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."

Friday, March 29, 2013

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links - 30th March, 2013.

Note: Each link is followed by a title and few paragraphs. For the full article click on the link above title of the article. Note also that full access to some links may require site registration or subscription payment.
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The Top 5 Trends From HIMSS13

March 12, 2013
Follow Me On Twitter @KenOnHIT
More than 34,000 health IT enthusiasts converged on New Orleans last week to attend the 2013 HIMSS Conference & Exhibition. As anticipated, the event provided a stage for several industry announcements, technology developments, and educational sessions. The Healthcare Technology Online team was there in full force, and the following are my top takeaways from the show.
Interoperability Takes Center Stage
As expected, interoperability was a focal point of HIMSS13. Perhaps the event’s biggest announcement — the launch of the CommonWell Health Alliance — centered on this crucial topic. Cerner and McKesson publicized plans to make a historic announcement at HIMSS a few weeks prior to the event, and health IT pundits immediately began to speculate that the news would involve interoperability between the two vendor platforms. However, the announcement turned out to be much bigger than initially anticipated — with Allscripts, Athenahealth, RelayHealth, and Greenway Medical Technologies also included in the news.
According to the release, these six vendors will form an independent, not-for-profit organization (CommonWell) in a collaborative effort to achieve data liquidity between systems, in compliance with patient authorizations. The Alliance will define, promote, and certify a national infrastructure with common platforms and policies. It also will ensure that health IT products displaying the Alliance seal are certified to work on the national infrastructure.
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Study: Telehealth not cost effective for chronic patients

March 22, 2013 | By Susan D. Hall
Telehealth failed to produce gains more cost effectively than standard care alone in a new study published at BMJ. That work comes on the heels of previous research in the journal that found telehealth produced  no significant improvements in reported quality of life or anxiety or depression symptoms.
Both studies were part of the British government's Whole System Demonstrator Evaluation of telehealth. The latest study tracked 534 patients with heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or diabetes who received telehealth services for 12 months along with usual care, and 431 who received usual care alone.
In the telehealth program, patients received equipment that enabled them to take measurements like blood pressure and blood glucose level at home and transmit readings electronically to a healthcare professional, according to Reuters.
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Remote Patient Monitor Sales on the Rise

March 21, 2013
According to a research report from the New York City-based Kalorama Information, sales of advanced remote patient monitoring devices have risen 20 percent from the year before. The market for the devices, which process patient data and link them to an electronic medical record (EMR), has constantly ticked up, going from $4 billion in 2007 to $10.6 billion in 2012.
"We expected growth and that growth was certainly seen between 2011 and 2012," Melissa Elder, analyst at Kalorama, said in a statement. "The market has benefited from the demand to move to a more wireless and streamlined operation both within major health facilities and in the home treatment markets. The demand to integrate data processing capabilities and EMR transfer options has also fueled the market."
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March 21, 2013, 11:46 am

Doctors and Their Online Reputation

By PAULINE W. CHEN, M.D.
When a doctor I know recently signed up for a Twitter account, his colleagues began teasing him. “Are you going to tweet what you eat?” one joked.
Their questions, though, soon turned serious. How often was he going to tweet? What would he do if patients asked for medical advice on Twitter? Did he make up a name or use his real one?
“Doesn’t it make you nervous to put yourself ‘out there’?” asked one doctor, a respected clinician and researcher who prided herself on her facility with technology … but only at home. “I refuse to look myself up on Google,” she said. “Quite honestly, I’m not sure what I’d do with what I might find.”
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10 Technologies Hospital Leaders Should be Watching

Ryan Chiavetta and Chelsea Rice , March 22, 2013

The ECRI Institute has released its third annual 10 C-Suite Watch List. The list was compiled by polling various technical colleges at ECRI, along with associated of the company who track hospital and health care operations to figure out which issues were of the most importance to them.
While some entries to the top ten list are repeats from last year, many of the entries are new, as various technologies in certain fields have made great strides over the last year.
1.Electronic Health Records
A big goal for many hospitals is to make sure they are able to certify their electronic health records for Stage 1 Meaningful Use. A concern that has arisen is whether the rush to achieve Stage 1 has affected patient safety.  While few errors involving health information technology have been reported, there have been  instances of patient harm associated with those errors, which included four fatalities. Errors involved data entry into the wrong file, inadequate data transfer between HIT systems, and failure for the systems to function as designed, which has called for hospitals to tighten up these errors in order to keep patients out of harm.
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Study: No vendor has a lock on EHR usability

March 21, 2013 | By Marla Durben Hirsch
Electronic health record vendors need to improve the usability of their products and provide more guidance to their provider clients, according to a new study by Orem, Utah, research firm KLAS.
In its study of 128 physician leaders, KLAS found that no vendor scored above a four (on a scale from one to five) in clinical usability. Epic scored the highest at four, while Cerner and Siemens each came in at 3.7. Allscripts scored a 3.5, with McKesson Paragon at 3.4 and MEDITECH v. 6 at 3.
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Docs cling to paper, EHR workarounds

March 21, 2013 | By Marla Durben Hirsch
Providers continue to use "workarounds" to deal with perceived inadequacies of their electronic health records, according to a new study in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association.
Current EHRs require clinicians to change the way they work and contain design flaws, such as difficulty in finding data and complex order entry processes. As a result, they often use workarounds, such as paper reminders or overriding alerts. However, these workarounds can pose a threat to patient safety, according to the study's authors.
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A Prescription for Failure

