Quote Of The Year

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

or

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

Thursday, June 28, 2012

A Really Worthwhile Look Back At The UK NHS Program for Health IT. It Started A Decade Plus Story That Needs To Be Told!

The following pair of very useful articles appeared a little while ago.

Horrible history part one: here comes the 21st century

Ten years ago, the document that led to the creation of the National Programme for IT in the NHS was launched. Lyn Whitfield re-visits ‘Delivering 21st century IT’.
11 June 2012
It is June and the government has set out a ten-year “vision” for information in the NHS. As the result of a new strategy, the patients of the future will “see that their health records are always available to staff” and be able to “help to maintain the quality of those records” by getting access to them.
The time that healthcare staff spend with patients will be “spent more effectively” because of the information at their fingertips. Data will also be opened up to healthcare managers and researchers and to new services such as telemedicine, which will become “commonplace.”
Of course, it is not June 2012 and the strategy is not ‘The Power of Information: putting us all in control of the health and care information we need.’ Instead, it is June 2002, and the strategy is ‘Delivering 21st century IT support for the NHS:  national strategic programme.’
Ruthless standardisation
‘Delivering 21st century IT’ is the document that paved the way for the National Programme for IT in the NHS. Its big innovation was not its vision – which it shared with earlier NHS IT strategies, as well as later ones – but the mechanisms it put in place for delivering that vision.
As it said upfront in its opening paragraphs: “The core of our strategy is to take greater control over the specification, procurement, resource management, performance management and delivery of the information and IT agenda.
“We will improve the leadership and direction given to IT and combine it with national and local implementation based on ruthless standardisation.”
Specifically, a ministerial taskforce was to be established under the chairmanship of Lord Hunt, a former head of the NHS Confederation, who had been made a Labour peer after the 1997 general election and was health minister in the Lords.
A new NHS IT programme director was to be appointed to lead on what Lord Hunt himself described as “the IT challenge of the decade.”
Standards for data and data interchange and system specifications for a new, National Health Record Service were to be set at a national level. And there was to be a big shake-up of procurement arrangements, with “consortia of suppliers” bidding for the work.
Finally, strategic health authorities were to appoint chief information officers to make sure that primary care trusts and providers “implement and use the core IT solutions determined at a national level.”
A product of its time
‘Delivering 21st century IT’ did not come out of nowhere. In 1998, the NHS had published ‘Information for Health’, a well-received strategy written by NHS IT pioneer Frank Burns, that proposed a rather different set of delivery mechanisms.
An NHS Information Authority was set up to create a national IT infrastructure, to run electronic patient record ‘beacon’ projects, to set standards for increasingly sophisticated ‘levels’ of EPR functionality, and to measure progress against targets for deploying that functionality to hospitals.
However, it left trusts to procure their own systems to meet these targets. And by the start of 2002 it was obvious that they were going to be missed.
IfH’s failure was blamed on technical issues, on trusts spending money that was supposedly ring-fenced for IT on other pressures, including a fledgling reform programme, and on the sheer difficulty of procuring systems from a “cottage industry” of suppliers.
But while the strategy had faltered, the pressure on the NHS to make better use of IT had grown. IfH was launched against a background of Tory “cuts” in the health service and Labour promises to restrain growth during its first term in office.
The strategy itself was to be funded from a £5 billion modernisation fund that had other calls upon it.
Yet in January 2000, Prime Minister Tony Blair was bounced into promising a massive increase in NHS funding in response to media stories about the NHS failing to cope with winter pressures.
The Department of Health quickly insisted that more money would have to be accompanied by ‘reform’ and launched The NHS Plan.
This included some ideas for getting the NHS to adopt the kind of consumer-facing technology that had been adopted by other industries – such as ‘airline-style booking.’
Meanwhile, a furious Treasury had asked a former banker, Derek Wanless, to investigate the demands that the health service would need to make on it in the future.
At the start of 2002, Wanless (who died recently) reported that if spending was going to be kept under control, the population would need to become healthier and the NHS would need to become more efficient.
He saw a big uptick in IT adoption as part of the second half of the equation, and proposed that NHS spending on IT should rise to £2.7 billion a year over a three-year period to deliver big gains in productivity.
The final part of the jigsaw was that Downing Street was keen on NHS IT, thanks to a seminar at Downing Street at which Microsoft chief executive Bill Gates, in the UK to promote Windows XP, persuaded Blair and his advisors of replacing a local approach to NHS IT with a national one.
The rest of the beginning story is found here:

Horrible history part two: things fall apart

The National Programme for IT in the NHS got off to a flying start; but soon started to go off-track. Lyn Whitfield looks back.
13 June 2012
Lots omitted as the rush to disaster seemed to accelerate.
......
So good they abolished it twice
As the programme struggled, the Department of Health’s commitment to its approach declined. In 2006, in a neatly Orwellian touch, it announced a ‘national local ownership programme’ to give SHAs much more responsibility for shaping and delivering NHS IT requirements.
Then, after Richard Granger completed an extended “transition” out of his post in 2008, Matthew Swindells, the chief executive of Royal County Hospital NHS Trust and a ministerial advisor, was brought in to carry out a review.
This urged trusts to focus on creating a “tipping point” in demand for strategic IT systems, by focusing on what became known as the Clinical 5 - a patient administration system, order comms, discharge letters, scheduling and e-prescribing.
Christine Connelly, who succeeded Swindells as the NHS chief information officer, went further. She talked about recasting the national elements of the programme and creating an “app store” for the NHS (which became the interoperability toolkit).
She promised a new “connect all” approach, in which there would be more choice for trusts and “multiple systems in different places” as a result of that choice. And at the end of its term in government, Labour lopped £500m off the nominal cost of the programme.
Despite this, it remained an irresistible target for media pundits and politicians. In opposition, Prime Minister David Cameron the project the “NHS supercomputer”; in government, his health ministers abolished it not once but twice.
In September 2010, Simon Burns announced that £700m would be cut from NPfIT, that the oversight of national projects would move from CfH to “new arrangements” by 2012, and that trusts would be allowed to choose from “a more plural system of IT and other suppliers.”
A year later, following a scathing report from the National Audit Office, and an even more scathing investigation by the Commons’ health select committee into what the programme had delivered by way of health records and into what the NHS had paid for them, Burns did the same again.
The zombie NPfIT
Yet, as EHI editor Jon Hoeksma noted at the time, NPfIT continues to have a kind of zombie existence. After more than 18 months of drafting, ‘The Power of Information’ failed to explain what will happen to CfH, or will be responsible for infrastructure, standards and national projects in the future.
CSC has been locked in negotiations over a new LSP deal for the NME for 18 months. A deal that would have delivered what the government called “savings” of £1 billion on its £3 billion contract looked close this spring. But a ‘standstill agreement’ between CSC and the DH was recently extended to 31 August.
Trusts in the South that were not covered by the BT deal were promised a systems procurement using the Additional Supply Capability and Capacity framework. But this collapsed at the end of December 2011, after almost two years of effort.
These trusts have yet to hear whether an alternative way to deliver national support and funding will be found. But then, amazingly, the £700m of legal action triggered by Fujitsu’s departure has yet to be resolved.
And, of course, the vision of ‘Delivering 21st century IT’ has not been delivered. The patient experience of the NHS has not been transformed by technology, health staff continue to lack universal access to sophisticated health records, data for commissioning and research remains hard to gather and analyse.
‘The Power of Information’ did not make the mistake that ‘Delivering 21st century IT’ made of drawing up a national plan to try and impose its vision on local NHS organisations.
On the other hand, it said virtually nothing about how its remarkably similar ten year vision for NHS IT would be achieved. So the question may be: will no plan succeed where the ‘national strategic programme’ didn’t get results?
Full article here:
This really makes just riveting reading as you see 10 years pass over just a few minutes.
The strategic instability, the lack of clinician engagement and so on are all there and most worrying is the length of time the programme has persisted after so many attempts to kill it off and maybe start again.
The parallels to what is presently happening in Australia are all too obvious.
All in all - compulsory reading.
David.

The Design For the NASH Smartcard Leaks!

I am assured this is a late working draft of the NASH Smartcard.

We always have the freshest news here.Otherwise how would such a still evolving plan get out?


Here is the Smartcard design coming to the pocket of a healthcare provider near you some time! How soon is anyone's guess.

(Click on Card For a Larger View)

On a totally separate matter we are hearing lots of rumours that there is a mad push to have some way of online registration for the NEHRS / PCEHR on Sunday 1, July 2012 at exactly 1 minute past 12. I won't be staying up put people are welcome to see if it is true!

Enjoy.

David.


Wednesday, June 27, 2012

One Week Out From The NEHRS / PCEHR We Need To Grasp Just How Badly NEHTA Has Performed. See For Yourself How Claims And Reality Contrast.

With us being just under one week out from the start of the new national E-Health Record System it seems reasonable to ask if there is any chance of real delivery of the NEHRS Program.
The National Authentication Service for Health (NASH) has become a poster boy for just not actually seeming to make a great deal of progress over what seems like geological time.
Here is the NEHTA blurb produced regarding NASH dated 6/6/2008.

National Authentication service for health (NASH) - June 2008



In this electronic age, where significant amounts of sensitive and personal information are being sent electronically, there is a need to guarantee the authenticity and validity of the information being exchanged.

