be felt for generations. We want to get it right. “

That is why it has taken me so long to say anything. I have been thinking about it!

“We want babies born in the next decade to have an electronic health record that stays with them for their whole lives.

An Electronic Health Record would mean patients will be able to present for health service treatment anywhere in the country, and with patient approval, the treating health professional will be able to access a summary of the patient’s treatment and medication history at the touch of a button.

For health professionals, this will mean that less valuable time is lost, expensive tests are not being re-ordered or duplicated at a cost to the taxpayer, and knowledge is shared.”

Here is where we see some possibility Ms Roxon does not quite grasp what system for providers do and what systems the patients store their information within can do.

“In fact, it has been estimated that up to 18 per cent of medical errors are attributed to inadequate availability of patient information, and between 9 and 17 per cent of pathology and diagnostic tests are unnecessary duplicates. When we spend $14.8 billion a year on the MBS, there are clearly some major savings to be made.”

To do this you need detailed information in the hands of providers and to have them properly computerised and connected – hardly with the summary of what the NHHRC said provided above make clear.

“The Reform Commission has put the price tag of an Individual Electronic Health Record at between $1.1 and 1.8 billion. That’s serious money, and it will require serious consideration on how it could be funded.

Coincidently, you may have noticed that this week in the Senate that the Government is attempting to pass its changes to the private health insurance rebate.

We are trying to change the rebate provided to high income earners with private health insurance – for example couples who earn over a quarter of a million dollars – which is estimated to save the Government $1.9 billion.

So as you can see, the E- health reforms are an example of what we could pay for if the private health insurance measure is passed

You might consider placing a call to your local Coalition or Independent Senator to point this out.

E-health does however also have the potential to deliver significant savings. The AIHW supplementary report to the Reform Commission, puts them in the order of $430 million in 2022/23 and $627 million in 2032/33.

The government has committed to a series of public consultations on the Report.”

Here we find a link made between two totally unrelated policy issues for blatant political reasons – of course it is also true this legislation is not going to pass, so she is pushing – but it is just opportunistic in the extreme and pretty disingenuous.

Also with recurring benefits of this scale over decades it seems to me the up-front billion or two is merely the price of admission to a more efficient and safer health system.

“In December last year, Health Ministers endorsed the National e-Health Strategy, which will help drive future e-Health activity for the next decade. The Rudd Government is determined that the Commonwealth has a major role to play in driving the roll-out of e-Health.

With the states and territories, we have already committed to funding of $218 million over the next three years to fund the work of the National e-Health Transition Authority.

Since being established, NEHTA has developed and commenced the roll-out of the Australian Medicines Terminology and the National Product Catalogue, two initiatives which introduce common standards for how medicines and health products are defined in this country. The fact that this situation did not exist before demonstrates the scale of the task ahead as we try to build common foundations for e-Health in Australia.

Mr Peter Fleming, the Chief Executive of NEHTA, will be discussing NEHTA’s work a little later today. My department continues to work with NEHTA on implementation packages for e-Prescribing, e-Pathology, e-Referral and e-Discharge.”

Here is where it becomes clear Ms Roxon does not get it. The NHHRC report recommends implementation of this National Strategy – as well as the other things she mentioned first. You need both!

As for the AMT and NPC after 5 years they are still works very much in progress – incredibly – and the implementation packages are – at this point – simply unproven documentation that is yet to be implemented even on a trial basis.

“By the middle of next year, all Australians will have been allocated a 16 digit Unique Healthcare Identifier.

This 16 digit unique number is the first step in building a secure e-Health system. It will not replace your Medicare card – it will be a totally new, unique number. It will be the key that unlocks the information on your medical record – an e-Health record.

You will be the owner of the key, and you will decide who gets access to your records.

So whilst progress may seem slow at times, there is still a lot of work being done outside the arena of the reform process, but complementary to it.”

Coming ready or not! – well maybe. The glacial progress on the AMT and NPC would make any sane observer pretty sceptical!

Finally we have:

“We stand at the cusp of an era of significant changes in health in this country. The decisions the government makes over the coming months will help build a health system to meet the needs of the current, and future generations. E-health is a clear symbol and practical example of this.

The Prime Minister and I are absolutely determined to get the reform of our health system right. We have blueprint for the most significant reform of the health system since the introduction of Medicare 25 years ago.”

Given that e-Health has essentially been strategically paralysed for a decade, with all the progress and innovation having come at largely local levels, it seems to me we still do not have the savvy leadership we are going to need to make any serious progress.

Sadly, on this effort, all I see is words strung together with little real understanding of what is needed.

What it is not clear from her comments is that she understands that the National E-Strategy must be funded and implemented and I find this deeply disappointing. Without this plan and all it recommends she will surely fail.

David.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

NICOLA ROXON SPEECH HEALTH e NATION 19 AUGUST 2009

Ms Roxon gave the following speech earlier today – reactions welcome.

-----

The Hon Nicola Roxon MP

Health e Nation Conference

Wednesday 19 August 2009

***CHECK AGAINST DELIVERY***

Acknowledgements

Ms Sally Glass, Managing Director, Chik Services;

Dr Andrew Pesce, AMA President;

Mr Peter Fleming, Chief Executive, NEHTA;

Mr Mark Cormack, Chief Executive, ACT Health

Dr Mukesh Haikerwal, NHHRC Commissioner; and

Ladies and gentlemen.

Introduction

Thank you for having me this morning.

I wanted to take time from proceedings in parliament to join you today because it is an important time for e-health in this country – and not just because it gives me a breather from the shenanigans of the House.

It has certainly been an exciting time in the health portfolio. Parliament has actually given me a chance to be in the same city for more than a day at a time.

As almost all of you would be aware by now, on July 27 the Prime Minister and I released the final report of the Health and Hospitals Reform Commission.

Reform Commission context

The Government set up the Commission because we knew there were serious, systemic issues in our health system that need addressing and action.

We asked for a comprehensive, independent forensic analysis of our health system – and we got it. The report represents an opportunity for the most important reform of our health system for decades, certainly since the introduction of Medicare.

The report paints a picture of a good health system, but one that is struggling to adapt to the needs of an ageing population, and a community which is becoming more prone to chronic disease.