MAR 21, 2013 9:23am ET
We spend a lot of time reporting around the elderly/chronically ill. Taking care of that burgeoning swath of society has become a big priority for health providers and payers with accountable care, hospital readmissions and population health management ruling the day.
The technology is bulking up—at-home medical monitoring devices, talking pill-boxes, analytics-driven care coordination and predictive modeling, and dozens of other software and hardware solutions trying to keep geriatric populations out of trouble. But they’re not moving the chains far enough or fast enough, and I think one reason is that none straight-on address the problem of polypharmacy and the prescription for failure that it’s written for so many costly and well-intentioned I.T. efforts.
Polypharmacy by abridged definition means “the use of multiple medications by a patient, especially when too many forms of medication are used by a patient, when more drugs are prescribed than is clinically warranted, or even when all prescribed medications are clinically indicated but there are too many pills to take (pill burden).”
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House panel grills Mostashari on delay of widespread interoperability

By Diana Manos, Senior Editor
Created 03/21/2013
Today in the third of three hearings held by subcommittees of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, Farzad Mostashari, National Coordinator for Health Information Technology reassured a congressional panel that health IT interoperability will take some dramatic leaps forward within the next two years.
Michael Burgess, MD (R-TX) vice-chairman of the House Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigation, questioned the sluggishness of interoperability.
“We do hear about this a lot,” Burgess said. “Even anecdotally, hospital systems in the same city, that have the same operating system aren’t talking to each other.”
“You’re the head, why don’t you fix that?,” he asked Mostshari. “Why don’t you just make that happen?”
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Prioritize workflow during HIT implementation

March 21, 2013 | By Dan Bowman
For providers asked to use new technologies like electronic health records and analytics tools, workflow impact, no doubt, is a top of mind issue. Transitioning away from familiar and comfortable practices and adopting new habits is one of the biggest obstacles an organization can face.
In a recent interview with the Institute for Heath Technology Transformation, Stephen Beck, chief medical informatics officer at Cincinnati-based Catholic Health Partners, said that's exactly how he approaches his organization's IT implementation processes. For instance, during Catholic's EHR implementation, Beck said he asked his employees to anticipate across-the-board changes--everything from physical movements to communications processes.
"Continual reinforcement of the new efficient workflows helps drive this change," he said. "A small change in habit, such as always using an admission order set, makes subsequent changes easier over time."
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Govt plans law to stop "fiddled" figures

16 March 2013   Lyn Whitfield
The government is thinking of holding trusts criminally liable for manipulating figures on waiting times and death rates as part of its response to Robert Francis’ final report into the scandal at Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust.
According to a report in the Daily Telegraph, health secretary Jeremy Hunt is inclined to introduce new criminal sanctions to support Francis’ call for more transparency in the health service, and in response to a spate of newspaper stories claiming that trusts have “fiddled” their mortality figures.
The paper says that “a source close to” Hunt told it that “the manipulation of data has been happening, rarely but consistently, for many years. We feel strongly that if NHS trusts are caught acting fraudulently about their performance on areas such as death rates or waiting times they should be criminally liable.”
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Fewer health IT contracts last year: report

Posted: March 20, 2013 - 1:45 pm ET
Healthcare companies inked 39% fewer information-technology contracts last year as the market for IT services saw a contraction across the board.
A report from Ovum, a technology research and consulting firm, found that the volume and value of IT services contracts last year fell to their lowest levels since 2002 as economic uncertainty prompted a cutback in spending in both private and public sectors.
The firm looked at a number of industries in both the U.S. and Europe and found that fourth-quarter IT deal value fell 34% to $20.8 billion, while the number of deals declined 17%.
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Thursday, March 21, 2013

States Not Keeping Up With Telehealth Advances

State laws on telehealth are antiquated, contradictory and confusing, according to a recent comprehensive report on how all 50 states oversee the use of technology to deliver health care remotely.
No two states are alike in how telehealth is defined and regulated, according to the report by the Center for Connected Health Policy, an independent not-for-profit telehealth planning and technical assistance group based in Sacramento, Calif.
"Generally speaking, the policies and regulations that govern telehealth are not keeping up with where telehealth is today," said Mario Gutierrez, executive director of the CCHP, which is partially funded by the California HealthCare Foundation. CHCF publishes iHealthBeat.
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EHRs Rush in Where Doctors Fear to Tread

Scott Mace, for HealthLeaders Media , March 21, 2013

This article appears in the March 2013 issue of HealthLeaders magazine.
Resistance to new technology may be futile, but it remains an issue for healthcare.
"Physicians do have to spend more time at computers now, which diminishes the amount of time we can spend at the bedside and interacting with patients and actually doing those things like surgical procedures and interventions that only we have the skill and the knowledge and the training to do," says Steven J. Stack, MD, chairman of the board of the American Medical Association.
Stack, who also heads the AMA's health information technology advisory group, says physicians flock to new technology when it helps them provide better diagnosis or treatment in a more timely fashion. "Just look at robotic surgery," Stack says.
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EMIS and TPP share data

18 March 2013   Rebecca Todd
EMIS and TPP are working on a data-sharing agreement to allow clinicians to see information held in each other’s systems.
The GP IT companies plan to deliver one-to-one local health community data-sharing for clinical commissioning group areas using both EMIS and TPP systems.
The new agreement, described by the companies as “groundbreaking” and “momentous”, means clinicians using one system will be able to view patient records from the other system.
This will be subject to sharing agreements and patient consent at the point of care.
EMIS managing director Neil Laycock told EHI the two companies were working together to find pilot sites for the new data-sharing arrangement. Areas with high populations of TPP and EMIS users tended to be in the North East and South East of the country.
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9 tips for getting started with big data

By Mike Miliard, Managing Editor
Created 03/20/2013
With big data promising enormous clinical and financial rewards for healthcare, but posing just as many technical and strategic challenges, the Institute for Health Technology Transformation (iHT2) has published a study mapping the way forward for providers at the starting line.
"Health care providers face significant obstacles in implementing analytics, business intelligence tools and data warehousing," writes iHT2 CEO Waco Hoover in the report. "Health data is diverse, comprising structured and unstructured information in a range of formats and distributed in hard-to-penetrate silos owned by a multitude of stakeholders.
Moreover, he writes, "each stakeholder has different interests and business incentives while still being closely intertwined."
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Android gene test presages future of data privacy