When the information being transferred is your personal medical information, there is an even greater imperative to ensure that information is collected and securely electronically exchanged only by those authorised to do so.

The National Authentication Service for Health (NASH) project being delivered through NEHTA will deliver the first nationwide secure and authenticated service for healthcare organisations and personnel to exchange e-health information.

Together with clinical terminology, messaging standards and unique healthcare identifiers, the NASH will provide one of the fundamental building blocks for a national e-health system, as well as providing security credentials for use at the organisational and local level.

NASH & the Authentication Vision

The vision for authentication in the Australian health sector is that provider authentication should use a strong credential (smartcard with PKI certificate) issued by a NASH-accredited organisation. All e-health transactions and records that need to be electronically signed will use standard credentials.
The goal is to issue NASH credentials to all healthcare professionals over the next five years.
NEHTA‘s vision for NASH is:
  • A healthcare community and professional smartcard system that supports and facilitates the use of e-health information, for example unique healthcare identifiers and the individual electronic health record (IEHR), within the whole Australian community.
  • Coordination of smartcards and reader supply arrangements for health professionals and employees.
  • Provision of support for the smartcard implementation and operation to jurisdictions, software vendors and end users.
  • Design and delivery of support arrangements that meet the needs of jurisdictions and software vendors.
  • Provision of a trusted authentication service that addresses the data protection and privacy requirements of stakeholders and regulators.

What will the future look like with NASH?


Once the NASH is operational, healthcare workers will insert their smartcard into a slot in their desk top computer and enter a PIN. Once accepted this should be sufficient to meet the majority of their daily authentication requirements.

Mobile workers such as nurses will use their smartcard as they move from one workstation to the next, with not only immediate and convenient access to information systems but also session portability. Their NASH smartcard will enable them to seamlessly send and receive secure health messages and attached digital signatures.

It will be possible to add new credentials during the life of the smartcard at any time in response to initial and new/changed authentication requirements. Such credentials will be added to the card by authorised local staff, or by using an automated online service.

More than just a PKI and smartcard!

The NASH will provide:
  • The technology, infrastructure, frameworks, processes and support services to enable health organisations to issue credentials within their own community of interest.
  • Information and support about the use, integration and support of NASH credentials for software vendors and jurisdictions.
  • Provision of robust setup and on-boarding processes for credential issuing points that protect the integrity of the overall scheme.
  • Provision of a governance mechanism that will enable jurisdictional participation in the operational policies and services.
  • Provision of support to software vendors and jurisdictions in transitioning existing systems to use the NASH.
NASH credentials can be used for whatever purpose is deemed suitable by the issuing community, for example signing electronic prescriptions, hospital discharges, hospital admissions, or government reports. By leveraging the national infrastructure, participants can also strongly authenticate and securely exchange health information.

Implementation Approach

As the NASH is a foundation service for wider e-health initiatives, it will be designed, developed and operated in collaboration with the healthcare community at all stages
of implementation. The following milestones are likely, with detailed timelines being developed with our stakeholders:
  • 2008 – NASH specification, design and build test and development environments, develop software interface specifications.
  • 2009 - Deployment commences through early adopter organisations and through software vendor adoption.
----  End Blurb
We all know essentially zilch has happened since with no real implementation progress really having been made and interim approaches now being used.
And from August 2006 we have a just wonderful FACT SHEET.

 A NATIONAL APPROACH TO SHARING HEALTH INFORMATION - August 2006

 Background

NEHTA Limited is a not-for-profit company established by the Australian Federal, State and Territory governments in July 2005 to develop better ways of electronically collecting and securely exchanging health information.
Electronic health information (or e-health) systems that can securely and effectively exchange data can significantly improve how healthcare providers communicate important clinical information about patients. As a result, e-health systems have the potential to unlock substantial healthcare quality, safety and efficiency benefits.
People require health care throughout the course of their lives, regardless of where they are. However, the ability of healthcare professionals to access up-to-date health information about an individual whenever and wherever necessary, is limited and fragmented. This is due to the shortcomings of paper-based records, or, where computerised clinical records are available, the inability of these records to be shared across different computer software systems. This results in individual points of care becoming ‘islands of information’.
Lack of timely access to relevant information increases the risk of individuals not receiving appropriate care. For example, the 1994 Quality in Health Care study concluded that there was a clear link between avoidable deaths in hospital and communication problems and poor record keeping. It also results in an accumulation of inefficiencies in the health care system, such as the unnecessary repetition of diagnostic tests.

