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."

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Is NEHTA Buying Out A Royal Clinical College with the Promise of Some Sponsorship?

This was published by the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners on Friday Feb, 19, 2010.

Message from the President

Healthcare Identifiers Bill 2010

The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners welcomes the government’s latest step in implementing the e-health agenda, with the Minister for Health and Ageing, The Hon Nicola Roxon MP, presenting the Healthcare Identifiers Bill, 2010 to Parliament earlier this week. The proposed national Healthcare Identifiers Service aims to implement and maintain a national system for uniquely identifying health care providers and individuals and is planned to be available from July 2010. Medicare Australia will be the initial operator of the Healthcare Identifiers Service.

The vast majority of GPs are already using computers for a range of health services and the college recognises the importance of building a robust and future looking e-health system for Australia.

In order to create a safe, reliable and timely health care environment, it will be of utmost importance to quickly and adequately identify patients, while maintaining the flexibility to provide anonymous services to those who require them. If we get it right, the national Healthcare Identifiers Service is the cornerstone to making e-health work.

The correct implementation of individual and health care provider identifiers is important, as it will help lead to a safer and more efficient means of distributing medical records between health care providers such as general practitioners, hospitals, specialists and pharmacists. It also greatly reduces risk of avoidable error.

The passing of this legislation is paving the path for the future. Health care identifiers are an important building block to enable a national individual electronic health record system.

While the RACGP in principle supports the development and implementation of a national Healthcare Identifiers Service, there must be clarity regarding privacy safeguards, implementation issues and the application of health identifiers before progressing the system. To read the RACGP’s submission to the Department of Health and Ageing, ‘Exposure Draft Healthcare Identifiers Bill 2010’ in detail, visit www.racgp.org.au/healthreform/35827.

The college’s work with the National E-Health Transition Authority

Quality and standards are the college’s core business. As such, the Standards for general practices are central to the work of the college, especially during a time of major health reform. The 4th edition of the Standards will include updating of the e-health standards, which is why the RACGP is working with the National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA) to develop the next edition of the Standards.

General practitioners are at the forefront of IT and e-health and we must continue to hold this position or risk having requirements imposed upon us. The Standards review process has recognised this, and the RACGP e-health Standards team will be proposing changes to the Standards. Our profession will drive any change to our Standards.

The work of NEHTA is crucial in health reform. To ensure that GPs can deliver the highest standard of care to their patients, the RACGP is ensuring that NEHTA is informed of what is reasonable, workable and useful for GPs when leading the progression of e-health in Australia. The 4th edition of the Standards for general practices will be launched at the RACGP Annual Conference – GP’10 – to be held from 6–9 October 2010 in Cairns. As announced at GP’09, the college is pleased that NEHTA have come on board as the major sponsor for GP’10; we hope to see you there.

This material comes directly from this link.

http://www.racgp.org.au/fridayfacts/36098

This enthusiastic support of all NEHTA is doing seems to have been purchased by an offer of sponsorship as best one can tell.

On 13 January, 2010, just a month ago, in a submission on the Identifiers from the College, we find the following.

4. Concluding comments

The College is supportive in principle of Unique Health Identifiers, and looks forward to continuing discussions with the Department of Health and Ageing regarding HIs prior to their progression and implementation.

In particular, the RACGP looks forward to receiving information providing clarity regarding:

• privacy safeguards and informed consent

• details of the communication strategy for the implementation process

• how implementation issues will be addressed, including the roll out of general practice software, installation, and funding

• application of HIs, including when to apply anonymous or pseudonymous IHIs.

See here:

http://www.racgp.org.au/reports/20100113RACGPSubmission_IHIBill2010.pdf

Submission - Page 4.

Why the adoption of a new and much more compliant view?

We suddenly find NEHTA sponsoring the College Annual Conference, and all the problems apparently identified so recently resolved and everything is now just wonderful. A little stall for NEHTA to exhibit maybe – major sponsorship smells a bit like a payoff to me! What an amazing outcome.

I for one would not want to be associated with a clinical College that can be so ‘flexible’ in its views. (Just so it is clear I hold Fellowships of two other major clinical colleges (Anaesthetics and Intensive Care) – so I know of what I speak).

One really wonders why such a sudden change of mind was possible from the published view just one month earlier.