By: Jonah Comstock | Mar 19, 2013     
A team led by University of California-Irvine researchers has developed what’s been called an Android-based smartphone paternity test. The app would allow two people, if they had access to their digitized genomes, to run a paternity test comparing their genomes, determine how closely related they are, and even scan their genome for predictors of different diseases. The team also includes researchers from the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC) and the New York Institute of Technology.
According to researchers, though, the real innovation of the platform, called GenoDroid, is that it allows people to run tests using their digitized genomic data, while maintaining data privacy — not sharing their genome with anyone, even the other subject of the test.
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55% of Providers Don't Know When Their Organizations Will Have Formal Clinical Informatics Programs

Written by Anuja Vaidya  | March 18, 2013
More than half of healthcare providers don't know when their organization will have a formal clinical informatics program, according to "Needles in a Haystack: Seeking Knowledge with Clinical Informatics," a report by PwC's Health Research Institute.
For the report, researchers conducted 30 in-depth interviews with IT, clinical and strategy professionals involved with informatics within their healthcare organizations. They also conducted online surveys, in 2011, of more than 400 providers, 90 health insurers and 100 pharmaceutical and life sciences executives on their approaches and strategies for analyzing clinical data.
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US hospitals making progress on EMRs

5 March 2013   Jon Hoeksma at HIMSS 2013 in New Orleans
US hospital IT leaders report strong progress towards electronic medical records, with two thirds saying they have achieved the first milestone in the Federal ‘meaningful use’ programme.
A further three quarters say they anticipate meeting the next - stage 2 - meaningful use milestone that falls in September 2014. The findings came as part of the annual HIMSS leadership survey.
But the continued momentum on EMR, fuelled by President Barak Obama’s American Recovery and Investment Act of 2009, which triggered $30 billion of incentives for using electronic records to improve and demonstrate quality of care, is creating intense competition for skilled and experience health IT professionals.
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Chinese hackers targeting the healthcare industry

March 20, 2013 | By Susan D. Hall
Gangs of Chinese hackers are targeting the U.S. healthcare industry, going after intellectual property associated with new drugs and devices as well as business processes that improve efficiency, according to an article at Dark Reading.
Generally, hackers are looking for financial information they can use for identity theft and other financial fraud, but cyber espionage from Chinese gangs is growing, according to security firm CyberSquared. It released a white paper outlining some of the recent attacks.
"Many of these victims have technology or drugs that are a monopoly," Rich Barger, chief intelligence officer with CyberSquared, told Dark Reading. "If you are the first to market with some great new technology breakthrough or drug, and you get a profit from that research ... it would definitely be an issue for the Chinese to target some of these [firms]."
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The Doctor Is In (Well, Logged In)

By JOSHUA DAVID STEIN
Published: March 19, 2013
Surfing the Web in his all-white Dumbo loft, Dr. Jay Parkinson, 37, looks like any other young tech visionary. He has a trim beard and thick-framed glasses. He wears slim-fitting black outfits and jaunty scarves. He speaks with a measured, “This American Life”-like cadence. And he’s a firm believer in the utopian promise of the Internet.
But Dr. Parkinson’s start-up isn’t a new app or social network. He is a founder of Sherpaa, a Web site that operates like a virtual doctor’s office, examining patients by e-mail and text message.
“We’re using the Internet to reinvent health care,” Dr. Parkinson said proudly, seated next to a Ping-Pong table and a shaggy goldendoodle.
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5 steps to managing data security risks in the cloud

By Rick Kam, President and co-founder ID Experts and Doug Pollack, CIPP, Chief strategy officer, ID Experts
Cloud computing. It’s like having a butler for your data — managing them, securing them, and making them available when and where they’re needed. No wonder the cloud is attractive to organizations burdened with time and budget constraints.
But the cloud is not without its risks. The Cloud Security Alliance (CSA) recently released its “Notorious nine,” a list of the top threats associated with cloud computing.  At the top of the charts for 2013: data breaches. With this threat at the forefront, healthcare organizations should determine when, if ever, is an optimal time for placing protected health information (PHI) and personally identifiable information (PII) in the cloud.
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Are cloud-based record banks superior to HIEs for data sharing?

March 19, 2013 | By Dan Bowman
Health information exchanges, as currently constructed, are an "inefficient" means of sharing healthcare data due to interoperability issues, according to a commentary published recently in the Journal of the American Medical Association. A better solution--according to authors Edward Shortliffe of Arizona State University, Latanya Sweeney of Harvard University and William Yasnoff of consulting firm National Health Information Infrastructure Advisors--would be to use cloud-based health record banks that could allow patients more control over their information.
The authors called current systems "institution-centric," adding that such an approach to sharing data is "complex," "expensive" and "prone to errors."
"The problem is that health IT is on the wrong path," the authors said. "The current approach involves trying to use HIT to replicate existing manual process for contacting other clinicians or healthcare organizations to get patient records instead of creating a single, unified record for each patient, as has been done for years with paper records within single hospitals and clinics."
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Evidence-supported decisions key to big data success

March 19, 2013 | By Susan D. Hall
With big data among the biggest buzz words in healthcare, a new report from the Institute for Health Technology Transformation (iHT2) offers guidance for leaders trying to harness all that information and gain insight from it.
The report highlights some success stories, including a partnership between the University of Ontario and IBM to develop a monitoring platform for newborns that allowed the hospital to predict the onset of nosocomial infections 24 hours before symptoms appeared.
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HIMSS Recap: Intermountain Shares Tech Goodies, Big Data Plans

