Quote Of The Year

Timeless Quotes - Sadly The Late Paul Shetler - "Its not Your Health Record it's a Government Record Of Your Health Information"

or

H. L. Mencken - "For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong."

Wednesday, July 07, 2010

A Spectacular Example of the Power and Value of Electronic Health Records – With A Few Others Thrown In.

As we are seeing more health systems gradually ramp up their levels of automation the benefits case for Health IT is rapidly firming. The following is a really fabulous example of how useful clinically decisive information can be derived from EHRs. This is followed by a few more, equally interesting write-ups of things that are being done.

Electronic Medical Records Strengthen Vaccine Safety Monitoring In Seizure Study

Cheryl Clark, for HealthLeaders Media, June 28, 2010

Intelligent use of electronic health records—even those collected from multiple health systems—can alert providers to harmful medical practices.
That's how Kaiser Permanente's analysis of 459,000 pediatric health records revealed that young children who received the combo MMRV (measles, mumps, rubella, varicella) vaccine experienced twice the rate of febrile seizures as did children who received two separate shots—one for measles, mumps, rubella and the other just for varicella.
"This study shows the tremendous power of electronic medical records to improve vaccine safety monitoring," says Nicola P. Klein, MD, co-director of the Kaiser Permanente Vaccine Study Center.
She adds that with either type of vaccine, the risk of a child having a seizure and a high fever as a result is very low, but it's important that parents know that risk so they can have informed discussions with their doctors about whether the combination vaccine is worth the risk.
For every 10,000 children given MMRV instead of MMR +V, there was an additional 4.3 seizures during the seven to 10 days following vaccination.
The finding, published in today's edition of the journal Pediatrics, prompted the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last month to change its vaccine guidance to one that favored the MMRV over MMR plus V.
Much more here:
It is worth noting that the lack of nationwide systems in Australia made more difficult than it might have been the sorting out of similar issues with the seasonal flu vaccine and young children here. We could have both noticed and responded to the issue better with better real—time surveillance systems.
That said there are also these recent reports along similar lines.
See here:

Clinical Studies Fueled by EMR Data 

Gienna Shaw, for HealthLeaders Media, June 29, 2010

At Montefiore Medical Center in Bronx, NY, researchers are harnessing the power of more than a decade's worth of electronic medical record data using a software program called Clinical Looking Glass (CLG). Developed by the academic medical center, the program interprets de-indentified data for entire patient populations and can be used to gauge the effectiveness of patient safety measures, identify and track public health threats, and provide data for professional articles and published studies.
Researchers, physicians, and other clinicians run as many as 2,800 queries every month using the software. Three examples: They used the program to measure the impact of Medicare regulations on rehabilitation patients, quantify the reduction in radiation exposure for emergency department patients, and track the care and progress of diabetes patients over time.
Measuring Medicare Policy
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) announced in 2005 a new rule that said a large percentage of rehabilitation hospitals' patients must have one of 13 specific diagnoses or the organizations could lose reimbursement. Concerned about the rule's potential impact on patients, a group of physicians at Montefiore, using CLG, performed a retrospective study of discharges from the hospital the year before the rules were implemented and discharges the year after the rules. They found that, in general, "restricting access to inpatient rehabilitation on the basis of diagnosis alone" resulted in patients being readmitted sooner and dying sooner. Their study called for broader, evidence-based guidelines to allocate rehabilitation services.
Reducing Radiation
To reduce unnecessary radiation exposure to patients admitted to the ED with a suspected pulmonary embolism, a group of radiology and nuclear medicine physicians conducted educational seminars for ED physicians. They showed the ED physicians that for certain embolism patients, a high-radiation CT pulmonary angiography (CTPA) was not necessary and that the lower-radiation ventilation-perfusion scan was just as effective. Using CLG, they showed that the number of CTPA scans performed decreased from 1,473 before the educational seminars to 920 after the seminars for an average reduction in radiation exposure of 23% percent per patient.
Much more here:
and here:

A Data Gold Mine

Gienna Shaw, for HealthLeaders Magazine, June 9, 2010

Tech-savvy hospitals are using EMR data to conduct clinical research, improve quality, and inform business decisions.
Clinical studies can take years to conduct. Just one example: A study of the widely used antibiotic gatifloxacin showed it could cause dangerous fluctuations in blood sugar levels among diabetic patients. After further research showed that all patients were at risk for the dangerous side effect, the drug was pulled from the market.
At Montefiore Medical Center in Bronx, NY, an analyst was curious whether a new clinical research tool the system had developed could duplicate the results of the gatifloxacin studies. The analyst isolated a cohort of the four-hospital system's patients who had been on the antibiotic and compared them to a group that was on a different antibiotic. Sure enough, the query showed that the patients on gatifloxacin were six times more likely to have high or low blood sugar than those who were not.
But the analyst didn't have to study the drug for months or years, go in front of a committee of physicians and data experts for research review, nor wait for the results to be published in a peer-reviewed journal. The analyst performed the query on his lunch break using a software program called Clinical Looking Glass that taps into more than a decade's worth of electronic medical record data.
The program interprets de-indentified data for entire patient populations and can be used to gauge the effectiveness of patient safety measures, identify and track public health threats, and provide data for professional articles and published studies. CLG has been used to measure the impact of Medicare regulations on rehabilitation patients, quantify the reduction in radiation exposure for emergency department patients, and track the care and progress of diabetes patients over time.
It also helped the system react quickly to a surprise FDA hospitalwide study during the heparin scare to check if patients using the blood-thinning drug had a longer hospitalization or died. Montefiore analysts quickly tracked all the patients who were given the drug from December 2007 through January 2008 and compared length of stay and mortality against those who were given the drug during the same period 12 months earlier, before the quality concerns were raised. The query found no increase in either measure—and no cause for alarm for Montefiore patients.
"The goal of these analytics is to gather information and conduct studies that lead to better clinical decision-making," says Eran Bellin, MD, vice president for clinical IT research and development at Montefiore, who was instrumental in designing CLG. "The queries have provided the quantitative evidence for dozens of peer-review journal articles, presentations at professional meetings, institutionwide patient quality improvement initiatives and programs that benefit entire populations."
"We believe it offers a glimpse into how healthcare informatics is shaping the future of medicine," says Montefiore's president and CEO Steven Safyer, MD.
Heaps more here
Also here is more even:

HIT That Enables Quality, Efficiency, and Value

June 2010
In the rush to implement healthcare information technology, providers might miss crucial steps to get the most from their systems and best reengineer care processes to provide higher quality and better value.
In this HealthLeaders Media Breakthroughs report, leading hospital systems—Bon Secours Virginia Health System, Denver Health, Trinity Health, and Hackensack University Medical Center—share insights and the lessons learned that will help you:
  • Understand the value of data warehousing and analysis
  • Use HIT as a transformational quality improvement tool
  • Communicate and align with physicians
  • Define what meaningful use means to your organization’s goals and objectives
See here:
And finally for some future work:

HealthPartners Research Foundation team to study role of electronic health records in reducing heart disease risk

BLOOMINGTON, Minn. --(Business Wire)--
A HealthPartners Research Foundation team has received a National Institutes of Health research grant to develop and implement an electronic health record (EHR)-based clinical decision support system to help reduce patients' risk of heart attack or stroke. The team, led by Patrick O'Connor, MD, MPH, senior clinical investigator, HealthPartners Research Foundation, received $3.7 million to conduct the five-year study, 'Prioritized Clinical Decision Support to Reduce Cardiovascular Risk.'
"This is the next generation of personalizing care with decision support that's meaningful to care providers and patients," said O'Connor who is also an assistant medical director at HealthPartners Medical Group. "HealthPartners Medical Group physicians and clinics have been pioneers in this area and this new project will likely lead to further improvements in care for thousands of patients," he said.
The team, in collaboration with the University of Minnesota's Carlson School of Management, will engineer a point-of-care system that identifies and prioritizes evidence-based treatment options for patients at moderate to high risk for a heart attack or stroke within 10 years. With HealthPartners physicians, they will test its effect on risk in a randomizedtrial that includes 18 primary care clinics, 60 primary care physicians and 18,000 patients.
If successful, this approach will reduce the risk of heart attack or stroke for about 35 percent of adults in the United States and maximize the clinical return on investment for electronic health record systems. It could also be a model for using electronic health record technology to deliver personalized medicine in primary care settings.
Full release here:
All in all we live in very exciting times. Sadly most of this will NOT be enabled by the Roxon proposed Personally Controlled EHRs without about a decade of work putting in the systems for providers that are needed first.
David.

Tuesday, July 06, 2010

Now Here Is An Issue or Two NEHTA and DoHA will Really Need to Address.

And now from the real world we find out about the quality of data in Shared EHRs in the UK where there have been efforts and incentives in place for years to improve the problem!

GPs confident their data is fit to share

24 Jun 2010
Four out of five GPs believe the quality of their practice data is fit for sharing, according to a survey on the future of general practice IT.
More than 500 GPs took part in a survey by doctors’ magazine Pulse which looked at GPs use of IT systems now and their views on access to information out-of-hours.
The survey found that 82% of GPs thought the quality of the data held in their practice’s clinical system was of sufficient quality to share with other healthcare. Only 7% thought their data quality was not fit for sharing and 11% said they were unsure.
The survey also found that 56% of respondents had received electronic records through the GP2GP transfer project. Just under one in three GPs (30%) thought that the quality of the records was good enough to ensure seamless delivery of a high quality service but 25% said that the quality of the records was not good enough.
GP data quality was described as one of the ‘wicked problems’ delaying implementation of the Summary Care Record in the independent evaluation of the SCR LINK published two weeks ago with researchers finding that SCRs did sometimes contain incomplete or inaccurate data.
More here:
Put another way one in six GPs were not sure their records were up to scratch. Not really great news given the efforts over five + years to get the data quality up. A survey asking similar questions now in Australia is needed I reckon the see how much work we have ahead to lift the Australian GP (and specialist) game.
And if that issue is not enough, here is at least some thinking on another contentious issue.
The other issue is consent management so that only what should be shared is shared!
I found this very all interesting.