We have a health system that is focused on hospitals and on treating people when they get sick. It patches up and treats patients very well, but it is finding it harder to do so as demand continues to increase.

The report describes the system as at a “tipping point”, and says the time for ‘business as usual’ has passed. The time to act is now.

We simply won’t have the resources to keep doing things the way we are doing them in the future. Our health and aged care costs will grow from around 9 per cent now to 12.4 per cent of GDP – or $246 billion – a little over two decades from now if we don’t change.

Our ‘frontline troops’ in primary care are our first line of defence against some of the health care problems that are set to cripple our population and our health care system – like obesity and diabetes. If we do that better our hospitals will have more capacity to treat those acute illnesses we cannot prevent.

There are plenty of other things we can also do better.

The Commission has provided the Government with 123 recommendations to address these challenges, which can be broadly broken down to three key goals:

- tackling major access and equity issues that affect health outcomes for people now;

- redesigning our health system so that it is better positioned to respond to emerging challenges, including the boom in chronic disease; and

- creating an agile and self-improving system for long term sustainability.

Reform Commission & e-Health

A key theme that emerges from the Report, that is of particular interest to this audience, is the revolutionary potential of e-Health to drive many of the transformative changes needed to meet these goals.

Fast forward 50 years.

Can you imagine our health system without instant access to our medical records? Where you have to carry your x-rays to each appointment, or have test results posted to you, or more commonly your doctor? Where a simple click could deliver so much information – but doesn’t, because we didn’t take action when we should have?

It’s unthinkable.

I want our future health system to be connected, secure and efficient.

It is frustrating that in a sector where technology and research drive continual innovation in patient care, paper is still king. After a decade of doing our banking – and almost everything else – online, we’re still carrying our x-rays under our arm, a script to the pharmacy, and the hospital can’t send a discharge summary to the family GP.

If any of you were to present to Canberra Hospital tonight unconscious, the staff in the ED would have no idea what your health history was – if you were diabetic, your vaccination history, or your allergies for example. That’s just the worst case scenario, but the same idea applies if you need care on holidays anywhere in Australia. And that is for an infrequent visitor to hospital – imagine the stress for frequent user – the elderly, those with chronic disease.

The NHHRC Report recommends:

- a person-controlled electronic health record for all Australians by 1 July 2012, with unique personal, professional and organization identifiers by 1 July 2010;

- legislative and policy controls to protect patient privacy; and

- encouraging the take up of e-health by making payments to public and private health professionals dependent on e-health compatibility by 2013, starting with hospitals and pathology and diagnostic imaging providers by 1 July 2012.

We are already moving to implement a new, unique healthcare identifier number, which I shall return to shortly.

The UHI number is important as once they are in place, we can get on with building the vault of information – the medical records – for our health professionals to access, via that unique key.

We are building an e-health system now, because a future without it is unthinkable.

E-health really does have the potential to revolutionise how we deliver health care services. Think of the patient suffering from the chronic disease diabetes, who over the course of 12 months of his or her treatment, may see multiple GPs across the country, practice nurses, podiatrists, pharmacists, dieticians and psychologists – at the moment none of these health professionals can access and share this patient history.

It is estimated that 30 to 50 per cent of patients with chronic disease are hospitalised because of inadequate care management.

It is examples such as this which highlight why this debate is so important.

The decisions we take now on e-health will be felt for generations. We want to get it right.

We want babies born in the next decade to have an electronic health record that stays with them for their whole lives.

An Electronic Health Record would mean patients will be able to present for health service treatment anywhere in the country, and with patient approval, the treating health professional will be able to access a summary of the patient’s treatment and medication history at the touch of a button.

For health professionals, this will mean that less valuable time is lost, expensive tests are not being re-ordered or duplicated at a cost to the taxpayer, and knowledge is shared.

In fact, it has been estimated that up to 18 per cent of medical errors are attributed to inadequate availability of patient information, and between 9 and 17 per cent of pathology and diagnostic tests are unnecessary duplicates. When we spend $14.8 billion a year on the MBS, there are clearly some major savings to be made.

Better information means better and safer health treatments for patients.

Our reform plans, including those on e-health, will not come cheap.

The Reform Commission has put the price tag of an Individual Electronic Health Record at between $1.1 and 1.8 billion. That’s serious money, and it will require serious consideration on how it could be funded.

Coincidently, you may have noticed that this week in the Senate that the Government is attempting to pass its changes to the private health insurance rebate.

We are trying to change the rebate provided to high income earners with private health insurance – for example couples who earn over a quarter of a million dollars – which is estimated to save the Government $1.9 billion.

So as you can see, the E- health reforms are an example of what we could pay for if the private health insurance measure is passed

You might consider placing a call to your local Coalition or Independent Senator to point this out.

E-health does however also have the potential to deliver significant savings. The AIHW supplementary report to the Reform Commission, puts them in the order of $430 million in 2022/23 and $627 million in 2032/33.

The government has committed to a series of public consultations on the Report.

We want to road-test the recommendations and options with the community, who are all stakeholders in the future shape of our health system. We have so far had a number of forums in Sydney, Adelaide, Melbourne and North Queensland, with more to come. I urge you to come to a forum, and if you can’t do that, get online at www.yourhealth.gov.au and give us your views on the recommendations.

So far at our consultations there has been vigorous nodding and lots of supportive comments and questions when e-Health has been mentioned.

I can’t announce our position on this key recommendation of the Commission’s today – much as I’m sure you’d all be delighted if I did.

What I can do, is confirm that I, and the Government, are well aware of the potential benefits and importance of e-health and we’ve already taken action in this area – this work will not be halted.

NEHTA & e-Health strategy

Like our broader reforms in healthcare funding, elective surgery and infrastructure projects, the Government has not been sitting on its hands when it comes to e-Health.

In December last year, Health Ministers endorsed the National e-Health Strategy, which will help drive future e-Health activity for the next decade. The Rudd Government is determined that the Commonwealth has a major role to play in driving the roll-out of e-Health.

With the states and territories, we have already committed to funding of $218 million over the next three years to fund the work of the National e-Health Transition Authority.