Scott Mace, for HealthLeaders Media , March 19, 2013

In the scramble that is today's healthcare industry, expect to see the unusual. At the HIMSS conference in New Orleans this month, Exhibit A was tech goodies on display at Intermountain Healthcare's booth and its announcement of a strategic alliance with Deloitte.
At the HIMSS booth, Intermountain chief technology officer Fred Holston was demonstrating new technologies developed internally, and looking for technology partners to help mass produce them.
The first invention was fiendishly simple: A wristwatch that can sense when the wearer has washed his or her hands. If they're washed, a light on the face of the watch glows green. If they aren't washed, or if the caregiver has left the room, the watch face displays a red light.
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Telestroke programs significantly boost care access for rural patients

March 18, 2013 | By Ashley Gold
Researchers from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine have found that a telestroke program based in Oregon was able to increase access to stroke care by 40 percent in regions of the Beaver State. Their findings are being presented this week at the American Academy of Neurology's 65th annual meeting in San Diego.
According to an announcement touting the presentation, telemedicine programs in rural parts of Oregon upped the percentage of residents with access to stroke care within one hour from 54.5 percent to 80 percent. The researchers noted that in-person stoke care was crowded in urban areas, and while telestroke care was available in urban centers, it didn't reach less populated, uninsured areas quite as well.
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Sensors promising for diagnosis, treatment of cancer

March 18, 2013 | By Dan Bowman
While new sensor technology developed by Chilean researchers holds promise for improving cancer diagnosis efforts, European researchers hope sensors also can eventually aid in treating the disease.
For the former, researchers at Chile's Centro de Estudios Científicos created a molecular sensor with the ability to detect lactate levels in individual cells in real time. Lactate, according to the researchers, can be used to determine metabolism processes in such cells, and the researchers found that tumor cells produced lactate three to five times faster than non-tumor cells.
Their research was published recently in PLOS ONE.
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3 lessons learned by eHealth Ontario chief

By:  Nestor E. Arellano  On: 18 Mar 2013 
For: ComputerWorld Canada 

Some electronic health records projects are better suited for the private sector, government should focus on setting standards, says eHealth Ontario CEO Greg Reed

Three years into his job as the steward of Ontario’s electronic health records program the head of eHealth Ontario said the organization has learned three valuable lessons about technology deployment that would help them deliver on a promise to have the health records of every Ontarian in digital form by 2015.
Topmost among these lessons, according to Greg Reed, CEO of eHealth Ontario, was accepting that the organization can’t go it alone.
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HealthVault launches Windows 8 app

By: Jonah Comstock | Mar 15, 2013
Microsoft has just launched a new HealthVault app for its Windows 8 operating system, designed to run on tablets, W8 phones, and computers. The upgrade doesn’t functionally allow users to do anything they couldn’t do before, but it aims to make it easier for users to track and review their own health data by leveraging Windows 8’s multitasking features.
HealthVault Distinguished Engineer Sean Nolan told MobiHealthNews that Windows 8 is ideally suited to interacting with HealthVault. It’s also a mobile-focused operating system, and Nolan sees HealthVault as an increasingly mobile-focused platform.
“It became incredibly clear that mobile was a game changer for consumer health,” Nolan said. “The fact is that the behavior [of mobile users] is really fundamentally different. It’s particularly acute in health: [Managing health] doesn’t happen at 8 p.m. up in your den after the kids go to bed. The daily health stuff — ‘Hey my coach needs me to fill out this med form’, or I’m traveling, all these kinds of things help bring health into the world of everyday people.”
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93% believe EHR-connected mHealth apps benefit patient care

Author Name Jennifer Bresnick   |   Date March 15, 2013   |  
Physicians want patients to use mHealth apps as much as patients themselves do, a new survey by EHR vendor eClinicalWorks says.  From scheduling appointments and emailing nurses to receiving follow-up reminders and accessing their own EHR data, mobile smartphone apps have numerous uses before, during, and after a clinical visit, and an overwhelming majority of physicians are eager to embrace the technology.
More than ninety percent of the 650 physicians polled believe that mHealth apps have the potential to improve patient outcomes, and an equal amount would like to see apps give patients the ability to upload data into their personal EHR file. Eighty-nine percent would recommend an app to a patient in the future.
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Canada's TELUS Health expands big time

By Erin McCann, Associate Editor
Created 02/26/2013
A recent business acquisition by Longueuil, Québec-based healthcare IT company TELUS Health will make the company the largest electronic medical record provider in Canada, officials announced Tuesday. 
TELUS Health announced it will acquire Ontario's largest electronic medical record provider MD Practice Software LP, a member of the MD Physician Services Group and subsidiary of the Canadian Medical Association. Financial terms of the agreement were not disclosed. Closing of the transaction is slated for March 4.
With the new acquisition, TELUS Health will further expand its reach in the first line of care, now providing EMR solutions to some 9,000 Canadian physicians nationwide, and impacting more than 25 million patient interactions each year, officials say. TELUS Health provides solutions to all major stakeholders in the health system, including hospitals, pharmacies and extended healthcare providers, such as physiotherapists and chiropractors.
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Monday, March 18, 2013

How Stage 2 Changes the Stage 1 Rules for Meaningful Use

Buried within CMS' Stage 2 Final Rule are changes that will affect health care providers currently in Stage 1 of the Electronic Health Record Incentive Program. These changes range in severity and some require immediate attention. Providers should make plans now to comply with the new requirements.   
Providers must ensure that their Stage 1 work plan aligns with some potentially high impact changes. Two of note that Stage 1 program participants in fiscal year/calendar year 2014 must meet are a Stage 2 patient engagement measure and reporting an increased number of clinical quality measures.
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Technology Alone Isn't Healthcare's Savior

Anyone who deploys tech "solutions" without reconsidering workflows and policies -- and doing other heavy lifting -- is in for a rude awakening.
If you believe everything you read and hear, technology is the Holy Grail of our industry. It will "fix" just about everything that's broken in healthcare. That's a presumption fueled by human nature: Gravitate toward simplicity and immediate gratification. Technology is tangible, something we can install, turn on and it works.
But what exactly should we expect from this working technology? Have we done a thorough job of defining what we want to accomplish and then addressed all of the components that go into ensuring we succeed?
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Enjoy!
David.