The response to this blog – with 19 comments – rather suggests there is a level of disconnect between the College and its members and considerable concern with the College Standards setting approach.

See here:

http://aushealthit.blogspot.com/2010/02/talk-about-being-out-of-touch-with.html

I am sure the reasons for all this will come out in due course – I hope it will not be too damaging to the College when it does.

I look forward to comments from College Members and Fellows on all this. Please note I am not suggesting anything like corruption, undue pressure or influence or the like. I just believe bodies such as the clinical colleges should be rather more circumspect in how they approach dealing with Government and pseudo government entities.

David.

Monday, February 22, 2010

The Australian Department of Defence Plans to Do E-Health.

A major tender was announced a little while ago (19th February, 2010)

The key details are as follows:

The Department of Defence is seeking a Contractor to design, build and implement a new electronic health system for serving ADF members. The service provider will be required to tender for all services associated with such an implementation, including supply and integration of the relevant COTS products and the hosting of the solution. Their services will also include organisational change, communication and training.

An Industry Briefing will be held in the morning of Thursday 4th March 2010 in the Australian Capital Territory.

This consultation process is without prejudice and the Department cannot be held to account for any decision made in the final procurement documents.

Important note to Tenderers

Tenderers should note that, as at today's date, the Commonwealth has released only the following parts of this RFT:·

- Covering Letter

- Conditions of Tender (excluding Attachment A)

- Draft Statement of Work (including Attachments)

Other parts of the RFT will be released in due course.

Tenderers should register with AusTender to ensure that they are notified when other parts of the RFT have been released. Tenderers should note that upon registration at jehdi.project@defence.gov.au, the tender pack will be emailed to the registered contact.

Information about registration for the industry briefing will be provided in the conditions of tender.

-----

See here for full details.

https://www.tenders.gov.au/?event=public.advert.show&AdvertUUID=E334928D-00E3-5AA4-685025E0F2795258

The Tender closes 29-Mar-2010 12:00 pm (ACT Local time)

The tender seems to be driven by the 2009 Defence Capability Review. Here we find a project on the ADF Deployable Health Capability.

It is described thus:

JP 2060 is a multi-phase joint project which involves the identification and development of capabilities required to prevent, treat and evacuate casualties in joint operations in the defence of Australia and its interests.

This phase is intended to improve the existing ADF Deployable Health Capability to deliver optimum quality services for the prevention, treatment and evacuation of casualties. It intends to achieve this through the adoption of a ‘whole of system’ approach to the delivery of health support, addressing each of the following five Health Operating Systems:

  • Preventive Health;
  • Treatment;
  • Medical Evacuation;
  • Health Information Systems (command, control, communication, intelligence and information management systems); and
  • Health Service Logistics.

The full document is here.

http://www.defence.gov.au/publications/DCP_2009.pdf

More details are also available here:

http://www.defence.gov.au/dmo/id/dcp/dcp.cfm

It is good to see e-health getting a serious look in – if only in, of all places, the Defence Department. I guess they know something the Health Department doesn’t!

Sounds like a pretty major project for someone!

David.

The Truth About the Department of Health and Ageing – And it is All bad!

The following appeared in the Age today. (Mon Feb 22, 2010)

Yes Minister meets Alice in Wonderland

MYLES PETERSON

February 21, 2010

Midway through last year I was head-hunted by the federal Department of Health and Ageing to write speeches for their ministers - a surprise as I had no experience or qualifications. As far as the department was aware, my limited skills were derived from reviewing video games for The Canberra Times.

Perplexed and amused, I dusted off the suit and attended my one and only interview. ''I'll be writing speeches for who?''

''Minister Roxon,'' answered my interviewer.

''And you're going to pay me how much?''

''Eighty thousand a year. Will that be enough?''

So began my journey down the public service rabbit-hole. I would soon learn that swine flu and a raid on staff by another department were to thank for my recruitment.

Compounding the staffing crisis was a high turnover rate. A recent survey had revealed staff satisfaction was the lowest of any section, for any department, anywhere. I pondered the figures as they stared down at me from a huge poster, plastered opposite my new desk.

''What does that 35 per cent mean?'' I asked a colleague. There was no answer, a response I would get used to.