Since being established, NEHTA has developed and commenced the roll-out of the Australian Medicines Terminology and the National Product Catalogue, two initiatives which introduce common standards for how medicines and health products are defined in this country. The fact that this situation did not exist before demonstrates the scale of the task ahead as we try to build common foundations for e-Health in Australia.

Mr Peter Fleming, the Chief Executive of NEHTA, will be discussing NEHTA’s work a little later today. My department continues to work with NEHTA on implementation packages for e-Prescribing, e-Pathology, e-Referral and e-Discharge.

Unique Patient Identifiers and privacy

Regardless of our success with technical aspects of e-Health, it will not realise its potential without ensuring the privacy and security of personal information. That’s why our number one priority is the privacy and security of information.

The Commonwealth, together with the states and territories, is developing national legislation for a consistent approach to privacy across Australia and the roll-out of unique healthcare identifiers. NEHTA is spending $50 million on this project this year alone.

Public consultation on the legislative framework for these was undertaken jointly by all jurisdictions and NEHTA during July and August. The results of this process will be reported to COAG and feed into the legislation to be introduced early next year.

By the middle of next year, all Australians will have been allocated a 16 digit Unique Healthcare Identifier.

This 16 digit unique number is the first step in building a secure e-Health system. It will not replace your Medicare card – it will be a totally new, unique number. It will be the key that unlocks the information on your medical record – an e-Health record.

You will be the owner of the key, and you will decide who gets access to your records.

So whilst progress may seem slow at times, there is still a lot of work being done outside the arena of the reform process, but complementary to it.

Conclusion

We stand at the cusp of an era of significant changes in health in this country. The decisions the government makes over the coming months will help build a health system to meet the needs of the current, and future generations. E-health is a clear symbol and practical example of this.

The Prime Minister and I are absolutely determined to get the reform of our health system right. We have blueprint for the most significant reform of the health system since the introduction of Medicare 25 years ago.

I welcome the contributions and ideas of everyone here today to our consultation process.

And I am pleased to officially declare today’s conference open for business.

ENDS

----

Passed on without comment for now – other than to note giving yourself 50 years to develop e-Health seems pretty cautious!

David.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

HIC 2009 Special - Clarity Needed from Our E-Health Leaders.

Over the next few days we are having the HIC 2009 Conference which is being conducted by the Health Informatics Society of Australia (HISA).

You can find all the details here:

http://www.hisa.org.au/hic09

HIC 2009 Canberra 19 - 21 August

There is an amazing list of excellent speakers attending and educational sessions being conducted.

The conference is being well attended by Department of Health and NEHTA staff and here lies the opportunity for those who are attending to ask a few hard questions and push those issues that are important to you – and which may not be working out with the speed, clarity or communication that is really needed to make some headway.

The following appeared in the Australian today. This should provide some useful conversation starters!

Small steps better in e-health

Karen Dearne | August 18, 2009

THE business case prepared to kickstart a national e-health record rollout warns of the growing cost of inaction, but almost a year after completion the document still awaits the attention of the Council of Australian Governments.

The Individual Electronic Health Record for Australia business case, obtained by The Australian, warns that shortcomings of the existing system will increase, resulting in further duplication and fragmentation of investments and limited uptake of e-health initiatives.

In particular, it predicts that private-sector solutions "moving rapidly ahead of a co-ordinated government response" will entrench interoperability problems that will be very difficult and costly to rectify.

"There is a point at which the number of disparate systems will be so great and integration so difficult that the ability to realise the gains from an interoperable system may be prohibitively risky and expensive to attain," the report says.

"This would represent a major lost opportunity for Australia to take a very significant step towards the delivery of safer, more efficient and sustainable health services."

Setting up a national health record system would cost an estimated $1.6billion over four years, beginning in the present financial year, but state and federal health ministers have yet to examine the proposal.

The National E-Health Transition Authority was given this work in 2006, and it is understood the organisation was ready to present the case to COAG in October.

COAG meetings this year have been dominated by pressing issues such as the financial crisis and the Northern Territory intervention.

The report's authors are adamant Australians will pay a high price for further delays, sentiments echoed in the National E-Health Strategy produced by consultancy Deloitte, and the National Health and Hospital Reform Commission report.

Lots more here:

http://www.australianit.news.com.au/story/0,24897,25942529-15306,00.html

I would love to think we could have the odd comment on the blog outlining just what you hear and how satisfied you are with the answers you hear in the sessions and when chatting one to one.

Enjoy HIC 09.

David.

Monday, August 17, 2009

Bouquets and a Brickbat or Two for the NEHTA e-Discharge Summary Work!

A few days ago (14/08/2009) NEHTA released the following:

Discharge Summary Release 1.0 - Executive Summary

Discharge Summary Release 1.0 - Release Note

Discharge Summary Release 1.0 - Business Requirements Specification

Discharge Summary Release 1.0 - Solution Design

Discharge Summary Release 1.0 - Core Information Components

As far is it goes this is good stuff and the various documents can be downloaded from the links above.

Also good is the request for feedback from the Executive Summary:

“Feedback

Feedback on this release is requested before September 30th 2009 and can be emailed to dischargesummary@nehta.gov.au as can any questions relating to this package. Priority areas for feedback include errors of omission or commission, inconsistent descriptions and editorial rule concerns.”

Also very good indeed is that there has been widespread consultation on this work before it is brought to this Version 1.0 status.

The web page describes this program thus:

e-Discharge Summaries

e-Discharge Summaries will enable the electronic exchange of comprehensive and accurate patient reports between hospitals and primary healthcare sectors. Major benefits of a nationwide e-Discharge Summary system include:

Improved continuity

The primary function of an e-Discharge Summary is to support the continuity of care as the patient returns to the care of their community health care provider(s). e-Discharge Summaries improve continuity of care and patient handover and offer security, accessibility and timeliness of health information.

Increased safety

The electronic exchange of patient reports between hospitals and the primary healthcare sectors will ultimately lead to improved safety and quality, through the exchange of timely, accurate and structured discharge summary information to health care providers, enabling better patient outcomes.

The e-Discharge Summary Program

We will work with healthcare organisations to understand the technologies and processes currently used for e-Discharge Summaries, and collaboratively plan the most effective approach to introduce alignment of these technologies and processes with national standards and NEHTA’s blueprint for e-Discharge Summaries.