Thursday, March 28, 2013

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

It Looks Like Telehealth In Chronic Disease May Not Be All That Useful.

This appeared a few days ago.

As "telehealth" grows, experts question cost benefits

Thu, Mar 21 2013
LONDON (Reuters) - Monitoring patients at home using modern technology, so-called 'telehealth', is tipped as the next big thing in healthcare, but a new study by British researchers suggests it may not be worth the extra expense.
The findings will fuel controversy over the economic case for telehealth, which many information technology and telecoms companies are betting on as a multibillion-dollar market opportunity.
Martin Knapp, professor of social policy at the London School of Economics, one of the leaders of the study, said the disappointing results did not mean telehealth was a waste of time but did suggest it needed to be better targeted.
In some cases, smarter technology and a scaling up of programs might help improve the outcome, he added.
"We have got to find ways of better adjusting the equipment to suit the circumstances of the individual patient," he said in an interview. "Just at the moment we don't find the advantage that people had hoped for."
Knapp and colleagues tested the cost-effectiveness of telehealth compared with standard care over 12 months in 965 patients with three long-term conditions: heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or diabetes.
Just over half the patients received equipment to allow them to measure things like blood pressure and blood glucose levels at home. They then transmitted their readings electronically to a healthcare professional.
The pay-off, however, was marginal. The researchers found that the cost per quality adjusted life year (QALY) - a standard measure of quantity and quality of life - of telehealth when added to usual care was 92,000 pounds ($139,200).
That is well above the 30,000 pounds that Britain's National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) uses as a benchmark for assessing if medical interventions are worth using on the state-run health service.
Lots more here:
There is also coverage here:

Study: Telehealth not cost effective for chronic patients

March 22, 2013 | By Susan D. Hall
Telehealth failed to produce gains more cost effectively than standard care alone in a new study published at BMJ. That work comes on the heels of previous research in the journal that found telehealth produced  no significant improvements in reported quality of life or anxiety or depression symptoms.
Both studies were part of the British government's Whole System Demonstrator Evaluation of telehealth. The latest study tracked 534 patients with heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or diabetes who received telehealth services for 12 months along with usual care, and 431 who received usual care alone.
In the telehealth program, patients received equipment that enabled them to take measurements like blood pressure and blood glucose level at home and transmit readings electronically to a healthcare professional, according to Reuters.
Lots more with links and references here:
On a different tack - slightly different technology seems to be useful with early stroke treatment.

Telestroke programs significantly boost care access for rural patients

March 18, 2013 | By Ashley Gold
Researchers from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine have found that a telestroke program based in Oregon was able to increase access to stroke care by 40 percent in regions of the Beaver State. Their findings are being presented this week at the American Academy of Neurology's 65th annual meeting in San Diego.
According to an announcement touting the presentation, telemedicine programs in rural parts of Oregon upped the percentage of residents with access to stroke care within one hour from 54.5 percent to 80 percent. The researchers noted that in-person stoke care was crowded in urban areas, and while telestroke care was available in urban centers, it didn't reach less populated, uninsured areas quite as well.
Previous work by the same researchers published in February 2010 found that half of Americans live more than an hour away from lifesaving stroke care.
"Telestroke programs can reach patients in smaller communities and provide time-critical treatment to previously unreached people," senior study author Brendan Carr, an assistant professor of emergency medicine, surgery, & epidemiology at UPenn said. "Increasing telestroke networks gives everyone a better chance of surviving a stroke, the fourth leading cause of death in the United States."
More with links here:
All in all some useful perspectives again on what works and what doesn’t.
David.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

AusHealthIT Poll Number 160 – Results – 26th March, 2013.

The question was:

Will The Opposition Make E-Health A Major Issue For Attack On The Government In The Health Portfolio Leading Up To The Election?

For Sure 26% (11)
Probably 17% (7)
Possibly 33% (14)
No Way 17% (7)
I Am So Sleepy I Have No Idea 7% (3)
Total votes: 42
Very interesting! A good majority seem convinced there will be some effort to exploit the perceived problems.
Again, many thanks to those that voted!
David.

The Queensland Health Payroll Enquiry Is Certainly A Gift That Keeps On Giving.

Here is the latest instalment.

Qld Health staffer accused of helping IBM

Date March 21, 2013
Petrina Berry
A Queensland Health employee involved in selecting IBM to provide a new payroll system has been accused of helping the IT giant to win the government contract.
Queensland's payroll inquiry is examining emails and meetings between Damon Atzeni, a member of the state's panel involved in the process, and an IBM contractor in the lead-up to the tender process in 2007.
The inquiry's first two weeks have focused on whether IBM had an unfair advantage in winning the contract.
In astounding developments on Thursday, counsel assisting the inquiry, Peter Flanagan SC, accused Mr Atzeni of favouring IBM in replacing the obsolete system.
''You were doing everything in your power to assist IBM to become the prime contractor because you knew that the first rollout of a human resource solution was to be Queensland Health. Yes?," Mr Flanagan asked.
Mr Atzeni denied he had been assisting IBM. However, he said he wanted Queensland Health to be made a priority over other departments because its computer systems needed to be urgently replaced.
Lots more here:
Days prior are linked here:
Read more:
I really hope, at some point, we move away from finger pointing and try to form a view of what actually happened so future disasters like this can be avoided.
In circumstances like this there is seldom just one person or one cause for the mess that ultimately emerges. We all need to learn from this while avoiding scapegoats unless clear malfeasance is established. Even then it is unlikely to be the whole cause of the problem. With so many people around the project there must have been many opportunities to sort things out with reasonably competent management.
David.