Govt., vendors show off consent-management tools

Posted: June 30, 2010 - 12:15 pm ET
There are at least seven computerized consent-management software systems either operational or under development that let patients segment their sensitive healthcare information and control and audit who sees or uses their electronic health records.
Today's existing messaging standards are sufficient for allowing patients to communicate their privacy preferences to these systems, according to government and private-sector developers of privacy-protection software systems who testified and demonstrated their wares Monday in Washington at a daylong, HHS-sponsored hearing.
The most sophisticated of these consent management systems let patients exert unprecedented levels of so-called "granular" control over their medical information.
The missing link to wide deployment of these systems, many of the developers said, is not the technology but the lack of a uniform national policy on what level of control patients should enjoy as providers continue to adopt EHR systems and regional and state organizations seek to link them in a proposed national health information network.
The hearing was held before the Privacy & Security Tiger Team, a new work group of the federally chartered Health IT Policy Committee. The committee and its companion Health IT Standards Committee were created pursuant to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 to advise the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology at HHS on health IT issues.
Links to the written presentations of participants and a webcast of the hearing is available at the Tiger Team Web page.
Three of the seven systems featured during the hearing were open-source or public-domain software projects. Two were government-sponsored initiatives.
Lots more here:
It seems on both sides of the Atlantic people are battling with these complex issues.
No one can accuse me of not warning all that will listen that this whole shared patient record business has a zillion wrinkles which might come back and bite you! Care, learning from others and careful planning are vital if you are to have a hope in hell of succeeding!
David.

Useful Set of Presentations from a Recent Aust. General Practice Network e-Health Conference.

I was sent this link earlier today and think it is worthwhile passing on for those who are interested.
The link is here:
Included is the MSIA presentation I discussed a week or so ago here:
Other speakers included Prof Enrico Coirea, Mr Peter Fleming from NEHTA and a host of others.
Enjoy a browse!
David.

Monday, July 05, 2010

An Anniversary That Needs to be Noted. Have We Moved Far Yet?

Just on a year ago the National Health and Hospital Commission (NHHRC) submitted its final report to Health Minister Nicola Roxon. (June 30, 2009)
On E-Health the Executive Summary said the following (Page 8):

Smart use of data, information and communication

Our third lever to support an agile, self improving system is the smart use of data, information and communication.
We are recommending a transforming e-health agenda to drive improved quality, safety and efficiency of health care.
The introduction of a person-controlled electronic health record for each Australian is one of the most important systemic opportunities to improve the quality and safety of health care, reduce waste and inefficiency, and improve continuity and health outcomes for patients. Giving people better access to their own health information through a person-controlled electronic health record is also essential to promoting consumer participation, and supporting self-management and informed decision-making. We want the Commonwealth Government to legislate to ensure the privacy and security of a person’s electronic health data.
Making the patient the locus around which health information flows is critical and will require a major investment in the broader e-health environment. Electronic health information and health care advice will increasingly be delivered over the internet. Broadband and telecommunication networks must be available for all Australians if we are to fulfil the real promise of e-health.
We are also recommending that clinicians and health care providers are supported to ‘get out of paper’ and adopt electronic information storage, exchange and decision support software. The Commonwealth Government must set open technical standards which can be met by the vendor industry while ensuring the confidentiality and security of patient information. Most importantly, we urge governments to expedite agreement on a strengthened national leadership structure for implementing a National Action Plan on E-health, with defined actions to be achieved by specified dates.
Access to good information is also vital to measuring and monitoring the health of our population. We are recommending the development of Healthy Australia Goals 2020 – the first in a rolling series of ten-year goals. We want all Australians to participate in setting these goals and working towards improvements in health outcomes at local, regional and national levels.
We are also keen to promote a culture of continuous improvement through health performance reporting. Our recommendations include:
·         systems to provide comparative clinical performance data back to health services and hospitals, clinical units and clinicians;
·         publicly available information on health services to assist consumers in making informed choices;
·         the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care to analyse, report and advocate on safety and quality across all health settings; and
regular reporting on our progress as a nation in tackling health inequity
----- End Quote
 The detailed e-Health Recommendations are found in Section 5.3 of the report.
All the report and associated literature are here (yes, it has all moved from www.nhhrc.org.au)
It is interesting now to see where we are a year on (See Section 16 – Page 229 on for accountabilities – Mostly NEHTA and DoHA).
From earlier (Page 29) here are the recommendations:

Implementing a national e-health system

We recommend that, by 2012, every Australian should be able to:
·         have a personal electronic health record that will at all times be owned and controlled by that person;
·         approve designated health care providers and carers to have authorised access to some or all of their personal electronic health record; and
·         choose their personal electronic health record provider.
We recommend that the Commonwealth Government legislate to ensure the privacy of a person’s electronic health data, while enabling secure access to the data by the person’s authorised health providers.
We recommend that the Commonwealth Government introduce:
·         unique personal identifiers for health care by 1 July 2010; unique health professional identifiers (HPI-I), beginning with all nationally registered health professionals, by
1 July 2010;
·         a system for verifying the authenticity of patients and professionals for this purpose – a national authentication service and directory for health (NASH) – by 1 July 2010; and
·         unique health professional organisation (facility and health service) identifiers (HPI-O)
by 1 July 2010.
We recommend that the Commonwealth Government develop and implement an appropriate national social marketing strategy to inform consumers and health professionals about the significant benefits and safeguards of the proposed e-health approach.
Ensuring access to a national broadband network (or alternative technology, such as satellite) for all Australians, particularly for those living in isolated communities, will be critical to the uptake of person-controlled electronic health records as well as to realise potential access to electronic health information and medical advice.
We recommend that the Commonwealth Government mandate that the payment of public and private benefits for all health and aged care services depend upon the ability to accept and provide data to patients, their authorised carers, and their authorised health providers, in a format that can be integrated into a personal electronic health record, such that:
·         hospitals must be able to accept and send key data, such as referral and discharge information (‘clinical information transfer’), by 1 July 2012;
·         pathology providers and diagnostic imaging providers must be able to provide key data, such as reports of investigations and supplementary information, by 1 July 2012;
·         other health service providers – including general practitioners, medical and non-medical specialists, pharmacists and other health and aged care providers – must be able to transmit key data, such as referral and discharge information (‘clinical information transfer’), prescribed and dispensed medications and synopses of diagnosis and treatment, by 1 January 2013; and
·         all health care providers must be able to accept and send data from other health care providers by 2013.
We recommend that the Commonwealth Government takes responsibility for, and accelerates the development of a national policy and open technical standards framework for e-health, and that they secure national agreement to this framework for e-health by 2011-12. These standards should include key requirements such as interoperability, compliance and security. The standards should be developed with the participation and commitment of state governments, the IT vendor industry, health professionals, and consumers, and should guide the long-term convergence of local systems into an integrated but evolving national health information system.
We recommend that significant funding and resources be made available to extend e-health teaching, training, change management and support to health care practitioners and managers. In addition, initiatives to establish and encourage increased enrolment in nationally recognised tertiary qualifications in health informatics will be critical to successful implementation of the national e-health work program. The commitment to, and adoption of, standards-compliant e-health solutions by health care organisations and providers is key to the emergence of a national health information system and the success of person-controlled electronic health records.
With respect to the broader e-health agenda in Australia, we concur with and endorse the directions of the National E-Health Strategy Summary (December 2008), and would add that:
·         there is a critical need to strengthen the leadership, governance and level of resources committed by governments to giving effect to the planned National E-Health Action Plan;
·         this Action Plan must include provision of support to public health organisations and incentives to private providers to augment uptake and successful implementation of compliant e-health systems. It should not require government involvement with designing, buying or operating IT systems;
·         in accordance with the outcome of the 2020 Summit and our direction to encourage greater patient involvement in their own health care, that governments collaborate to resource a national health knowledge web portal (comprising e-tools for self-help) for the public as well as for providers. The National Health Call Centre Network (healthdirect) may provide the logical platform for delivery of this initiative; and
·         electronic prescribing and medication management capability should be prioritised and coordinated nationally, perhaps by development of existing applications (such as PBS online), to reduce medication incidents and facilitate consumer amenity.
---- End Extract.
A year on it is clear this is going to be a much longer process that the NHHRC envisaged!
We have given people their identifiers but the implementation of their use is now reckoned to take a couple of years.
NASH was meant to be ready for use but has not been seen as far as I know.
The national professional registration systems are just now creaking into life so it will be a while before provider identifiers are ready for use.
Fortunately the very silly idea of linking messaging capabilities to payments of standard Medicare benefits has gone quiet and work is still underway on getting the Standards in place – let alone fully proven and implemented nationwide. It would be hard to tie payments to messaging without a proven, working, nationally accessible system where all software providers had appropriate modifications in place and the data content rules etc were fully evolved. Not next week then!
The  professional and patient portals are also still well off into the future as far as we can all tell.
Lastly and critically – we now have some of the implementation funds without the leadership and governance as recommended in the NHHRC Report.
All in all rather a mixed and patchy implementation effort with most of the ‘hard stuff’ not addressed.
I find it interesting the NHHRC suggested choice of Person Controlled EHRs for patients. According to Ms Roxon that idea is out the window for now – with Medicare Australia to be doing it.
See here:
For other comments on the PCEHR proposal see here:
It is difficult to see a passing grade on all this just yet!
David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 25 – Results – 05 July, 2010.

The question was:
Will A Change to a New Prime Minister Improve Australia's Progress in E-Health?
For Sure
 - 3 (8%)
 Possibly
 - 6 (17%)
 Don't Know
 - 5 (14%)
 Probably Not
 - 18 (52%)
 No Way
 - 2 (5%)
Votes: 34
An interesting outcome, with 57% saying probably not or worse and only 25% positive on an improved outcome.
Again, many thanks to all those who voted
David.

Sunday, July 04, 2010

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 04 July, 2010

Here are a few I have come across this week.

Note: Each link is followed by a title and a paragraph or two. For the full article click on the link above title of the article. Note also that full access to some links may require site registration or payment.