Once the most effective solution is established, the e-Discharge Summary program will create recommendations to bring existing projects in line with national standards and establish a blueprint for future e-Discharge projects.

Source:

http://www.nehta.gov.au/e-communications-in-practice/edischarge-summaries

Can I say that the goals and objectives of this program I totally support –as I do the goals of all the workstreams that are being worked on in the e-Communications is practice arena.

So why any brickbats?

Well the devil is in the detail.

As admitted above, and in the documents discussed here, each of the jurisdictions is off and rolling on some sort of project to address discharge summaries and they are essentially – in a standards sense – all over the place like a ‘dogs breakfast’. Getting any sense of uniformity and direction will take years and it need not have been so.

Over two and a half years ago NEHTA released this (it is so old it is now even off the website).

DISCHARGE SUMMARY CONTENT SPECIFICATIONS

Release Notes

21 December 2006

NEHTA announces the release of specifications to standardise the information content of hospital discharge summaries in Australia.

(Release 2 took until 30 June 2009 to appear).

It is this failure to actually get on with things that has provided the window for the present state.

NEHTA in the Solution Design describes the present situation thus.

“Today, State and Territory jurisdictions are at varying stages of developing and deploying electronic discharge summary systems. They are maintaining their own indexes/directories of service providers and have embraced an array of methods for enabling access to discharge summaries.”

And the future is planned to be:

“In the future, it is envisaged that the discharge summary will be initiated at admission and be pre-populated with a wide variety of structured data from information systems related to IEHRs (Individual Electronic Health Records), incoming referrals, emergency department and existing pre-admission systems. Distribution lists will be pre-populated with accurate identification of the patient's usual and referring clinicians through the use of the single national UHI (Unique Health Identifier) service while the ELS (Endpoint Locator Service) will subsequently provide electronic addresses of these recipients. Clinical data will be structured, based on Australian data modelling standards, with source systems using Australian terminology standards. The security and integrity of discharge summary messages will be enhanced by the use of approved secure messaging and NASH (National Authentication Service for Health) authentication services. Consumers will have the ability to create customised presentations of discharge summary information and incorporate selected data into recipient clinician systems, including the Summary Health Profile.”

This vision can be seen visually on page 13 of the Business Requirements Document.

Frankly this is a classic ‘boil the ocean’ view of e-Health in Australia with at its centre and IEHR which is unlikely ever to get funded given that it is not even mentioned by the NHHRC and is very much on the ‘back-burner’ behind some much more important priorities the Deloittes National E-Health Strategy. As much as I would love all this to be real I fear it is just glossy ‘foilware’!

At best this is a 10 year project which should only be undertaken after the basics are addressed and operational.

Just having a basic text admission summary able to be simply created and moved between hospital and GP would be a good first step while the wrinkles in this over complex, over engineered specification is further developed (it is nowhere near final yet - see the pathetic comments on privacy that just list the NPP principles without comment.) and then implemented on a test basis to show it is actually practical. The more of this documentation I read, the larger the number of gaps I see and the more ‘pie in the sky’ it feels.

Sad that. I know the journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step but there are some steps we can take at the 100 mile point that could really help and can be made to work.

Someone needs to sit NEHTA down and say it is not documents that save lives, it is actual working systems and we can’t wait for the unaffordable, perfectly engineered systems of 2030 they seem to want to give us for some incomprehensible reason.

David.

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Useful and Interesting Health IT News from the Last Week – 16/08/2009.

The Australian E-Health Press provided a good serve this week. It included these:

First we have:

GPs urge caution over college data plan

Elizabeth McIntosh - Friday, 14 August 2009

THE RACGP is looking to radically widen the scope of its standard-setting activities, with a plan to drive improvements in patient care.

But the plan – hailed by the college as a means to drive improved patient outcomes – has concerned frontline GPs, who fear any clinical standards set could later be used by the Federal Government to determine incentive payments.

The plan is based on a Web resource called Oxygen, which will collate and store de-identified patient data – from information on age and sex to clinical outcomes. In turn, this will allow participating GPs to compare their patient outcomes against national and local averages.

According to Associate Professor Ron Tomlins, chair of the college’s national standing committee on quality care, such comparisons would ultimately drive up the quality of patient care.

The resource could also be used to set new clinical practice standards, devised and agreed to by the wider profession, he said. This would broaden the college’s current focus on practice accreditation by moving it into the clinical domain.

“The college is focused on [the resource] being about clinical outcomes and what is best for the viability and sustainability of general practice,” Professor Tomlins said.

“If we do this, we will move beyond the way we look at accreditation processes.”

He added the data collected using Oxygen would boost GPs’ position when negotiating with government for additional resources and funding.

Professor Tomlins said Oxygen would be funded and managed by the college but was unable to detail costs. He said de-identified patient data would be drawn from practices using the Pen Computer Systems Clinical Audit Tool – whose annual license costs $195 per GP.

More here (subscription required):

http://www.medicalobserver.com.au/News/0,1734,5081,14200908.aspx

This is actually very important in my view. The fears of ‘frontline GPs’ are warranted if clinicians do not retain genuine control of clinical standards and are able ensure there are no ‘unintended consequences’ of incentives – as have been the experience in the UK. As long as clinicians retain control it is equally important that we have clinical care being shaped to provide optimal outcomes – and you can only have that if you are measuring just what is being done – and the Pen CAT is a very good way of doing that. A well designed and managed approach can help I believe.

Second we have:

MD backs Guild e-script system

by Michael Woodhead

GP software vendor HCN has chosen the Pharmacy Guild’s eRx Script Exchange system as the preferred electronic prescribing tool to integrate into its Medical Director program.

It says the move will give 90% of GPs the ability to send electronic prescriptions by the end of the year. But the company says it will not rule out working with the rival RACGP-backed Medisecure system at some point in the future.

The CEO of HCN, Dr John Frost, told 6minutes that the company had chosen the eRx system because it believed it to be the most robust and functional form of e-prescribing currently available in Australia.

More here:

http://www.6minutes.com.au/articles/z1/view.asp?id=493949

This is a major move in the e-prescribing wars given Medical Director does have significant market penetration among GPs.