Monday, March 25, 2013

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 25th March, 2013.

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

Not a very exciting week - other than the amazing goings on in Canberra. We really seem to be a rudderless ship at present. E-Health will hardly benefit from all this.
We see the Qld Payroll Enquiry drag on with blame being spread around all over the place.
Other than that the SA E-Health program seems to be slipping a little, the NBN seems to be becoming very bogged down (again with blame flowing all over) and apparently we have a big push on signing up people to the NEHRS.
My check on my NEHRS this week was uneventful but slow as usual.
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E-health system launch delayed

Date March 20, 2013 - 1:47PM

Trevor Clarke

The launch of the computer system meant to form the foundation of one of the Australia's first e-health record projects has been delayed by several months due to accounting complexity.
South Australia's electronic health record (EHR) was to be one of the first in the national push for electronic patient records, a national project already marred by delays.
SA Health's Enterprise Patient Administration System (EPAS) is made up of clinical, patient administration and billing modules. It was due to go live in the first week of March. It will form one of four projects in a $408 million upgrade of the state organisation's systems.
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2% of Dungog and surrounding area have registered for an eHealth record

21 March 2013. Dungog is a country town on the Williams River in the upper Hunter Region in New South Wales.  In early 2013, the Hunter eHealth lead site (one of twelve sites across Australia) targeted the Dungog area to raise awareness of the personally controlled electronic health record (eHealth record) system and the benefits it could offer Dungog residents.  
Prior to 1 January 2013, there were only nine consumers registered in the Dungog postcode (2420).  Since then nearly 50 additional consumers have registered and if the other postcodes (surrounding areas) covered by this activity are included, then 2% of the local population have now registered with an electronic health record.*
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Flu jab a good time to get on eHealth records

WITH one of the worst flu seasons expected to hit us soon, Ipswich Mayor Paul Pisasale is leading the way by getting his flu vaccination.
The West Moreton-Oxley Medicare Local said it was also a good time for Cr Pisasale to sign up for his eHealth record.
eHealth records allow doctors to see what care patients have received, whether they have collected their prescriptions and what course of treatment they have tried in the past, even when they are away on work or holidays.
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PCEHR in for a 'big push' says DOHA Secretary

Launceston residents can register for the PCEHR via trained administrative staff using the new assisted registration tool from this week, with the tool to then be rolled out nationally, Department of Health and Ageing (DOHA) Secretary Ms Jane Halton said today.
The assisted registration tool is one of the final parts of the PCEHR puzzle, now that all major GP software developers have system upgrades to ensure compliance.
"From May this year we are ready for a publicity push on the PCEHR," Ms Halton said.
A slow rollout of the health record had been flagged from the outset, she said, but momentum is building and over 85,000 enrolments have been completed so far.
Of these, around 90 per cent have been done online rather than through a Medicare office or via the Medicare-staffed hotline.
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Qld Health staffer accused of helping IBM

Date March 21, 2013 - 5:04PM

Petrina Berry

A Queensland Health employee involved in selecting IBM to provide a new payroll system has been accused of helping the IT giant to win the government contract.
Queensland's payroll inquiry is examining emails and meetings between Damon Atzeni, a member of the state's panel involved in the process, and an IBM contractor in the lead-up to the tender process in 2007.
The inquiry's first two weeks have focused on whether IBM had an unfair advantage in winning the contract.
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Payroll consultant had 'preconceived view'

Date March 19, 2013

Petrina Berry

A consultant who played a major role in the Queensland government adopting IBM's flawed health payroll system had preconceived views before the tender process, an inquiry has heard.
Queensland's Health Payroll System Commission of Inquiry is looking into whether IBM had an unfair advantage in winning a bid to supply a state government computer system.
The contract included a disastrous payroll system for Queensland Health.
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Payroll inquiry: independent consultant a 'long-time IBMer'

Date March 18, 2013

Petrina Berry

An independent consultant involved in hiring IBM to overhaul the Queensland government's IT systems identified himself as a "long-time IBMer", an inquiry into the health department's payroll debacle has been told.
The Queensland Health Payroll System Commission of Inquiry is looking into whether IBM had an unfair advantage in winning a bid to supply a computer system for the state government, which included Queensland Health.
An email by IBM's public-sector expert Lochlan Bloomfield to fellow IBM workers was presented to the inquiry on Monday.
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Queensland Health payroll at 'point of critical vulnerability'

A PROJECT to roll out a new government IT system across Queensland's public service was costing $45 million every six months without a solution in place, an inquiry has heard.
IT contractor Gary Uhlmann told Queensland's Health Payroll System inquiry hearing this morning the government's own "Shared Services" model was on the verge of failure in 2007.
The Arena Consulting director - a former deputy director-general in the Queensland government - said his company's April 2007 four-week snapshot review of the system revealed it was at a "point of critical vulnerability".
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Sharp increase in online orders for counterfeit pills

AUSTRALIANS are fuelling the global trade in counterfeit pharmaceuticals, going online to order everything from diet pills to sex aids and putting their health at risk.
The popularity of internet shopping, combined with the high dollar, has led to a dramatic increase in the number of parcels seized by Customs. In 2009-10, only 262 parcels breached the Therapeutic Goods Act, but for the past two years the number has exceeded 700. The seizures -- separate to the rising number of illicit drug detections -- include erectile dysfunction, slimming and tanning drugs. Authorities warn that up to 50 per cent of pharmaceuticals purchased online are fake, and Australian consumers are already reporting the adverse effects of taking unregulated imported drugs.
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Australian FHIR Connectathon and Tutorial