General Comment:

Well it has been a busy week. Medicare Australia has given everyone a new number that will be of some use a few years down the track. It seems we are now going to start to get to work on the software that can use the HI Service. We can now await further developments.
Additionally we have interesting developments at Macquarie University and seemingly endless problems at Queensland Health.
The major issue I still see is that we still do not have any clarity about what Government are planning to do with the $400+ million for e-Health over the next two years. It really is about time we heard something about this.
-----

Two-year wait for health e-records

  • Fran Foo, Mitchell Bingemann
  • From: The Australian
  • June 29, 2010 12:00AM
PATIENTS will have to wait at least two years before they can access medical records online, federal Health Minister Nicola Roxon says.
Initially, only Medicare would operate a secure website or portal that would allow patients to retrieve their personally controlled electronic health records, she said.
But she left the door open for other service providers, such as health insurance providers, to manage patients' e-health records in future.
A 16-digit healthcare identifier, issued by Medicare, forms the backbone of an e-health records system.
-----

Australians get health ID number tomorrow

By Josh Taylor, ZDNet.com.au on June 30th, 2010
All Australians will have a Healthcare Identifier number from tomorrow, despite the legislation surrounding the identifiers only passing late last week.
The Department of Health and Ageing today confirmed to ZDNet Australia that everyone would be assigned an identifier by tomorrow, matching the government's original 1 July roll-out date.
"It is planned that identifiers for individuals will be allocated within the Healthcare Identifier system (run by Medicare Australia) on 1 July 2010," the department said. "Consumers do not need to do anything for this process to occur."
As part of the national professional registration process, health providers that are registered under the Health Practitioner Regulation National Law will also be given a number in the Medicare-run system from tomorrow.
-----

How I got my healthcare identifier

By Josh Taylor, ZDNet.com.au on July 2nd, 2010
Commentary : Despite individual healthcare identifiers being allocated to every Australian by Medicare yesterday, it has not been easy for the average citizen, me, to get a hold of my own number.
Considering the legislation just passed the Senate last week, I was curious to discover how easy it would be to find out my own personal 16-digit identifier number.
As part of the roll-out, Medicare Australia established a hotline (1300 361 457) to inform patients and healthcare providers about the new healthcare identifiers allocated to them following the passing of the legislation. The Medicare online service also contains record information including the identifier number.
-----

E-health summaries unreliable as sole source of patient records

2nd Jul 2010
ELECTRONIC summary care records (SCRs) provide little benefit to primary health care, a large British study suggests.
The study, which analysed quantitative data of more than 400,000 primary care consultations, found that where SCRs were available, health professionals only accessed them in 21% of patient encounters. Overall, SCRs were accessed in just 4% of patient encounters.
A qualitative analysis of the data found that clinicians did not view the SCR as the sole source of reliable data. 
-----

Media Monitors sold among swarm of private equity deals

Friday, 02 July 2010 11:31
Patrick Stafford
Media Monitors has been sold to Quadrant Private Equity in a deal reportedly worth up to $200 million, as the Australian private equity scene caught fire with a number of deals taking place yesterday.
The deals included US private equity group Providence Equity Partners buying Study Group for $660 million from fellow private equity firm CHAMP.
CHAMP in turn bought fence hiring group ATF Services from Quadrant for a reported price of about $250 million.
Meanwhile, private equity groups are reportedly circling health software provider iSOFT after a number of profit downgrades and a subsequent drop in its share price. The company itself blames volatility in Britain's political system for a number of product delays.
-----

Waikato District Health Board Selects iSOFT Group Limited (ASX:ISF) To Deliver Modern Laboratory Solution

Sydney, June 30, 2010 (ABN Newswire) - Waikato District Health Board in New Zealand has today signed a NZ$2.95 million, five-year deal with iSOFT for a laboratory information system to improve the speed, accuracy and reporting of 6.5 million test results a year.
The move provides a single solution for all of Waikato Hospital's pathology services and 190 laboratory staff, but will also be watched closely by other health authorities in New Zealand and Australia that are set to upgrade to modern laboratory systems.
Proven at over 300 laboratories across Europe and Asia, iSOFT Laboratory covers all laboratory functions including anatomical pathology. Full traceability meets all statutory regulations and provides sophisticated statistical information on the laboratory's business to enable effective decision making. Increased productivity and quicker turnaround of test results also enables faster intervention to improve patient care.
-----

iSOFT Group Limited (ASX:ISF) Completes E-Health Roll-Out At New Macquarie University Hospital

Sydney, June 28, 2010 (ABN Newswire) - iSOFT Group Limited (ASX:ISF) has installed a host of e-health systems at Macquarie University Hospital in Sydney in time for the new 199-bed, state-of-the-art hospital to operate paper-free from day one, under a A$7.8 million deal agreed in March 2010.
The A$250 million hospital opened on 26 June with iSOFT applications for patient, clinical and medication management as well as finance, purchasing and management reporting. The solutions are fully integrated with third-party systems for radiology, laboratory and pharmacy. Integration is provided by iSOFT's Viaduct integration engine to guarantee that changes are reflected across all applications in real-time.
-----

iSOFT CEO forced to dispose of more shares

15:39, 2nd July 2010
By Dylan Bushell-Embling (CFO World)
Gary Cohen, CEO of health IT company iSOFT (ASX:ISF), has been forced to sell even more shares because of an ongoing decline in the company's share price.
Cohen said he had disposed of around 7.6 million more shares, because he had borrowed against the holding to participate in a share purchase plan.
-----