Establishing national foundations

The sharing of health information is best addressed through a national approach.
NEHTA is therefore establishing the national foundations to Shared Electronic Health Records (SEHRs) – records which will contain selected health information about an individual, which can be shared between multiple points of care while maintaining high standards of privacy and security.
The primary purpose of the SEHR will be to improve the quality and safety of healthcare experiences. Secondary purposes of the SEHR include public health and policy planning, and supporting safety initiatives, disease detection, research and education.
The national SEHR approach will involve the creation of one (or more) SEHR Service(s), which will maintain, and provide access to, the SEHR of those individuals who choose to participate in that Service.
Healthcare providers and organisations will be able to contribute information to an individual’s SEHR by keeping electronic records of patient interactions, and using software which is compatible with the SEHR Service(s). This software will allow healthcare providers to maintain their own detailed records, while ensuring that the most critical information can be easily included in the individual’s SEHR, without the need for double data entry. Providers will also be able to see summarised views from the individual’s SEHR.
The national approach to SEHRs provides an opportunity for vendors to create solutions that are capable of bridging the gap between the needs of particular clinical groups/specialities and the broader care continuum supported by the SEHR Service(s).

NEHTA’s SEHR Contribution

NEHTA’s work program is currently centred on producing specifications and standards for the SEHR, including:
  • Recommending SEHR standards for adoption in the Australian health sector. NEHTA has retained an independent e-health consultant to review the standards being developed around the world. From this NEHTA will define the structure and content of SEHRs; assess their use and potential impact on future Australian developments; and recommend the most appropriate SEHR specifications for adoption.
  • Defining requirements for a national approach to SEHRs. NEHTA is developing, for consultation, operating concepts for a national approach to SEHRs. Based on these operating concepts, the requirements for a national approach to SEHRs will be defined and a privacy impact assessment process will be undertaken.

Relationship to other NEHTA Initiatives

NEHTA currently has a number of initiatives underway to deliver secure, interoperable e-health systems, many of which are highly relevant to NEHTA’s SEHR work. This includes:
  • Establishing standard clinical terms for diagnoses, medicines, treatments and therapies so that one e-health system can understand the information produced by another system;
  • Setting standards for the types of priority clinical information – for example, discharge summaries, referrals, etc. - to be communicated by e-health systems;
  • Identifying a secure means of electronically transferring clinical information - such as prescriptions for example - between authorised healthcare professionals in a way that maintain privacy;
  • Establishing an overall framework for how the various e-health systems interoperate;
  • Developing unique identifiers for individuals and healthcare providers to ensure that the information is attributed to the right patient and the right provider;
  • Developing a framework for involving local and international standards organisations, to support implementation; and
  • Pursuing opportunities for supply chain reform across the health sector – supporting the purchasing of medications and medical devices in particular.
For further information go to www.nehta.gov.au.
----- End Fact Sheet.
I leave it as an exercise for the reader to see just how much of this now six year old plan - that has had NEHTA funded to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars has actually been delivered in any real and clinically meaningful sense.
It really would have the be the ‘triumph of hope over experience’ to hope all this will come right over the next two years for which funding has been apparently provided.
Without dramatically improved leadership and governance frameworks we are just wasting time and money.
David.

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

It Has Taken Me Many Reads To Figure Out Just What A Fiasco This News Conveys. It Is Just Amazing.

The following appeared today.

Leading e-health sites to undergo $52m record transition

THE Gillard government will spend $52 million transitioning work done at three lead sites to the new personally controlled e-health record system over the next six months.
Three former GP divisions (now rebadged as Medicare Locals) -- in Brisbane North, Hunter Valley, NSW and in Melbourne East -- each received $5 million in mid-2010 to implement software supporting the PCEHR system and to trial the use of records by doctors and patients.
.....
A Health Department spokeswoman said the National E-Health Transition Authority had been given $51.8m in order to "support transition of the lead e-health sites to the PCEHR infrastructure over the next six months".
"This transition is occurring progressively until December," she said.
A further $33.4m had been paid to NEHTA as the commonwealth's half-share of the body's COAG-funded work program for the next financial year, the spokeswoman said.
The rest of the article can be read here:
What on earth is going on here?
Why were the lead sites not built to the specifications required to fit the PCEHR Infrastructure first off?
What on earth went wrong with the overall project co-ordination and planning?
Why do the sites now seem to need the three times the original allocation over just six months - when they have been doing all this for the last 18 months or so?
When did they suddenly figure out it was all falling in an utter heap?
What about all the other Wave II sites - how much extra are they going to cost? Even if they are covered in this sum it is still an awesome cost overrun. (Wave 1 was initially allocated $12.5M and the 9 Wave 2 Sites received $55M as I recall)
All I can say this whole thing is a runaway train-wreck.
The Australian also has a lot more - given the PCEHR Start-up next week.
Go here:

Underdone e-health record system set for launch

and here:

Fact and fiction of e-health changes

to browse.
Amazing stuff you could not make up. A bit like the Greek PM and Finance Minister not turning up for the Eurozone Summit at the end of the week because they are in hospital. I wonder why? Someone must have shown them the books!
David.