Posted on March 20, 2013 by Grahame Grieve
We’ll be holding a FHIR connectathon here in Australia as part of the IHIC 2013 – International HL7 Interoperability Conference in Sydney in late October 2013 (around 28-30).
This is an opportunity for Australasian implementers and vendors to get practical experience in FHIR. Here’s why you should consider attending:
  • Find out what all the excitement is about
  • Get a head start building FHIR into your products
  • Get a real sense of what FHIR is good for, and what it isn’t
  • Help ensure that FHIR meets real-world Australasian requirements
  • Be a recognised part of the FHIR community
  • Connectathons are real fun
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Get a handle on your health

  • by: TECH TIME: DAVID FRITH
  • From: The Australian
  • March 21, 2013 12:00AM
WHEN Samsung's new Galaxy S4 smartphone hits the Aussie marketplace next month, buyers will be offered a new line of accessories that turn the dog-and-bone into something else.
For instance, there's to be a Game Pad that clamps around the Galaxy handset, turning it into an Xbox controller with dual analog sticks.
Also promised are an S Band waterproof biometric bracelet that tracks how many paces you have walked or run, calories burned, distance travelled and your sleep patterns; S-Health blood pressure and heart rate monitors; and a body scale that relays your weight to the smartphone via Bluetooth wireless technology.
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Software developers pave the way to eHealth records system

12 March 2013. NEHTA is pleased to announce that all vendors from its three Vendor Panels have passed their Notice of Connection testing enabling access to the national Healthcare Identifier Service. In addition, the majority have passed all the Compliance, Conformance and Accreditation (CCA) tests necessary for their first PCEHR-enabled release, and are now finalising this release or working on their second release.
With this complete, there is now widespread availability of software for healthcare providers to connect to the national eHealth record system.
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Comparing Clinical Practice Cuts Hospital Waste

Melbourne Health CEO Dr Gareth Goodier brings extensive experience in heading one of the UK’s leading research hospitals to his new role – and says that understanding expenditure right down to patient level costing is the key to big savings in hospitals.
The Health Service Journal named Dr Goodier one of the UK’s most influential leaders in both 2010 and 2011 for his role of chief executive of Cambridge University Hospitals, which he left in June last year to join Melbourne Health.
Comprising one of the UK’s five academic health science centres as well as two major public hospitals (Addenbrooke and Rosie) and as a leading national centre for specialist treatment, Cambridge University Hospitals form an exceptionally complex institution, Dr Goodier says.
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MMR Global vs. Nehta, Round 2 (US/AU)

Ding! The Australian reported last week that Nehta (National E-Health Transition Authority) is defending itself against charges by PHR company MMRGlobal that it has not responded to information earlier requested from and supplied by its operating company MyMedicalRecords and its licensee in Australia.
MMRG is claiming that Nehta’s planned national PHR system will infringe upon patents held in Australia. According to The Australian article, Nehta’s chief Peter Fleming said that they learned of the claims only on 7 February and that MMRG had “nothing solid” to back them up:  ”MMRGlobal has never contacted us at all and indeed our understanding is that they’re investigating a potential claim but have nothing solid” and “we’ve obviously taken a look at their patents, both from an architectural and a legal perspective, and have obviously briefed our lawyers to investigate, but certainly this company has not contacted us at all …
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New Zealand streamlines e-health with robotics technology

In a first such project for e-health, New Zealand’s Gore Hospital is rolling out robotics technology to streamline healthcare for home-bound patients and the elderly across remote areas.
Gore Hospital’s chief executive Karl Metzler told FutureGov that one in five New Zealander lives in a rural or remote area. “We’re exploring robotics technology to manage healthcare, and reduce pressures on our medical system.”
Healthcare-oriented robots and software are being piloted for primary, community and aged care. “We want to understand where robots can best provide improved health outcomes, especially for long-term chronic care patients.”
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Iron Man meets HULC: exoskeleton suit coming to a body near you

Date March 20, 2013 - 1:30PM

Thomas Black

Wearable machines that enhance human muscle power are poised to leave the realm of science fiction and help factory workers hoist heavier tools, lighten soldiers' loads and enable spinal patients to walk.
Lockheed Martin and Parker Hannifin are joining a handful of start-ups in finding practical uses and, more importantly, paying customers for bionic suits inspired by novelist Robert Heinlein's 1959 Starship Troopers and Stan Lee's Iron Man comic-book character.
Sales of mechanical exoskeletons cap decades of scientific tinkering that included a 680-kilogram General Electric clunker in the 1960s. Strapped to users' bodies and powered by lithium-ion batteries, the emerging technology has led to some models that sell for about $US70,000, weigh less than 22 kilograms and are nimble enough to dance the Macarena.
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Plibersek accuses Opposition of plan to sack 3000 ML workers

20th Mar 2013
THE rift between Health Minister Tanya Plibersek and shadow health minister Peter Dutton has intensified with Ms Plibersek accusing her opposite number of promising to sack 3000 frontline health workers connected to Medicare Locals (MLs).
Mr Dutton has said a Coalition government would put an end to MLs and yesterday Ms Plibersek said Mr Dutton had repeated in parliament – in comments not recorded by Hansard – that he would sack the 3000 “bureaucrats” who worked for them.
“The truth is the vast majority of staff employed by Medicare Locals are frontline health workers including doctors, nurses, psychologists, podiatrists, pharmacists and speech pathologists,” Ms Plibersek said in a statement.
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Nothing healthy about department of stuff-ups

HEALTH is an area the Labor Party thinks it owns. According to the polls, Labor has generally been judged the better manager of health (and education) than the Coalition.
One of the worrying recent trends for Labor is that this ascendancy has been significantly whittled away. Labor now holds only a slim lead - down to four points -- as the better manager of health. (The gap for education is five points.) One of the more interesting aspects of government involvement in, and funding of, health is that monumental stuff-ups often go under the radar. There are programs that cost hundreds of millions, even billions, but which never generate the anticipated benefits. In some cases, they never generate any benefits. And then there are the forecasting errors of the Department of Health and Ageing that have led to extreme shortages of doctors followed by extreme surpluses.
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Australian government releases big data issues paper