Govt seeks CIO to tackle e-health

By Josh Taylor, ZDNet.com.au on July 2nd, 2010
The Department of Health and Ageing is looking to appoint a chief information and knowledge officer to begin the implementation of the government's e-health agenda.
According to the advertisement, the role will report to the secretary of the department and will "have leadership responsibility for information and knowledge management across the portfolio".
"This includes an organisation-wide focus on data, performance and information to improve health outcomes and to support advances in the development of e-health, including recent Australian government investment in a personally controlled electronic health record system," the advertisement states.
-----

Western Health to move to e-records

Victorian healthcare provider to deploy an electronic health record and scanning system
Western Health is to deploy an electronic health record and scanning system to enable the Victorian healthcare provider to digitally store and deliver patient medical records across its multiple sites.
The system, which will see some four million pages scanned in its first year of operation, will be used across all of Western Health’s sites including Western Health Footscray, Sunshine Hospital, Williamstown Hospital, Sunbury Day Hospital and a number of satellite sites.
-----

Connecting Healthcare In Australia

28 Jun 2010
The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP) has warmly welcomed the recent passing of the Healthcare Identifiers Bill through the Federal Parliament and is calling on all GPs to continue driving this process.
Dr Chris Mitchell, RACGP President, said that the passing of this legislation is the foundation needed to make e-health work in Australia and the passing of this legislation would not have been possible without the ongoing hard work and determination of general practice.
"The success of the Healthcare Identifiers Service in Australia will now be dependent on patients and health providers using the system to achieve the best possible health outcomes.
-----

Macquarie Uni Hospital IT infrastructure a "spaghetti" of systems

CIO readies ageing integrated environment path designed to see a more streamlined IT infrastructure
The newly opened Macquarie University Hospital (MUH) may boast a number of Australian firsts in technology, but its IT infrastructure is a "spaghetti" of systems, according to chief information officer (CIO), Geoff Harders.
The $250 million hospital, which opened on 15 June with a single patient, was part of two year project which saw owner, Macquarie University, set up an advanced medical school as well as negotiate the move of Cochlear Limited's global headquarters to the university campus. The 183-bed private hospital expects to be fully operational by the end of July, with 12 operating theatres and specialised clinics in radiology, pathology, radiotherapy and oncology.
However, many of the firsts it boasts - the first Australian Gamma Knife, a completely paperless hospital and a combined PET/CT molecular scanning clinic - are marred by a complicated mess of IT systems, applications and infrastructure as the result of decisions made by former partner, Dalcross Holdings.
-----

Macquarie Hospital shuns mobility

Ipad loss is thin-client win
Like many chief information officers (CIOs), Geoff Harders of Macquarie University Hospital (MUH) has tried the Apple iPad and sees its place in specialised sectors like healthcare. But unlike other CIOs, he has shunned the device.
"They're good for reference guides and patient lists," Harders told Computerworld Australia.
Harders does not find the iPad useful for either personal or professional use. He went as far to voice his qualms about the device on a colleague's blog at university proper.
The inability to print was one of Harders' main concerns that he said makes the device unfit for use in Macquarie University Hospital. Without that basic function, many MUH-accredited doctors who own practices would be incapable of taking valuable patient information with them, Harders said.
-----

Electronic barriers

29-Jun-2010
COMPUTERS: Obstacles to a paperless practice are proving difficult to shift. By Noel Stewart
GPs have been using computers for years, but the move to the paperless office is thwarted by three main limiting factors.
First, the word processing tools in most clinical software packages are quite inadequate.
You cannot have subfolders in the template list (such as one folder for outpatient referrals), so you are forced to scroll through a long list of templates. Nor can you have "if … then ..." choices, so that when you select a specific outpatient clinic, the relevant clinic details are transferred to the template you are using.
-----

PSA rejects opposition e-health spending cuts

2 July 2010 | by Nick O'Donoghue
Federal opposition leader Tony Abbott has been told to rethink his plans to cut funding for e-health to support his $1.5 billion mental health policy.  
Pharmaceutical Society of Australia president Warwick Plunkett accused the opposition of being “short-sighted” after Mr Abbott revealed he would cut spending on e-health and other health care initiatives to support his policy should the Coalition return to power after the next election.
Mr Plunkett described e-health as the “missing link” in terms of providing effective collaborative primary-care teams.  
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Updated: Qld Govt blames IBM for health payroll bungle

Whole-of-government ICT arrangements under fire as State Government reconsiders risk management and contingency requirements
The Queensland Government has threatened to terminate the troubled SAP payroll contract between IBM and Queensland Health, citing a "breach of duty of care and breach of contract".
The threat follows the release of report from the Auditor-General, which found the payroll system implemented for Queensland Health employees was not properly tested and did not provide contingency plans in case of failure when it was rolled out on 24 March, despite warnings from the testing company contracted. The fault left thousands of workers incorrectly paid.
The Queensland Government said in a statement that IBM should be held responsible for the bungle, as it was tasked with choosing appropriate software, as well as project management, design, development and implementation duties. The government issued a notice to the company to remedy breaches on 12 May, but a lack of action has caused the government to threaten to terminate the contract.
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Minister keeps job despite Queensland Health payroll debacle