Monday, June 25, 2012

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 25th June, 2012.

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

General Comment

There was really only one bit of news this week - and that was the passage through both houses of the PCEHR legislation.
Now all we have to just wait and see what is delivered in about a week or so and to see, after a year or so if there is any measurable impact on the health of the Australian populace.
I would be interested to hear from readers any suggestions for metrics we could use to assess the success or not of the overall program.
-----

Plotting a path to the PCEHR

Electronic health records go “live” on 1 July. Will everything change?
The much trumpeted personally controlled electronic health record (PCEHR) officially launches on 1 July, but if you’re feeling a little underprepared, you’re not alone.
The $467 million project to provide a seamless source of patient health data has hit a few obstacles along the way.
As a result the PCEHR  “go-live” date is likely to pass by quietly and without fanfare - something most medical practitioners will be grateful for.
There are a few hoops to jump through to participate in the PCEHR: once a practice is registered, doctors will need to familiarise themselves with the web-based system, upgrade their clinical software to integrate with the system and, ultimately, create and manage patients’ shared health summaries.
-----

Defiant doctors force e-Health backdown on PCEHR liability

TWO weeks before the introduction of the Gillard government's $1 billion e-Health scheme not one medical practice has signed up to use it, forcing Canberra to back down on a move to compel doctors to accept full liability for problems with the initiative.
The Department of Health and Ageing this week agreed to remove contentious contract conditions that would have made doctors liable if one of their employees leaked information contained in a patient's electronic health record.
It has also amended a clause that would have allowed government officials to raid surgeries and remove computers and records when a breach of the e-Health system was being investigated.
-----

Medical insurers still refusing to endorse e-health records

18th Jun 2012
A HEALTH department backdown has freed GPs of liability for “compromised or hacked” e-health records but the government is still demanding GPs obtain permission from the author of every document they upload to the system before doing so.
The issues of liability and intellectual property management are the main impediments to medical insurers endorsing the participation agreement practices will be required to sign in order to use the system.
MDA National president Professor Julian Rait told MO the department had agreed last week to waive its original demand that practices accept liability for the security of the system but had yet to provide a solution to the problem of how to handle intellectual property issues.
“Under the PCEHR bill… a GP would have to obtain consent from the author [of a specialist report, for example] before uploading any document to the system, which would be an absurd level of work,” he said.
“We don’t have an easy answer for [how intellectual property issues should be resolved], but until it is worked out, we won’t recommend our clients be involved.”
-----

Last minute talks trigger 'breakthrough' in e-heath endorsement

21st Jun 2012
DOCTORS' groups and MDOs are ready to endorse the government’s e-health records contract almost three months after MO’s report on the first draft of the contract sparked outrage across the profession.
In April, MO reported AMA secretary general Francis Sullivan had warned the department that the first draft of the participation agreement was so onerous it would “deter every medical practice in Australia from participating”.
The draft agreement required practices using the system to assume all legal liability and to grant government officials unrestricted access to their premises and records, while GPs were required to obtain permission from the author of every document they uploaded.
-----

E-Health: are we ready for this brave new world?

On July 1, Australia is going to "change the world", "dive in the sand" and "realise the dream".
The date represents "our big chance to make a difference", and apparently we have to compare it to "putting a man on the moon". Exciting, isn't it? Surely we are finally going to Mars, initiate world peace or establish brotherhood amongst men? Or not, of course.
When Peter Fleming uttered these inspirational words last August, he was unfortunately not talking about finding a cure for cancer, but about the start of a national electronic health system in Australia.
-----

e-health record grinds to July deadline

Ten days from now Australians should be able to sign up for a personally controlled electronic health record – the centrepiece of the Federal government’s e-health programme which has already cost it $467 million. However the peak body representing GPs in Australia has yet to finalise the terms and conditions for healthcare providers actually using the records and a $23 million key security system being built by IBM won’t be ready by 1 July.
The Government has always said that from 1 July 2012 Australians would be able to opt in and sign up to have their own PCEHR. While that deadline is still in place it now seems likely that while Australians will be able to register for a PCEHR, they won’t be able to do much more.
-----