I was given my first speech to write. I was not given an induction, training, an occupational health and safety lecture, a security clearance, a standard operating procedures manual, a style guide or anything you would expect when starting a job with the federal government of Australia.

As promised, the speech was for Nicola Roxon, Minister for Health and Ageing. The topic was macular degeneration and I was instructed to mention Ita Buttrose. Despite being completely lost, without an inkling of how to proceed, I quickly learnt not to ask any questions. Nobody would answer them with anything other than an annoyed glare or dismissive quip.

I wrote the speech. I muddled my way through the maze of acronyms that indicated who my departmental researchers were while I attempted to learn the procedures on the run. I emailed the final copy to the Minister's office and winced, waiting with dread for the inevitable criticism that should come pouring back.

Nothing happened. My speech was swallowed by the public service ether. Did the Minister ever read it? I do not know. Did the Minister even look at it? No idea. The following day I was given a second speech to write.

The sad saga continues here:

http://www.theage.com.au/opinion/yes-minister-meets-alice-in-wonderland-20100220-omsa.html

After reading this I am almost ready to throw in the towel. The incompetent led by the ignorant and the stupid.

At least the author was honourable enough to leave!

The chances for Health Reform and e-Health in Australia must approximate zero!

David.

The Mainstream Media is Noticing What a Mess e-Health is in Australia.

Life Matters on ABC Radio National has struck again.

The following was broadcast this morning (Monday, Feb 22, 2010).

Google and privacy

listen now | download audio

The Federal Government's proposal to create an e-health number for every Australian has renewed debate over how our personal medical information is collected and distributed.

But the global company Google also collects and controls massive amounts of personal information.

Google has just launched its new social networking site - Buzz - for the more than 150 million people who use gmail, Google's email service.

Some commentators are concerned it's another step toward an unhealthy level of surveillance and data collection.

Social researcher Vivienne Waller raises these concerns, we also hear from David Vaile from the Australian Privacy Foundation.

Bottom of Form

Guests

Dr Vivienne Waller
Research Fellow at the Institute for Social Research, Swinburne University of Technology

David Vaile
Vice-Chair, Australian Privacy Foundation

Further Information

Australlian Privacy Foundation

Dr Vivienne Waller

Publications

Title: Why is Google Buzzing
Author: Dr Vivienne Waller
Publisher: Inside Story
URL: http://inside.org.au/why-is-google-buzzing/

Presenter

Jane Caro

Producer

Amanda Armstrong

Story Researcher and Producer

Jane Shields

- End Program Announcement.

While the ‘slip up’ with the way Google introduced the Buzz social networking feature of Gmail is covered in some detail a key area of the discussion covers issues in the e-Health domain.

David Vaile made e-Health related points as follows:

1. Health Information now exists in paper and electronic records in a range of places and the way they are accessible is progressively being made more difficult for patients to keep track of as more of the information moves into electronic form.

2. The Government is wanting to accelerate this migration, but does not seem to want to wait for the final report on Privacy from the Australian Law Reform Commission.

3. While they have this objective the Government is providing very fragmented information on what they are planning to do, how individuals will have their privacy protected and so on.

4. The lack of a clear overall vision as to what is being planned, the lack of consumer consultation on the directions being pursued and the absence of information as to how privacy is to be address is a major problem for the Government’s plans.

(Apologies if not quite as presented, the thrust is as stated but there is not a transcript available).

All I can say is that he is spot on. This fragmented, secretive and incoherent approach is utterly unacceptable.

It is well worth a listen to the 15-20 minute discussion. Besides the e-Health material the stuff about Google is also interesting.

David.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

NEHTA’s Media Spin, Project Mismanagement and Public Confusion Just Rolls On. Not Good!

It has been a really big week for NEHTA in the news.

First we has the recognition in the News Limited press we were all going to get numbered – and it is not clear there was universal comprehension or joy about this.

See here:

Fake patients roll in health numbers game

Story Summary

  • 16-digit health number from July
  • Shared electronic health records
  • Privacy concerns remain

CONTROVERSIAL guidelines that will allow "well-known personalities" to have fake health ID numbers will be written, starting next week.

Every Australian from July will be automatically issued a new 16-digit health number.

Also known as a "building block", the health number will eventually allow for medical professionals to share patient health files via an electronic health record.