  • From: AAP
  • June 30, 2010 9:49AM
QUEENSLAND'S health minister will keep his job and oversee a new payroll model as the government struggles to fix its sick pay system.
Project integrator IBM says problems with the payroll system, based on SAP software, was not its fault.
Premier Anna Bligh on Tuesday insisted her deputy Paul Lucas was safe despite calls for his job following a damning report by Auditor-General Glenn Poole on the bungled rollout of the system, which left thousands of health staffers incorrectly paid.
Mr Poole revealed Queensland taxpayers have so far paid $64.5 million for a system that had no contingency plans once failures emerged.
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Queensland Health's bungled payroll system was released without the proper testing, Auditor-General finds

  • From: AAP
  • June 29, 2010 10:16AM
QUEENSLAND Health's bungled new payroll system was not properly tested and was rolled out without a back-up plan to deal with failures, an Auditor-General's report says.
Responsibility for implementing the system, which has left thousands of workers incorrectly paid, was also unclear, Auditor-General Glenn Poole found.
Mr Poole's report on the fiasco, tabled in state parliament on Tuesday, identified a raft of problems with the system rolled out on March 24.

Pay system not properly tested: report

Queenland Health payroll failure lacks responsibility says Auditor-General
AAP (AAP) 29/06/2010 10:57:00
Queensland Health's bungled new payroll system was not properly tested and was rolled out without a back-up plan to deal with failures, an Auditor-General's report says.
Responsibility for implementing the system, which has left thousands of workers incorrectly paid, was also unclear, Auditor-General Glenn Poole found.
Mr Poole's report on the fiasco, tabled in state parliament on Tuesday, identified a raft of problems with the system rolled out on March 24.
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Bligh offers no payroll guarantees

Premier Anna Bligh continues to give no guarantees as to when the bungled payroll system will be fixed, saying it depended on a number of factors.
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IBM defends role in Qld Health payroll shambles

Technology giants IBM has hit back at Queensland government criticism of its role in the bungled implementation of a new payroll system that has cost at least $65 million and left thousands of workers underpaid since March.
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Queensland Health to change payroll system again after bungle

  • UPDATED:
  • From: AAP
  • June 29, 2010 2:48PM
QUEENSLAND Health workers will be paid under a local pay model from September as the government struggles to fix its sick payroll system.
Premier Anna Bligh announced the move after a damning report by Auditor-General Glenn Poole on the bungled rollout of the system, which has left thousands incorrectly paid.
Mr Poole revealed Queensland taxpayers have so far paid $64.5 million for a system that does not work.
He found the project team gave the green light for the system's rollout, despite knowing about its defects and being warned it had not been properly tested.
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NBN Co's Wii based e-health trial is a promotional masterstroke

As a promotional exercise for the National Broadband Network, NBN Co, and the benefits of broadband in general, NBN's Co's trial of 'tele-therapy' for stroke victims is a masterstroke that puts the Government's $16m NBN promotional campaign in the shade.
The trial has all the right ingredients to gain wide exposure:
- It is highly telegenic: stroke victims can be shown undergoing their Nintendo Wii-based treatment and being remotely monitored via an '"NBN-like' broadband network;
- Almost every member of the community will be able to relate to some aspect of the trial: the young to the gaming aspect; older-people who almost certain know a friend or family member who has suffered a stroke; people in rural areas who struggle with their remoteness;
- It's funded by an act of philanthropy that in and of itself is newsworthy: a board member of Neuroscience Australia donates $2m to the project and related research. But when that board member is the CEO of NBN Co and the $2m is his annual salary this throws the spotlight of publicity firmly on NBN Co and its key role in the National Broadband Network.
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Stroke patients make a play for remote recovery

AMY CORDEROY
June 29, 2010 - 8:12AM
Less than a year ago Marianne McDonald awoke to find herself living a nightmare. The 43-year-old mother had suffered a stroke and lost her ability to write, speak and walk properly.
But an innovative program using computer games to provide rehabilitation has given Ms McDonald back most of her speech and movement.
The program, developed by Neuroscience Research Australia, involved two weeks of an intensive rehabilitation program using Nintendo Wii sports games such as tennis.
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Stroke patients to get Wii therapy over the NBN

NBN Co CEO donates $2 million to fund the project
The NBN Co has begun selling the National Broadband Network’s (NBN) benefit to the health sector, announcing that stroke patients will shortly receive Wii-based therapy over the network.
The initiative, run by the NBN Co and Neuroscience Research Australia (NeuRA), will see the NBN used to deliver remote rehabilitation therapy using Nintendo’s Wii gaming device.
The therapy will see participants take part in ten one-hour sessions at home over a two-week period. During this time a therapist based in Sydney will supervise patients using video images and sensor data relayed over the NBN to analyse the patient’s movements and provide feedback.
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Stroke patients get hi-tech help