E-health record service delayed by incomplete infrastructure

PLANS for Health Minister Tanya Plibersek to mark the start of the $1.1 billion e-health record service are on hold, as key parts of the system are not ready for the much-feted July 1 launch.
Sources who declined to be named say a ceremony planned at St Vincent's Hospital in Sydney on Monday, July 2 -- the first working day of the new system -- has been cancelled.
The minister's office was tight-lipped when The Australian asked whether the event had been postponed to a later date.
"We look forward to the launch of e-health, an important government reform that will cut down on medical errors and mean patients won't have to repeat their medical history every time they see a new doctor," her spokesman said.
-----

Jobs may go as Health Solutions Group abandoned by Microsoft in favour of joint venture

MICROSOFT has confirmed it is ditching the Australian operation of its Health Solutions Group as it shifts gears to a joint venture with General Electric.
The joint venture, announced in the US last year, aims to offer platform support along with system-wide crunching of data to assist organisations manage health data across populations.
Microsoft's Health Solutions Group in contrast mainly sought to sell software tools aimed at "people, clinics, hospitals, research institutions, and governments", according to Microsoft's website.
-----

E-health 'bank-strength' secure, but online registration scrapped

20th Jun 2012
THE government has assured consumers the national e-health record system would feature “bank-strength” security, but grudgingly admitted online registration has been scrapped, as its e-health legislation passed the Senate last night.
Coalition senators supported the legislation but raised a number of concerns about the implementation of the system and the security of patient information.
Parliamentary Secretary for Disabilities and Carers Senator Jan McLucas assured consumers’ privacy and security were “fundamental to the effectiveness of an e-health record system”, which she said would have “bank-strength security features, including extremely strong encryption and firewalls”.
-----

E-health records' security at risk

Fran Molloy
June 19, 2012 - 11:18AM
The national electronic health record database to be launched on July 1 has both medical and security experts calling for better e-health controls.
Australia has no co-ordinated approach to e-health safety and security – and with the national Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record (PCEHR) just weeks away, the risk of a safety crisis is growing daily.
People who choose to register for a PCEHR from July 1 will have access to a range of their medical data from Medicare, and over time also doctor's summaries, pathology results, scans and prescriptions.
-----

E-health records laws pass Parliament

BILLS governing the operation of the personally controlled e-health record system have been passed just 10 days before the scheme is set to go-live, albeit in a limited capacity.
After the PCEHR Bills were passed by the Senate with 32 amendments on Monday, the lower house has today agreed to the changes.
Health Minister Tanya Plibersek said it was "a once in a generation opportunity to deliver these important reforms" and "make it easier for consumers to receive the right care when and where they need it".
Coalition e-health spokesman Andrew Southcott said the opposition would not oppose the "sensible" amendments, which arose from the Senate inquiry into the PCEHR Bills requested by the opposition.
-----

E-health records laws pass Parliament

  • From: AAP
  • June 19, 2012 8:52PM
PATIENTS will no longer have to repeatedly re-tell their medical histories to doctors after legislation passed Parliament to set up an electronic health record system.
The Federal Government says the system will bring the management of health records into the 21st century and provide life saving information in emergencies.
The legislation passed the Senate this evening with the support of the Coalition despite the concerns about privacy from some Opposition senators.
-----

E-health laws pass parliament

By AAP, ZDNet.com.au on June 20th, 2012
The legislation required to set up the government's planned personally controlled electronic health record (PCEHR) system passed parliament yesterday.
The Federal Government said that the system will bring the management of health records into the 21st century, and will provide life-saving information in emergencies.
The legislation passed the Senate with the support of the Coalition, despite concerns about privacy from some opposition senators.
The system aims to reduce the number of hospital admissions from medication errors, which equate to around 190,000 per year, as well as cutting down on medical errors because of inadequate patient information.
-----

PCEHR passes Senate after sides lay cards on table

The Australian Senate has passed legislation necessary for the PCEHR to be instituted as part of Australia’s health system. The go ahead followed a debate where Labor, Opposition and Greens Senators summarised their stance on the major national ehealth reform.
Labor senator Carol Brown restated the need for the PCEHR as part of an “accountable, affordable and sustainable” future for healthcare, while senator Jan McLucas defended the development of Labor’s handling of implementation, saying there had been “extensive consultation with clinicians, consumers and the health IT industry.”
-----

Website to help paramedics avoid hospital bottlenecks

Updated June 21, 2012 07:55:21
SA Health will set up a real-time monitoring system aimed at improving the flow of patients from ambulances to hospital emergency departments.
It will advise on the number of patients being treated, average waiting times and the occupancy and expected discharge times for inpatient beds.
The website will go live on Friday and is similar to other emergency department and inpatient information available electronically.
-----