At least one correspondent thinks the market share is a little exaggerated (from 6minutes the next day):

“While no one disputes MD’s market domination, to date there has been no independent support of the vendor’s estimation of market share. In 2006, two different studies reported 73% and 63% respectively for GP use of MD. The average for nearly 5000 BEACH participants over the past five years is 62% and as Medisecure is ‘being used by 290 practices with Medical Director’, a more realistic figure for GPs accessing eRx is probably less

than 60%.

Dr Joan Henderson”

It is important to note I still believe we need a different approach to that planned by both the proponents. It should be one designed to balance the interests of all stakeholders, be fully open and be operated on a cost recovery basis or even federally funded.

Third we have:

AIIA proposes 'opt-out' plan for eHealth card

by James Riley

Wednesday, 29 July 2009

Government may need to include an opt-out mechanism with its plans to assign an individual healthcare number to all Australians as the best way to address legitimate privacy security concerns, Australian Information Industries Association chief executive Ian Birks said.

“Essentially it is a good thing that electronic health records has been identified as a key to healthcare reform in Australia,” Mr Birks told iTWire.

Better information, better use of data and better awareness of the available health information would lead to better health outcomes for individuals and reduced costs for Government and providers.

But Birks said the only way to successfully address the privacy concerns of some would be to give individuals control over their personal data, including the ability to opt-out entirely.

“Obviously there will be concerns from some sections of the community about security and privacy,” Birks said. “And probably the best way to (make people confortable) would be through some kind of opt-out mechanism.”

“That’s what has happened in other jurisdictions and it has been shown to be successful.

More here:

http://www.itwire.com/content/view/26577/53/

I could not agree more about the need for genuine ‘opt-out’ with the IHI. I wonder what we keep seeing comments around e-Health cards which are really on no-one’s agenda.

Fourth we have:

iSoft pays $18m for BridgeForward

Karen Dearne | August 12, 2009

ASX-LISTED health IT supplier iSoft has driven a stake into the US market with an $18 million purchase of hospital data integration specialist BridgeForward.

iSoft executive chairman Gary Cohen said BridgeForward's new integration engine, Viaduct, was a good fit with iSoft's next-generation Lorenzo platform.

"This acquisition means we're channelling the R&D dollars we would have invested in building out integration capabilities in Lorenzo into a world-leading product that's already built," he said.

"We see significant potential for Viaduct to be embedded with Lorenzo, as they are both built on a service-oriented architecture.

"There's also great potential for Viaduct as a standalone product. An integration engine is a critical component in electronically connecting healthcare systems, and this provides the interoperability that allows disparate legacy systems to share information."

More here:

http://www.australianit.news.com.au/story/0,24897,25918991-15306,00.html

Good to see iSoft is continuing to develop its international exposure. Hopefully this will assist ISoft’s Australian sites over time as well. (Usual shareholder disclaimer applies)

Fifth we have:

Take a good look - this picture might soon be banned

Joel Gibson Legal Affairs Reporter

August 15, 2009

SHOWING a sex tape to a third party or fishing someone's financial or medical records out of a bin could get you sued under privacy laws proposed yesterday. They would be among the toughest in the world.

The NSW Law Reform Commission released draft laws to give victims of stalkers, hidden cameras, harassment and some publications the right to sue for damages.

But the proposals also raised the prospect of lawsuits over a newspaper picture of a person in a public place or an artist's painting of someone in a street scene.

An invasion of privacy would exist where a person has ''a reasonable expectation of privacy'' that is not outweighed by a relevant public interest. Mere annoyance or anxiety would be enough to justify their claim.

Medical records would be off-limits, including details of a celebrity's treatment for drug addiction, such as supermodel Naomi Campbell's case against a British newspaper. Only if the information had to be published in the public interest, for example to warn of someone's infectious condition, would it be allowed.

Information about someone's sex life, even if cheating on a partner or paying a prostitute, also would be private, except where the sexual practices undermine a public figure's ability to do his or her job, for example, or belie previous statements.

Full article here:

http://www.smh.com.au/national/take-a-good-look--this-picture-might-soon-be-banned-20090814-el6w.html

This is all starting to get confusing with both the Australian Law Reform Commission and the NSW Law Reform Commission coming up with privacy related approaches. We need to watch closely for e-Health implications.

There is all sorts of information here:

http://www.lawlink.nsw.gov.au/lawlink/lrc/ll_lrc.nsf/pages/LRC_cref124

Sixth we have:

One giant leap for robokind: cyber limbs

Amanda O'Brien | August 15, 2009

Article from: The Australian

A BIONIC knee that powers an amputee up stairs, a Star Wars-inspired arm that lets a double amputee feed himself grapes, artificial limbs connected to nerve ends to trigger movement, metal hands that give elements of sensory feel...

The latest advances in prosthetics are making RoboCop look ordinary as science fiction turns to reality amid a surge of investment overseas.

``They're starting to look at whether an amputee could run faster than an able-bodied person,'' Perth-based clinical prosthetist Mark Hills says.

``They're playing with nanotechnology and with skin-type products. Where it ends up it's very, very hard to know.

``They're looking to graft metal directly on to bone, and when they can do that, you are practically into a bionic cyborg. It's fantastic.''

But amid the celebrations, experts admit that Australian amputees are missing out. They say government funding is too low to pay for cutting-edge prosthetics and many amputees are still using decades-old technologies.

Perth grandmother Elizabeth Grant brought a tiny taste of the new frontier to Australia last month when she was fitted with the nation's first X-finger: a fully functioning artificial finger that curls and grips like a normal digit and will eventually be covered by a lifelike cosmetic cover.

More here:

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,25928728-23289,00.html

Very interesting stuff indeed. It seems to be a pity that Ms Roxon does not provide a few direct dollars to assist development and implementation of workable technologies.

Seventh we have:

GPs slugged with admin costs for Easyclaim

Elizabeth McIntosh - Friday, 14 August 2009

THE Federal Government is paying GPs less than a fifth of what it costs practices to install and operate the Medicare Easyclaim system and frustrated doctors say it’s time to redress the disparity.