  • Adam Cresswell, Health editor
  • From: The Australian
  • June 29, 2010 12:00AM
STROKE patients will be the first to receive health services through the federal government's national broadband network.
The breakthrough will come next year,  when researchers start delivering rehabilitation classes straight into people's living rooms.
The superfast communications network, which is about to start rolling out in five "test bed" sites, will allow stroke patients to do exercises required for their recovery while being supervised by clinicians hundreds of kilometres away.
The technique, which relies on patients playing on the Nintendo Wii gaming system while their movements are watched on a live video link, has already shown good results in the laboratory.
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National broadband network chief Mike Quigley's $2m payday for science

MIKE Quigley did not need a job when he was approached by the federal government last year to run its nascent national broadband network.
He was independently wealthy after a long and successful career in the global telecommunications industry, but he took the job anyway, partly to move back to his native Australia. But he made it clear yesterday he still doesn't need the taxpayer-funded salary that comes with it, donating his entire first-year pay cheque of $2 million to aid research into brain diseases and stroke rehabilitation.
"I'm in the fortunate position where I can afford to give away my first year's salary," he told The Australian yesterday. "I don't spend a lot of money and I was in fact retired before I came into this role."
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National broadband network to cost government $30bn, says Mike Quigley

NBN Co chief executive Mike Quigley has said taxpayers will pay up to $30 billion to build the national broadband network.
The network, due for construction over the next seven years, has been widely estimated to cost $43bn.
Mr Quigley said NBN Co's three-year business case -- which was to be delivered to the government by May 31 but NBN Co has been granted an extension to factor in the $11bn deal with Telstra -- would show that the fibre-optic network would come at a cost to the government of below $30bn. The rest of the money required to build the network will come from debt markets.
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Abbott commits $1.5bn to improving mental health services

TONY Abbott will spend $1.5 billion to improve front line mental health services if the Coalition is elected.
Under the Real Action Plan for Better Mental Health, the Coalition would target young sufferers of mental disorders and build a range of new mental health centres to address the problem.
The opposition pledged today to deliver 20 new Early Psychosis Prevention and Intervention Centres, 60 additional youth headspace sites and 800 acute and sub acute early intervention beds.
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Microsoft game plan: copy Apple

June 29, 2010 - 12:45PM
New hardware to go with new software.
This post was originally published on mashable.com.
The Italian Windows website "Windowsette" somehow managed to get a hold of a super-secret, highly confidential PowerPoint presentation outlining many of Microsoft's goals and plans for Windows 8.
Apparently this sensitive data (complete with UNDER NDA watermarks) was just found sitting around the internet. MSFTKitchen has an extensive breakdown and detailed posting of all the slides from within the slide deck. The presentation details many of Microsoft's thoughts going forward for Windows 8, including the fact that it is taking direct cues from Apple on how to build something customers want to pay for.
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Enjoy!
David.

Saturday, July 03, 2010

There are Certainly Some Important Truths Here!

The following appeared a day or so ago.

Docs struggle with slow clinical information systems

June 30, 2010 | Mike Miliard, Managing Editor
DETROIT – A new survey has found that nearly half of healthcare professionals are dissatisfied with their clinical information systems, frustrated by response times that can last a full minute, or even longer.
Compuware Corporation this week announced the findings of the study, which polled 99 healthcare professionals at large and small hospitals in the United States – including nurses, doctors, CMOs and CMIOs – to better understand the availability of their clinical information systems.
The survey examined the length of time it takes for clinicians to log in, and how often they're required to log in during an average work day.

It found that end-users of clinical information systems are not satisfied with the performance of those systems, and those who were satisfied are settling for less than acceptable response times.
Key findings include:
  • Nearly 50 percent of respondents did not find response times acceptable.
  • Sixty percent of respondents reported response times for a single log-in greater than 10 seconds, some as long as one minute or more.
  • Nearly half of those who were satisfied with response times experienced lags greater than 11 seconds – and in some cases as high as 30 seconds – for a single log-in.
  • A majority of respondents log onto their clinical information system more than 20 times each day.
More here:
I have to say all my anecdotal evidence and experience strongly supports these findings!
Under provisioning and  poor design that results in slow screen loads and screen flips is just anathema to busy professionals generally and to clinicians in particular.
The point about slow log-ins is a good one as it is this that causes people to remain logged in and to let others use the same session with obvious consequences for security, audit trails and the like.
The original press release can be found here:
Now, while this company has a vested commercial interest in the findings I don’t believe anyone can deny how important responsiveness and system availability are in the clinical environment.
David.

Friday, July 02, 2010

An Amusing Little NEHTA Side Line.

I was alerted to this yesterday in Linkedin - for those who have access here is a link.

A post NEHTA employees discussion group and collaboration called NEXIAN!

See here:

http://www.linkedin.com/groups?gid=2450213&trk=anetsrch_name&goback=.gdr_1278054722245_1

Amazing there are now apparently 31 former employees that want to stay in touch with each other. Pity so many decided to leave and not to stick around and get planned stuff delivered - as we all know we need.

We will see if they are for good or not so good over time I am sure. Judgment suspended on all this until we see what happens next. It would be good if they could influence current staff to do better!

David.