Legislation is now before Federal Parliament to provide for the health number, which will only store names, dates of birth and addresses, but privacy concerns remain.

The Courier-Mail revealed last month that "well-know personalities" and others considered "at-risk" could apply to have two ID numbers.

One of these ID numbers would be a fake to offer another layer of protection.

Commonwealth-funded IT developer the National E-Health Transaction Authority will meet stakeholders next week to begin discussing guidelines on "pseudonymisation".

A NEHTA spokeswoman said yesterday the guidelines would determine who could be granted fake IDs and who could grant them.

She said it was likely the guidelines would heavily restrict who could be eligible.

The ability for "pseudonymisation" was needed because of guiding health principles, the spokeswoman said.

Defending the plan and in a bid to alleviate privacy concerns, Federal Health Minister Nicola Roxon said the identifier numbers would not be abused.

"The Healthcare Identifiers Bill specifically prohibits the use of the Individual Healthcare Identifiers for anything other than the delivery of healthcare services or related services, such as the management of the health service," Ms Roxon said.

"Further, the Bill also provides specific penalties for the use of Individual Healthcare Identifiers for any purpose other than this."

More here with comments from public.

http://www.news.com.au/national/fake-patients-roll-in-numbers-game/story-e6frfkvr-1225831155324

And here:

Patients have no choice - a health number ID for us all

YOU are going to get a unique 16-digit health ID number on July 1 - whether you want one or not.

This is a despite a Rudd Government promise the new "e-health" system would be on an opt-in basis.

You can opt not to have a tax file number but a spokeswoman for Health Minister Nicola Roxon yesterday confirmed you will not be able to opt out of the new health identity system.

At first the new health ID number will not hold information but eventually the Government wants it as the basis for a new electronic health record.

Patients will be able to decide whether they have an e-health record that will give doctors around the country access to information on medical tests, operations and other health information of a patient.

This will revolutionise the health system, make it faster and easier for doctors to get test results and improve patient safety by making medication mix-ups less likely.

However, there are concerns that future governments may decide to extend the use of the new e-health number beyond its initial purpose.

In l987, the Hawke government scrapped a project for a national identity system called the Australia Card after it proved unpopular.

Independent Senator Nick Xenophon said the new e-health system had benefits but wanted a Senate inquiry to examine any privacy concerns carefully.

"I can see it would be tempting for governments to use it for more than its intended purpose," he said.

More here:

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/patients-have-no-choice-a-health-number-id-for-us-all/story-e6freuy9-1225831125547

They even noticed in Europe:

Australia to mandate health ID number

17 Feb 2010

The Australian government has said it will mandate a new national e-health number for all citizens.

The move to mandate the unique 16-digit health ID number, to be introduced from July, comes despite an earlier Government promise the new "e-health" system would be on an opt-in basis.

While the new health ID number will not hold information, it is intended to form the basis of a planned new system of electronic health records.

More here:

http://www.ehealtheurope.net/news/5648/australia_to_mandate_health_id_number

Then we had the Fairfax press discovering we were not going to be able to control the sharing of our health information.

Electronic health record takes first tiny step

MARK METHERELL

February 17, 2010

THE promise that patients will control their medical records in the federal government's proposed electronic health system remains uncertain despite the introduction of ''foundation'' e-health legislation.

The first stage of the scheme, to take effect on July 1, will give every Australian a 16-digit identifying number, known as an individual healthcare identifier (IHI).

The goal is to create a single electronic process to allow doctors and others to identify patients and access their medical records.

A patient's control of who could view their records was highlighted as central to the success of the scheme in a report by the National Health and Hospitals Reform Commission last July.

''An electronic health record that can be accessed, with a person's agreement, by health professionals across all settings is arguably the single most important enabler of truly person-centred care,'' the report said.

But the National E-Health Transition Authority, the body responsible for the first stage, said it was still to be decided how access control would work.

Peter Fleming, the authority's chief executive, said that while the broad outline of the scheme was agreed, the Council of Australian Governments was yet to approve how the rules governing the new record would work.

Nathan Pinksier, a clinical adviser to the authority, said it was difficult to enable patients to block certain health providers from seeing sensitive information that others, such as their doctors, should know.

''These are not easy questions,'' Dr Pinskier said.