AMA calls for e-Health penalty delay until 2014

THE withdrawal of incentive payments to doctors who fail to sign up to the e-Health scheme must be delayed until 2014, says the AMA because of the multiple problems dogging the scheme ahead of its July 1 launch date.
Australian Medical Association president Dr Steve Hambleton said as things stood doctors would be penalised for failing to sign up to a system that is far from operational.
Eleven days before the launch of the new system that will see patient medical records digitalised, legislation underpinning it is still before the parliament.
The system needed to authenticate the identity of doctors using it is not ready and no doctors are signed up to use it.
-----

Call to delay cuts to e-health PIP

20 June, 2012 AAP and Paul Smith
Moves to pull up to $50,000 in funding from general practices who do not sign up to the personally controlled electronic health record (PCEHR) should be shelved because of the delays blighting its rollout, the AMA has urged.
The Federal Government announced in the budget that practices would not receive any e-health Practice Incentives Program payments from next February unless their IT infrastructure was compatible with the $467 million PCEHR system. About 4200 practices currently claim the incentives.
-----

e-Records database slated for a slow, incomplete start

Fran Molloy
May 28, 2012
The July 1 launch of the national Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record (PCEHR) is likely to be more fizz than fireworks, with only data from Medicare available to new registrants.
More functionality is expected later in the year, provided the government-funded National eHealth Transition Authority (NEHTA) can placate various interest groups including the doctor's lobby group Australian Medical Association (AMA).
"Given what was attempted in the timeframe, it wasn't reasonable to expect a sophisticated solution would be available by July 1," says Medical Software Industry Association (MSIA) President, Jon Hughes.
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E-health boost in Tassie bail-out

By Suzanne Tindal, ZDNet.com.au on June 18th, 2012 
As part of a $325 million rescue package for the Tasmanian health system, Health Minister Tanya Plibersek has pledged $36.8 million to roll out the government's planned personally controlled electronic health record system.
The Federal Government decided to reach out a helping hand to Tasmania, because the state's system wasn't coping with its older population and higher rates of chronic disease. Funding has been found for areas of need, including additional surgery facilities, chronic disease management and training, as well as e-health.
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$11.5 billion PCEHR benefit conservative: Deloitte

The organisation responsible for the federal government's economic modelling of the personally controlled electronic health record (PCEHR) has confirmed the business case for the national system is strong.
Adam Powick, lead partner of Deloitte Australia's Consulting practice, told eHealthspace.org the recently released figure of $11.5 billion in benefit to Australia by 2025 is an estimate based on global research and robust economic modelling.
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Victorian Government moves to fix Labor's $1.44b mistake

The Victorian Government has introduced the Victorian Information and Communications Technology Advisory Committee to provide advice on a new ICT strategy.
The Victorian Government has moved to fixed key weaknesses in the state's ICT strategy following a critical report by the auditor-general on Victoria's ICT frameworks and policies.
The revised strategy follows the November 2011 release of the Victorian Ombudsman's report into the state's ICT which slammed the then Labor government's management of ICT projects and investments.
Assistant treasurer, Gordon Rich-Phillips, said the revised ICT strategy will align processes across departments with a clear set of governance, accountability and direction.
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New Vic Govt strategy to end IT disasters

By Suzanne Tindal, ZDNet.com.au on June 21st, 2012
The Victorian Government has started work on a whole-of-government IT strategy, in an attempt to avoid wasting taxpayers' money on over-budget projects that have missed deadlines.
"The previous Labor government adopted a piecemeal approach to ICT that saw at least $1.44 billion of taxpayers' money wasted in cost blowouts on projects like HealthSMART, Myki and the LEAP database," Victorian Minister for Technology Gordon Rich-Phillips said.
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Coalition to support e-health bills in Senate

THE opposition will support passage of the Gillard government's legislation for its $1.1 billion personally controlled e-health record system in the Senate, but expects a debate over amendments to be tabled today.
Opposition e-health spokesman Andrew Southcott said the Coalition would not vote against the legislation in the Senate, "consistent with what we did in the House of Representatives".
He told The Australian: "We are supporting this legislation, but we do think it should be debated.
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Hospital league tables likely within months

THE National Health Performance Authority's chief Diane Watson says she's determined to name and shame underperforming hospitals, and will start publishing hospital league tables and mortality rates later this year.
"Our role is to create competition among the leading hospitals about who will be No 1," she tells Weekend Health.
"I want to point the community to where they need to work with organisations (hospitals and Medicare locals) on lifting their game."
Watson was appointed to head the new watchdog a week ago and her work at the Health Council of Canada and the NSW Bureau of Health Information makes her an expert on how health organisations try to dodge accountability.
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Evidence-based medicine