While practices are being paid just 18 cents for each Medicare claim processed via the Easyclaim system, the Australian Association of Practice Managers (AAPM) estimates the true cost of the task is at least five times higher.

“Two minutes is the minimum amount of time it would take [to process a claim],” said AAPM president Marina Fulcher.

“If you are paying staff around $25 an hour, it is $1 in staff time alone. Eighteen cents doesn’t compensate for anything.”

Pushing the Easyclaim system on to general practice translates into big savings for the Government. Official 1997 estimates put the cost of processing a claim at a traditional Medicare office at $1.60. Up-to-date estimates are not available.

In late May, the Government launched a multipronged campaign to encourage patients to claim Medicare rebates electronically, via the Easyclaim system or Medicare Online, rather than attending traditional offices. The Easyclaim system allows practices to refund rebates directly to patient bank accounts via an EFTPOS machine.

More here (subscription required):

http://www.medicalobserver.com.au/News/0,1734,5064,14200908.aspx

Oh dear, Oh dear! These are the same people who now want to do all sorts of other e-Health activities. They are going to need way better ways of relating with clinicians if this is even partly true!

Eighth we have:

An Operating System for the Cloud

Google is developing a new computing platform equal to the Internet era. Should Microsoft be worried?

By G. Pascal Zachary

From early in their company's history, Google's founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, wanted to develop a computer operating system and browser.

They believed it would help make personal computing less expensive, because Google would give away the software free of charge. They wanted to shrug off 20 years of accumulated software history (what the information technology industry calls the "legacy") by building an OS and browser from scratch. Finally, they hoped the combined technology would be an alternative to Microsoft Windows and Internet Explorer, providing a new platform for developers to write Web applications and unleashing the creativity of programmers for the benefit of the masses.

But despite the sublimity of their aspirations, Eric Schmidt, Google's chief executive, said no for six years. Google's main source of revenue, which reached $5.5 billion in its most recent quarter, is advertising. How would the project they envisioned support the company's advertising business? The question wasn't whether Google could afford it. The company is wonderfully profitable and is on track to net more than $5 billion in its current fiscal year. But Schmidt, a 20-year veteran of the IT industry, wasn't keen on shouldering the considerable costs of creating and maintaining an OS and browser for no obvious return.

Much more here:

http://www.technologyreview.com/web/23140/?nlid=2255

This is a really important article on what Google is up to.

This is also interesting.

Google gives search a 'Caffeine' boost

Search giant seeks feedback on new search architecture from power users, Web developers

Sharon Gaudin 12 August, 2009 08:10

Tags: Google

Google Inc. is set to let users try out an upgraded search technology, code-named Caffeine, that its engineers have been developing for the past several months.

Google today announced that it is opening the so-called "next-generation architecture" to Web developers and power users to test out. Users can access the as-yet unfinished Caffeine in a Google sandbox, a testing environment that isolates new code from production systems.

The announcement that Google is honing a faster, more accurate and comprehensive search engine comes about two weeks after rivals Microsoft Corp. and Yahoo Inc. announced that they are partnering up to challenge the search giant. The deal calls for Microsoft's Bing search engine to power various Yahoo sites, while Yahoo sells premium search advertising services for both companies.

More here:

http://www.computerworld.com.au/article/314555/google_gives_search_caffeine_boost?eid=-255

If Google is on the move it is move it is important to keep an eye on what is happening! The various searches I tried do not seem to provide many different results so far.

Lastly the slightly more technical article for the week:

Crikey August 13, 2009

15 . Bug-free computer software: Australia paves the way

Stilgherrian writes:

A computer crash and reboot are frustrating enough, but even more so when it’s an embedded system running a surgical robot, a weapons system or a self-driving car. Waste time rebooting and you could be dead.

Breakthrough Australian research could dramatically reduce the odds of that happening. Researchers at NICTA, Australia’s ICT Research Centre of Excellence, have just announced ... well, how can I explain this?

Computer programs are complex machines made of mathematics -- vastly more complicated than physical machines like nuclear reactors or spacecraft. Software is written by humans, and humans make mistakes. Typically, you can expect about 10 errors per thousand lines of computer code, and software like Microsoft’s Vista or OS X, or even applications like Microsoft Office or Adobe CS3, contain tens of millions of lines.

Given this complexity, programmers simply can’t test for every potential error. All software has bugs, and the bugs are only fixed when someone finds them. That’s why we all download and install software patches every month. Unless the hackers get there first. Which they do.

More here (subscription required):

http://www.crikey.com.au/2009/08/13/bug-free-computer-software-australia-paves-the-way/

This seems to be pretty important stuff – especially in critical areas like health. Sadly a correspondent to Crikey says the claim – while good – is not quite as represented.

See here:

http://www.crikey.com.au/2009/08/14/comments-corrections-clarifications-and-cckups-60/

Bug-free computer software:

Angus Sharpe writes: Re. “Bug-free computer software: Australia paves the way” (yesterday, item 15). Deep breath. Now I’m all for any system or methodology that can reduce bugs in software, but Stilgherrian says that “Programmers can build software on top of [this new software] and be certain that it’ll function correctly.” Wrong. Making the title of the story “Bug-free computer software” wrong. And fortunately, that’s not what the authors of the software actually claim. They claim that the software “is free of a large class of errors” (presumably buffer overflows etc.).

Why is this important? It’s the difference between saying that you cannot pick a door lock with tool XYZ, or saying that a door lock is perfect, and un-pickable, ever (Even with tools that haven’t been invented yet. Even when attached to glass doors.)

The first is possible, the second never true.”

Still – sounds like progress!

The full release is found here:

http://nicta.com.au/news/home_page_content_listing/world-first_research_breakthrough_promises_safety-critical_software_of_unprecedented_reliability

This quote positions things – I suspect.

“This is a remarkable achievement,” said Yale University’s Professor of Computer Science Zhong Shao, “It makes a significant advance toward building fully verified system software with meaningful dependability guarantees.”

More next week.

David.

Friday, August 14, 2009

Report and Resource Watch – Week of 10 August, 2009

Just an occasional post when I come upon a few interesting reports and resources that are worth a download or browse. This week we have a few.