There were several potential ways of quarantining patient information. Final selection would be part of a gradual process as the new system would take a few years to introduce.

Widespread differences between existing patient identification schemes throughout Australia have led some in the health industry to be sceptical about the time it will take to implement a new system.

A government official said it was possible the Council of Australian Governments would decide on the next stage of the scheme this year.

More here:

http://www.smh.com.au/technology/electronic-health-record-takes-first-tiny-step-20100216-o8zp.html

Here we have two important pieces of information. One is that the HI Service is a prelude in NEHTA’s mind to an EHR service and second is they have yet to work out how health information is going to be segmented, stored and protected.

Next we learn that the software industry has been kept outside the tent as all this has been planned and developed.

Software firms ill-informed on health ID plan

SOFTWARE makers are yet to see full technical specifications for the planned healthcare identifier regime due to start on July 1 provided enabling legislation introduced by Health Minister Nicola Roxon last week is passed by parliament.

The Medical Software Industry Association says members are also yet to see a working demonstration of the system, developed by Medicare Australia in conjunction with the National E-Health Transition Authority.

Under the program, to be operated by Medicare, all patients, medical providers and healthcare organisations will be issued with an individual six-digit number.

Unique identifiers are an essential base for greater use of electronic communications across the health sector, and will be a platform for the future development of individual e-health records.

But MSIA president Geoffrey Sayer said software-makers were in the dark about changes they would need to make to their products, beyond knowing to allow for a number in forms and databases.

"No one in the vendor community has actually seen the e-health community model, and no one actually knows what's involved in its set-up, which I find slightly odd given vendors are supposed to be rolling it out," he said.

"We've asked for the technical details several times and we've tried to source the information from what's available in the public domain, but we still haven't got a clear document that shows us what is supposed to happen."

A NEHTA spokeswoman said yesterday a special vendor day would be held at its Model Health Community demonstration site at Medicare's Canberra headquarters on February 26.

NEHTA chief executive Peter Fleming conceded in an interview with The Australian last month that the healthcare identifier system was built without input from local industry, but said engagement with the private sector was now being addressed.

More here:

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/australian-it/software-firms-ill-informed-on-health-id-plan/story-e6frgakx-1225830673348

Against all this we have the Australian Information Industry Association saying – on the basis of some rather uncertain link between broadband rollout and health productivity and apparent prior briefings that have told them what is in the critical regulations that will support the HI Service legislation - that all is wonderful. Maybe they should have a closer look at the details and expert reaction before they sound off.

See here:

http://rustreport.com.au/

February 19 2010

Healthcare bill a positive step

By Ian Birks*

AIIA is a strong supporter of the Healthcare Identifiers Bill, recently tabled in Parliament by Federal Health Minister Nicola Roxon. The aim of the bill is to introduce nationally consistent healthcare identifiers that will improve the accuracy of health records by ensuring that the right information about the right patient goes to the right place.

With a planned implementation date of July 1, the introduction of healthcare identifiers would deliver the foundations for a much wider range of electronic health care initiatives across the sector by supporting information flow between healthcare providers -- creating improvements in planning, co-ordination and decision-making at all levels.

E-health strategies have seen a long process of development in Australia, and it is now very important that we act consistently to implement planned activities. Delays in implementing national e-health strategies will only lead to higher costs as these issues are inevitably addressed in the future.

There are no strong arguments against the implementation of the Healthcare Identifiers Bill. Healthcare identifiers contain no clinical information. Clear mechanisms are in place to address privacy concerns.

In fact, NSW alone currently has 20 separate identifiers in place. Eliminating that level of duplication though a single national program that offers consistency at both the federal and state levels is essential if Australia is serious about improving the productivity of the healthcare sector.

The right technology strategies will be critical to improving the efficiency of healthcare on a national scale. Yet the levels of technology investment found in other parts of the Australian economy have not been seen in healthcare. ICT investment across healthcare industry sits at around 1.5 per cent, compared with an average of 2.5 per cent in the wider economy. Moreover, the health sector will be a critical component of Australia's economic growth in the future as we set out to develop a genuine digital economy.

.....

*Ian Birks is CEO of the Australian Information Industry Association www.aiia.com.au

----- End extract.

In the professional medical literature we also saw a long article on how we are moving towards a personal electronic health record.