19th Jun 2012
This week’s Update explores the efficacy of evidence-based medicine in clinical practice.
INTRODUCTION
What is the evidence for evidence-based medicine?
Unfortunately, this is a very common question and one that is asked most often by a cynical member of the audience looking to score a point at an evidence-based medicine (EBM)
workshop.
On the other hand, answering this question is a good chance to highlight the main issues involved in this topic.
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Microsoft announces its own tablet computer at keynote in Los Angeles

MICROSOFT has announced it will release its own line of tablet computers at a keynote event held in Los Angeles this morning.
The new line of tablets is called Surface, and will come in ARM and Intel processor versions with the Intel version sporting a Core i5 Ivy Bridge processor.
The Surface has a 16x9 inch format, a magnesium case, USB 2.0, weighs 675 grams and is 9.3 mm thick.
It has a 1080p full HD display and has two digitisers, one for touch and one for digital ink.
It also has a unique multi-touch keyboard cover called the touch cover that snaps to the device like an iPad cover, but has an integrated keyboard. The touch cover includes an accelerometer that can deactivate the keyboard when it is folded back.
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Enjoy!
David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 127 – Results – 25th June, 2012.

The question was:
What Chance Do You Give The NEHRS / PCEHR Program Of Surviving A Change Of Government?
Really High
- 5 (9%)
Pretty High
- 10 (19%)
Neutral
- 6 (11%)
Pretty Low
-  8 (15%)
Very Low Indeed
-  22 (43%)
Votes : 51
Good response and it looks like the majority are not all that optimistic about the program surviving a change of Government. Given the comments in Parliament I have to agree.
Again, many thanks to those that voted!
David.

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Is Our Democracy Up To Addressing Complex Technical Problems Sensibly? I Fear It Might Be Struggling.

Over last week I provided reports on the Hansard Record of the debate in the Senate and Reps on the PCEHR Legislation which saw the Bills passed last Thursday - 21 June, 2012.
There reports are found here:
and here:
and provide links back to the formal Government record.
In thinking about what went on I found myself asking is the adversarial political system we have well equipped to manage a topic so riddled with complexity, risk and expense as the PCEHR program.
At first blush you would have to say that maybe things could have been handled a great deal better.
The process of having the Government come up with a proposal that then is presented to the Parliament as some legislation (missing some important clarity around exact regulations etc. which are still causing considerable angst as recently as a few days ago) which then results in a brief enquiry and multiple submissions, which seem to have largely been ignored in terms of what finally becomes law, can hardly be an ideal way to handle issues of this sort I believe.
You can see how much concern there is about the heavy handed way DoHA has gone about things with recent articles like this.

Defiant doctors force e-Health backdown on PCEHR liability

TWO weeks before the introduction of the Gillard government's $1 billion e-Health scheme not one medical practice has signed up to use it, forcing Canberra to back down on a move to compel doctors to accept full liability for problems with the initiative.
The Department of Health and Ageing this week agreed to remove contentious contract conditions that would have made doctors liable if one of their employees leaked information contained in a patient's electronic health record.
It has also amended a clause that would have allowed government officials to raid surgeries and remove computers and records when a breach of the e-Health system was being investigated.
Full article here:
As late as Friday there was still no release of what is finally going be demanded that I am aware of.
What I find even more concerning is that there was no real process at the beginning of the PCEHR journey some two and a half years ago to properly research and frame an approach that might be ideal - despite having a well thought out National E-Health Strategy which at that point was unfunded and which did not in any way recommend what was then announced.
It is also a considerable worry that despite all sorts of concerns and recommendations from both the Opposition and the Greens that the legislation is just essentially ‘waved through’ without all the major concerns expressed both in submissions and by parliamentarians remaining, to my eye at least, unresolved.
I guess the issue is really whether this a systemic problem with non-experts attempting to manage complex technical and professional issues - in which case we need to work out how we can properly address highly technical matters via the present democratic processes - or is this just a poor Government which does not know how to correctly handle the resolution of stakeholder concerns in a reasonable way. Of course the third choice is that it is all fine, the system worked as it should and that the PCEHR Program is just ‘tickety boo’ in all aspects.  
In all this I would be the first one to admit I would be utterly clueless in trying to sort out issues like the Murray Darling Basin and the needed Nuclear Waste Dump where local vested interests seem to be able to endlessly delay and obstruct any real outcome. Both are clearly - among a host of others - clearly able to be rationally addressed based on the evidence but that does not somehow seem to be enough! Politics and very small sectional interests seem to be blocking the best overall outcome which is really needed.
What do readers think - is what we have fine - or do we, for complex technical issues, need a way to supplement the decision making capacities of Parliament for the good of all? If so how might this be done? You only have to watch European politicians trying to handle the aftermath of the GFC to see how technical and political complexity can lead to paralysis and potentially catastrophe.
David.