First we have:

HIT Lessons from Across the Pond

Carrie Vaughan, for HealthLeaders Media, August 4, 2009

I often hear how other countries are ahead of the United States when it comes to using electronic health records and exchanging electronic health information. For example, Don E. Detmer, MD, president and CEO of the American Medical Informatics Association, referred to Scandinavia, the Netherlands, Denmark, the United Kingdom, Canada, and Japan as countries that are ahead of us in this arena at a recent Nashville Health Care Council meeting. "We can learn a lot from these experiments," he said, acknowledging that no one has it totally figured out yet. "It is a tapestry that has different bright spots."

That is why I found a recent report, Accomplishing EHR/HIE (eHealth): Lessons from Europe," by CSC, a global consultancy firm, so interesting. It focuses on those "bright spots" and pulls 25 lessons learned from initiatives in Denmark, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom.

Granted there are key differences between these countries' efforts and the United States. The size of the European efforts is far smaller, for one. However, the initiatives are comparable and have encountered many of the same obstacles and issues. "The UK is 60 million people," says Fran Turisco, a coauthor of the report and research principal, emerging practices for CSC. While smaller than the US, "it is not eeny meeny," she says. Many of these countries also had a different starting place. In Denmark, The Netherlands, and Norway, EHR adoption by general practitioners is approaching 100%, compared to 20%, at most, in the United States, the report says. The U.S. effort is still focused on changing workflows and switching from paper to digital records in addition to exchanging data and becoming interoperable.

More here with a list of key points:

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/content/236945/topic/WS_HLM2_TEC/HIT-Lessons-from-Across-the-Pond.html

This is a very useful report – many of the points need to be carefully considered here in OZ as well.

Important stuff needing careful review.

Second we have:

AHRQ offers guide for evaluating health IT projects

August 3, 2009 — 8:01am ET | By Anne Zieger

The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality has weighed in with a step-by-step workbook helping providers get a handle on the actual cost and benefits and IT investment offers.

The guide walks IT project managers through the process of picking out project goals, including what aspects of the technology will need to be measured and how. It also offers proposed measures to evaluate, such as preventable adverse drug events and medication errors, as well as others impacting workflow and financial management. The idea is to make predictions ahead of time, then analyze those predictions later, learning from what assumptions were correct and which were not.

More here:

http://www.fiercehealthit.com/story/ahrq-offers-guide-evaluating-health-it-projects/2009-08-03?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal

This is very useful indeed and needs to be used!

The report can be downloaded from here:

http://healthit.ahrq.gov/portal/server.pt/gateway/PTARGS_0_1248_875888_0_0_18/09_0083_EF.pdf

Third we have:

RAND Health: Analyzing the core issues in health care reform

For forty years, RAND analysts have been providing objective research on many of the topics now at the heart of the health reform debate. Read highlights of this work in key issue areas.

RAND COMPARE

Facts you can use, analysis you can trust

http://www.randcompare.org/

COMPARE (Comprehensive Assessment of Reform Efforts) is a first-of-its-kind online resource that synthesizes what is known about the current health care system, provides information on proposals to modify the system, and delivers facts and analysis about how potential policy changes are likely to affect health care delivery and costs in the United States. RAND Health created COMPARE to provide an unbiased source of information to help policymakers, the media, and other interested parties understand, design, and evaluate health policies.

More here:

http://www.rand.org/health/feature/health_care_reform_debate/

This is a useful resource providing information on many aspects of macro health reform.

Fourth we have:

Games For Health: The Latest Tool In The Medical Care Arsenal

Carleen Hawn 1*

1 Carleen Hawn is cofounder and editor of Healthspottr.com in San Francisco, California.

*Corresponding author.

At the heart of any promising plan to transform the health care system lie two priorities: broader access to care for patients, and deeper engagement in health care by patients. Although the problem of expanding access to affordable care remains unresolved, new tools for deepening consumers' engagement in health care are proliferating like viral spores in a virtual pond. Digital games, including virtual realities, computer simulations, and online play, are valuable tools for fostering patient participation in health-related activities. This is why gaming is the latest tool in the arsenal to improve health outcomes: gaming makes health care fun. [Health Aff (Millwood). 2009;28(5):w842-8 (published online 4 August 2009; 10.1377/hlthaff.28.5.w842)]

Key Words: Chronic Care, Consumer Issues, Health Promotion/Disease Prevention, Research And Technology, Health Information Technology

More here:

http://content.healthaffairs.org/cgi/content/abstract/hlthaff.28.5.w842

The full article will be available till about the 18th of August, 2009 for free download.

Fifth we have:

HIEs Seek a Cash Injection

By Selena Chavis

For The Record

Vol. 21 No. 15 P. 10

State and regional organizations hope to receive a dose of ARRA funds to boost health information exchange to the next level.

Signed, sealed, and delivered. On February 17, President Obama signed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) aimed at providing a boost to the U.S. economy with specific investments to increase the health information exchange (HIE) movement across the nation.

The bill allocates more than $17 billion to implement EMRs in healthcare provider settings and an additional $3 billion to improve the nationwide healthcare technology infrastructure—money that is expected to be steered toward the expansion of HIEs and regional health information organizations (RHIOs).

“The overall impact [of the bill] is the refocusing and expansion of awareness. Many more administrators are much more aware of HIE and their role in improving healthcare,” says Christina Thielst, FACHE, an industry expert and HIT consultant. “Of course, the other major benefit is that there will be funding streams. We are at the cusp of more widespread implementation … but we need everyone’s support to move forward.”

While most industry insiders acknowledge the unique opportunity presented by the ARRA funding and are optimistic about the potential, the package itself has sparked much discussion and speculation about how best to move forward. In response to concerns voiced in the industry, Mosaica Partners, a Florida-based HIE consulting firm, initiated the white paper “Leading Practices: Leveraging the Economic Stimulus Package for Health Information Exchange” to gain insight into approaches being used by various states and regions in their planning efforts.

“We talked with 40 people in 30 different states. We felt the information was very valuable and indicated trends within various states,” notes Mosaica Partners President Laura Kolkman, RN, MS, adding that the organization tried to highlight innovative approaches that showed promise for success. “This is all brand new. We could not identify best practices, as that applies to initiatives that have been proven successful time and time again over a specified period. We instead called them ‘leading practices.’”