All wired up

18-Feb-2010

The Federal Government wants all patients to have a personal electronic health record by 2012 – and it’s GPs who will hold the key to its success or failure. By Sarah Colyer

DR Mukesh Haikerwal is on a mission to convince GPs that it is worth their efforts to make e-health a major part of the health system.

Rarely a week goes by when the former AMA president is not making an impassioned presentation to a gathering of GPs somewhere around the country on how IT is critical to health reform.

As the principal GP adviser to the National E-Health Transition Authority and a commissioner on the Federal Government’s National Health and Hospitals Reform Commission, Dr Haikerwal is one of Australia’s most well-informed GPs when it comes to e-health.

The reform commission recommended that by 2012 every Australian should be able to access a personal electronic record of their own health information.

Most controversially, it said GPs and other health practitioners should be able to send information to the record by 2013 or they could lose access to Medicare benefits for their patients.

It’s tough, but Dr Haikerwal has no doubt it will be better for patients.

Speaking at a GP function in Sydney late last year, he tried to pre-empt the local doctors’ concerns.

He’d heard some were worried the Person-Controlled Electronic Health Record (PEHR) would strip them of control of their own clinical records. Others doubted they could trust a patient-controlled system, and some were concerned about what it would mean for patient privacy.

Dr Haikerwal stressed that GPs would still own their records. The electronic health record would not contain the GP’s clinical notes, just a summary of vital information. There would be an audit trail to show when information was recorded and viewed and by whom, and GPs would be able to upload information to the record “at the push of a button”.

As for how GPs can be sure the record is up to date, Dr Haikerwal said they simply couldn’t. “But even today, health professionals are aware that records may not be complete. That doesn’t mean they are not worthwhile,” he said.

But Dr Hani Bittar, a western Sydney GP, remains unconvinced.

He has seen a similar system fail — the Healthelink pilot in his region. The internet-based system, hosted by NSW Health, was supposed to share patient data among GPs, hospitals, specialists and pathology providers using the internet.

But Dr Bittar says it has been nothing but a waste of time.

“It slowed our computers down dramatically, we got no support and the hospitals didn’t want to be involved,” he says.

Dr Bittar says some information is best shared only among doctors. He recounts the story of a young female patient who spent a weekend worrying she was going to die after opening an envelope containing normal results from a liver function test.

“Patients are not qualified to read the kinds of things that will be open to them in an electronic health record,” he says.

On top of this, he has his own suspicions that the electronic health record will evolve into a national identity card.

However, Dr Haikerwal says in some ways the national electronic health record is not dramatically different to the paper-based systems that are already starting to fade away.

Dr Haikerwal was recently cleaning out his office drawers when he found a paper version of a shared record he created in 1992 to give to patients, containing a summary of past test results, allergies and medications.

“It was a very useful process when the patient went to hospital, and it helped them and me to get feedback, but it took an awfully long time to put together,” he says.

“To be able to get information that is up to date, accurate, and from a trusted source on which I could act — and vice-versa so that the hospital could act on my trusted word — would help the patient on their journey and would stop me beating my head against a wall.”

DEFINING A NATIONAL ELECTRONIC HEALTH RECORD

THE exact nature of the “national electronic health record” is hard to pin down.

It was not long ago that the Federal Government and its e-health taskforce, NEHTA, were talking about building a centralised database containing the health records of all Australians — a prospect that horrified privacy advocates.

But in a media interview a few months ago, NEHTA CEO Peter Fleming said the original vision had been abandoned in favour of “person-controlled records”, which would be quicker to deploy. provider and healthcare organisation.

Much, much more here (if you can access Australian Doctor):

http://www.australiandoctor.com.au/articles/cb/0c066ecb.asp

The key point you find here is in the bold paragraph.

Even journalists covering this story can’t actually work out what is planned. Heavens help the public!

A day or so we then had this after NEHTA tried a sell job on the journalists with a visit to Canberra, some briefings and then a nice meal.

Long road to e-health record rollout

  • Karen Dearne
  • From: Australian IT
  • February 19, 2010 1:55PM

AN updated business case for a national e-health record rollout is being prepared for the Council of Australian Governments, but there is no guarantee the project will be considered this year.