The white paper is intended to generate early discussion to avoid what some in the industry fear may turn into waste. “We talk a lot about planning because it is lack of planning that usually contributes to waste,” Kolkman explains. “The waste—there’s going to be some because it [the stimulus package] is so huge.”

Thielst echoes Kolkman’s position, pointing out that “the biggest concern is that providers will jump into implementation before they are ready.

“There’s a lot of preparation that has to go into getting an organization ready,” she adds. “My fear is that we will use up the money and not have much to show for it.”

Charlie Jarvis, assistant vice president of healthcare industry services and government relations for NextGen Healthcare, points out that it will be easy for organizations to get caught up in the movement’s technology aspect and potentially miss the broader picture. “Choosing the right technology is extremely important … but it’s just as important to choose the right partners going forward,” he says.

Much more here:

http://fortherecordmag.com/archives/080309p10.shtml

The report is found here:

http://www.mosaicapartners.com/images/Leading_Practices_-_Leveraging_the_Economic_Stimulus_Package_for_Health_Information_Exchange_FINAL.pdf

Sixth we have:

Report: ARRA to Hike Hardware Sales

HDM Breaking News, August 5, 2009

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act should spur higher sales of hardware as well as software applications, according to a new report from Kalorama Information, a New York-based life sciences research firm.

Hardware sales represent about 23% of annual health care computer sales, report authors estimate. They expect hardware sales will grow at a faster pace than I.T. spending as a whole in the near term--about 10.7% annually through 2013.

More detail here:

http://www.healthdatamanagement.com/news/stimulus-38772-1.html?ET=healthdatamanagement:e960:100325a:&st=email

The 125-page report, "Healthcare Computer System Markets and Trends in HIT Buying," is available for $3,500 at kaloramainformation.com/Healthcare-Computer-System-2303131/.

Hardly a surprise. I am not sure how much all the details are worth however!

Second last we have:

10 'Basic Patient Safety Reforms' to Save 85,000 Lives, $35 Billion

John Commins, for HealthLeaders Media, August 7, 2009

The consumer activist group Public Citizen says it has 10 basic patient safety reforms that could save 85,000 lives and $35 billion annually.

The report "Back to Basics," analyzes the results of several studies of treatment protocols for chronically recurring, avoidable medical errors. Most of the reforms in Public Citizen's report involve fundamentals as simple as practitioners consistently washing their hands, sufficiently tending to patients to prevent bed sores, and following simple safety checklists to prevent infections and complications stemming from operations.

The financial toll of failing to follow accepted safety procedures is astounding, PC says. Severe pressure ulcers cost an average of $70,000 apiece to treat. A catheter infection costs $45,000. Collectively, avoidable surgical errors cost an estimated $20 billion a year, bed sores $11 billion, and preventable adverse drug reactions $3.5 billion.

"There are many incentives to order expensive tests and procedures and too few rewards for providing basic, sensible care," says David Arkush, director of Public Citizen's Congress Watch division. "As the largest investor in the nation's healthcare system, the federal government should ensure that fulfilling basic patient safety standards is a condition of receiving federal reimbursements."

Much more here:

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/content/237151/topic/WS_HLM2_QUA/10-Basic-Patient-Safety-Reforms-to-Save-85000-Lives-35-Billion.html

The link to the report is in the text. Important reading.

Lastly we have:

The Healthcare Information Technology (HIT) Market is Poised for Growth

by Lou Agosta

Originally published August 6, 2009

Market Overview

The healthcare information technology (HIT) software market is poised for dramatic growth. Drivers include built up demand for upgrades in legacy systems that have been neglected for years, government incentives for action in implementing an electronic medical record (EMR) system (and penalties for non action), gaps in addressing demand such as the need for small-scale systems to support physician practices of five or fewer doctors, and the ability to do what software does best – automate workflow and coordination of care through scheduling and asynchronous, parallel processing. In short, healthcare organizations will pull themselves forward in the capability maturity model for the hospital of the future by means of enhanced IT integration and functionality.

This research estimates the current market for hospital information systems (HISs) to be some $307 million and growing at a 20% rate, whereas the market for physician practice management is $102 million and growing at 25%. Combined, the two markets will reach $1.38 billion by 2014 and surpass $2 billion by 2015.

On the flip side, market risks and inhibitors are substantial. Open source looms as a major disruptor in the positive sense of driving innovation and reengineering rather than direct software revenues (since the software itself is “free”). The end result will benefit end user enterprises as they are able to acquire more technology for the dollar. Meanwhile, Congressional legislation is a blunt instrument and market uncertainty is being amplified by lack of clarity as to the rules of engagement. Yes, EMRs are being implemented, but interoperability, workable security and usability remain afterthoughts in too many cases. Attention to these by software providers, implementers and users alike is not gold plating and will be rewarded with the cost saving and productivity improvements that are the promise of HIT.

Vastly more here :

http://www.b-eye-network.com/view/11085

A useful overview of the US Health IT Marketplace

Enough goodies for one week!

Enjoy!

David.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

HIC 09 – Australia’s Peak E-Health Conference – Alert Number 5

The HIC 09 Conference is being held in Canberra between August 19 and 21, 2009.

The conference web site is found here:

http://www.hisa.org.au/hic09

In a series of posts over the next two weeks I want to highlight some of the goodies on offer, and encourage you to attend if you possibly can.

All the details and registration is available on the link above.

Alert 5.

NBN could “pay for itself,” on e-health savings

Health continues to be a major focus for the development of the National Broadband Network. iSoft has made a submission to the NBN Senate Select Committee emphasizing the cost savings for integrated health records of the order of $8-$10 billion annually, and the importance of broadband in realizing the full e-health system benefits. The submission proposes that the value of the NBN would be significantly boosted by aligning the rollout with federal government healthcare initiative such as the personal health record and the deployment of super clinics. We are currently at a very important time where the thought leadership of Australia’s health informaticians will have a significant impact on the delivery of healthcare over the next decade.

......

You really need to get involved now, come to HIC09, create a discussion on the Health Hub or just send HISA an email with your thoughts, whatever you do, make sure you do have your voice heard!

This will be a seminal event. All the movers and shakers will be there. You need to be too!

David.