National E-Health Transition Authority chief executive Peter Fleming said the business case for Individual E-Health Records (IEHR) "has been built, and it clearly ties into the government's overall health agenda and recommendations from the National Health and Hospitals Reform Commission".

"But (funding) is a COAG decision, and then obviously it is up to government in terms of timing (for rollout)," Mr Fleming said. "I am optimistic the case will go to COAG at some stage this year, but I cannot give you a timing on that."

The original IEHR business case, completed in October 2008, estimated the set-up cost of a national e-health record system at $1.6 billion over four years, but warned Australians would pay a high price for further delays.

.....

In Canberra this week, NEHTA clinical lead Mukesh Haikerwal said the current business case was aimed at creating shared record summaries, rather than "a complete health record with everything available".

.....

Media representatives were given a tour of the Model Health Community set up by NEHTA and Medicare Australia to demonstrate the potential operation of the planned national Healthcare Identifier service, if enabling legislation is passed by federal Parliament.

Under the proposed law, all Australians will be issued with a 16-digit unique e-health identity number, linked to existing Medicare numbers, while all medical providers and healthcare organisations will be given 16-digit electronic identifiers based on professional accreditation and location registries.

No personal health information is to be associated with the identifier, although the service will maintain name, address, date of birth and certain demographic details.

.....

Dr Haikerwal said provider authentication and audit logs of access to individual records would make the system more secure than current practices.

Much more here:

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/australian-it/long-road-to-e-health-record-rollout/story-e6frgakx-1225832211028

I hear that sadly the demonstrations were more like foilware and that the general tone of the discussions with the journalists was sceptical in the extreme – reflecting the earlier take from News Limited and Fairfax reported above..

The bottom line is that no-one knows what the new business case is seeking, no one knows where the HI Service is actually up to and we have some quite confusing things being reported.

It would be a very good idea if NEHTA were to actually put out a detailed release that defines just what is going on, where things are up to and what we can all expect over the next year or two. Right now we are in a NEHTA Media created fog.

On a related topic this appeared a few days ago

Commentary

7:25 AM, 15 Feb 2010

Robert Gottliebsen

More than Canberra can chew

The Peter Garrett insulation bungle is a symptom of a deep public service management problem in Canberra. It has already engulfed Penny Wong and Julia Gillard could be the next victim.

I must emphasise that I am not in the business of excusing ministerial mistakes, and Garrett and Wong could have done a lot better in handling their tasks and they have clear responsibilities under the Westminster system.

Nevertheless, the public service in Canberra is being asked to undertake tasks where it has little experience and that inexperience is contributing to the ministerial bungles. Penny Wong is lucky because opposition leader Tony Abbott is concentrating on the big picture in the emissions trading legislation. If he or his Climate Change Shadow Minister Greg Hunt ever begin to tackle the detail of the emissions trading legislation Penny Wong would be exposed.

.....

Julia Gillard is a brilliant performer and she has handled the problems that have so far arisen in her schools building problem with the professionalism you would expect.

.....

Both Kevin Rudd and Tony Abbott are thinking up all sorts of ideas to give the public service in Canberra even more work to do as part of centralisation. Where the public service is operating in areas where it has proven expertise, ministers can look very good. But once the public service moves into new areas, it struggles and so do the ministers.

I know one or two ministers with good departments who regard this as the greatest long-term danger the government faces. What has happened to Peter Garrett – and what would happen to Penny Wong if the opposition focused on the emissions trading legislation detail – is merely a sign-post of what is ahead.

Full article here (registration required)

http://spectator01.businessspectator.com.au/bs.nsf/Article/Penny-Wong-Julia-Gillard-Peter-Garrett-insulation--pd20100215-2NRFN?OpenDocument

Never were truer lines written. We are seeing a national government really struggle with implementation of a lot of programs and from the evidence in front of us both NEHTA and DoHA should be pretty nervous they might be next to be found to not be all that good at program delivery.

We mentioned this issue a few days ago and I am hearing more and more on the topic. Insiders on ABC 1 also mentioned the issue.

See here:

http://aushealthit.blogspot.com/2010/02/life-matters-radio-national-18-february.html

Overall, it looks to me like NEHTA has not only lost effective t control of the HI Service implementation but also it has now lost control of the public debate. That will not be easy to recover from.

David.

Saturday, February 20, 2010

AusHealthIT Man Poll Number 9 – Results - 20 February, 2010

The question was:

Should The Health Minister Replace the Departmental Secretary for Failing to Progress e-Health?

Definitely

- 29 (59%)

Probably

- 10 (20%)

Possibly

- 4 (8%)

Not Her Fault

- 6 (12%)

Votes : 49

Comment:

So what we have here is readers giving the Departmental Secretary a distinctly failing grade with a small rump thinking someone else is to blame – Minister Roxon would have to be a strong candidate. All badly need to lift their game in my view. Again the e-Health readership seem to have lost confidence.

Thanks again to all who voted.

David.

Friday, February 19, 2010

Talk About Being Out of Touch with Reality and Practicality.

The following appeared today.

GP standards to include e-health

by Jared Reed

New accreditation standard will mean that GPs may be required to show they are working towards the government's e-health agenda that kicks off later this year with the launch of unique health identifiers (UHI).

A likely addition to the upcoming fourth edition of the RACGP Standards for General Practices will ask GPs to ensure their practice and patient data is coded and de-identified.

But Dr Lynton Hudson, Chair of the college’s National Expert Committee on Standards for General Practices, tells 6minutes that coding itself will be done by software programs and is likely already happening in most practices.

Practices will also need to ask patients for three forms of identification to be checked against the patient’s file, such as proof of name and date of birth, and possibly the patient’s UHI should forthcoming legislation pass through Parliament, Dr Hudson says.

“The three identifiers are important because it’s been shown that that decreases error,” said Dr Hudson.

Lots more here:

http://www.6minutes.com.au/articles/z1/view.asp?id=511635

And can you see every General Practice in the country consuming secretarial and GP time doing all this for the sake of patient identification for no payment or incentive?

As a tired old blogger all I can say is that these people are totally out of touch with what is practical and affordable in GP. As far as specialists and others I suspect they will break down in tears of laughter!

Who on earth thinks this is a good idea? If this is an accurate report the RACGP has really lost it!

David.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

NEHTA – The One Year Report Card. Is F minus a Grade?

This appeared just on a year ago.

Peter Fleming, National E-Health Transition Authority, Chief executive

A PRAGMATIC approach will lead to success in e-health projects across the country this year, Peter Fleming says.

"There are huge opportunities to leverage what's out there, but in the short term we need to be pragmatic because that varies from state to state and from platform to platform," Fleming says.

"We have a utopian view of standards, but the reality is we need to work with each vendor to understand their capabilities, and start from there."

He is confident several production pilots, presently before NEHTA's board for approval, will begin this year.

"Initially, we're looking at medication management, referrals and discharge summaries because the work we've done on identifiers, security and clinical terminology positions us well in those areas," he says.

"A discharge summary means you need to pass data from hospital systems to the GP's system. So, we'll need to get clinical input on requirements; we'll need to look at the systems that are actually in place; and we'll need to work with the vendors and software suppliers to incrementally get where we want to go.

......

The Council of Australian Governments is to consider this year a business case for a more substantive e-health record program.

Fleming says NEHTA hopes to publish a road map soon, but he emphasises the plan will be iterative.

"To be successful, everyone needs to understand where they fit into the equation, what they need to deliver and when," he says.

A public awareness campaign is also on the agenda.

The Stakeholder Reference Forum, set up last year, brought in consumer representatives along with peak clinical and health IT bodies.

Full Article is here:

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/peter-fleming-national-e-health-transition-authority-chief-exe/story-e6frgaj6-1111118872538

So, at 1 year out.

1. No Business Case submitted for whatever the current name is for a shared record – a good thing in my view as we don’t want some half assed proposal dropped on us – as would be the usual NEHTA / DoHA form. I bet this is what happens!

2. No real change or improvement in secure clinical messaging.

3. No progress anyone can see on medication management – and a new specification delivered for Discharge Summaries – so not actually done yet!.

4. The Stakeholder forums meet each quarter – just how good is that and how much does anyone else hear about what went on – and if it was useful.

5. At least we now know what the spin program looks like.

6. Vendor engagement remains rudimentary at best.

We need to tell these people to fall on their swords. They are clearly clueless, can’t implement anything, and need to just melt into the background – and the sooner the better in my view.

David.