AGIMO mulls how to combine government data with publicly available data
The Australian government could tap data from Google, Twitter and Facebook as it seeks to embrace big data, according to an issues paper released Friday evening.
“Private sector organisations such as Google, Twitter and Facebook hold enormous data stores on Australian citizens and people across the world, and offer access to these on commercial terms,” the Australian Government Information Management Office (AGIMO) wrote in the report.
“While needing to carefully consider the veracity of this data, it may be that agencies could consider using this data as part of big data analytics projects.”
Australian Government CIO Glenn Archer announced the big data strategy last week. The release of the issues paper opens a three-week consultation period to collect feedback from industry and the public. A final big data strategy will arrive in June or July this year.
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NBN rollout delayed, again

Date March 21, 2013 - 4:38PM

Lia Timson

IT Pro Editor

Australians will need to wait a little longer for faster and universal broadband, after the company building the NBN again delayed delivery of the project.
NBN Co announced on Thursday afternoon it was revising down its forecast for the rollout of fibre optic cable from the June 2013 target of 341,000 premises to between 190,000 and 220,000 premises. It is the third time the target has been revised.
NBN Co chief executive Mike Quigley said: "We are accountable for the delay and are disappointed it has occurred.
However, he laid the blamed squarely with contractors who he said were responsible for meeting the targets.
-----

Disconnect on fibre reality

NEITHER Australia nor the world has seen anything quite like Labor's National Broadband Network. No other government in the world is committing the scale of funding - a cost of $37.4 billion - or attempting to build such a far-reaching fibre network as the one promised by the NBN.
As a vision, there's much to be admired in the mammoth infrastructure project that aims to connect 93 per cent of the nation to a fibre network capable of download speeds as fast as 1000Mbps by 2021.
Its champions, none louder than the project's overseer, Communications Minister Stephen Conroy, tout the NBN as a glistening technological marvel that will revolutionise industries, economies and the way Australians connect with each other and the world.
But in reality the building costs and delivery schedule of the large-scale infrastructure project have departed drastically from the script.
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Baby picture reveals an older universe

Date March 23, 2013

Dennis Overbye

The Planck telescope has excited cosmologists with a more detailed map of the Big Bang afterglow. Dennis Overbye reports.
Astronomers have released the latest and most exquisite baby picture yet of the universe, one that shows it to be 80 million to 100 million years older and a little fatter, with more light and dark matter than previously thought, and perhaps ever so slightly lopsided.
Recorded by the European Space Agency's Planck satellite, the image is a heat map of the cosmos as it appeared only 370,000 years after the Big Bang, showing space speckled with faint spots from which galaxies would grow over billions of years.
The map, the Planck team said, is in stunning agreement with the general view of the universe that has emerged during the past 20 years, of a cosmos dominated by dark energy that is pushing it apart and dark matter that is pulling galaxies together. It also shows a universe that seems to have endured an explosive burp known as inflation, which was the dynamite in the Big Bang.
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BlackBerry inventor to make Star Trek device a reality

Date March 21, 2013

Hugo Miller and Jon Erlichman

Mike Lazaridis, inventor of the BlackBerry smartphone, is starting a $C100 million ($A94 million) quantum technology fund aiming to turn devices like the medical tricorder from Star Trek into reality.
The fund, called Quantum Valley Investments, is being financed exclusively by Lazaridis and Doug Fregin, an old friend and co-founder of Research In Motion (RIM), the company behind BlackBerry. The goal is to commercialise technologies from a cluster of research labs that have been bankrolled by Lazaridis. At least one start-up has signed up with the fund and the first products may emerge in the next two to three years, he said.
"What we're excited about is these little gems coming out," said Lazaridis. "The medical tricorder would be astounding, the whole idea of blood tests, MRIs – imagine if you could do that with a single device. That may be possible and possible only because of the sensitivity, selectivity and resolution we can get from quantum sensors made with these quantum breakthroughs."
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Enjoy!
David.

Sunday, March 24, 2013

There Are Some Real Concerns Around How Citizens Are Being Corralled Into The NEHRS.

I found this a very interesting report a few days after some of the following comments (One alerted us all to it.):
PCEHR in for a 'big push' says DOHA Secretary
Posted Wed, 20/03/2013 - 13:57 by Fran Molloy
Launceston residents can register for the PCEHR via trained administrative staff using the new assisted registration tool from this week, with the tool to then be rolled out nationally, Department of Health and Ageing (DOHA) Secretary Ms Jane Halton said today.
The assisted registration tool is one of the final parts of the PCEHR puzzle, now that all major GP software developers have system upgrades to ensure compliance.
"From May this year we are ready for a publicity push on the PCEHR," Ms Halton said.
A slow rollout of the health record had been flagged from the outset, she said, but momentum is building and over 85,000 enrolments have been completed so far.
Of these, around 90 per cent have been done online rather than through a Medicare office or via the Medicare-staffed hotline.
Ms Halton told health professionals in the audience at the 2013 Health-e-Nation SUMMIT Conference in Melbourne that they needed to "all get out there" and encourage sign-ups.
"Word of mouth is one of the ways people find out about new technology; it takes a while," she said, citing the early adopters of 'brick' mobile phones as the vanguard of today's smartphone-enabled population.
Lots more here:
http://ehealthspace.org/news/pcehr-big-push-says-doha-secretary

As if to cue we then had the following discussion break out.

Terry Hannan said...

This topic has distinct relevance in my local hospital this week. Our corridors are populated by DOHA staff wearing DOHA e-health T-shirts who confront people passing by with the request that "would they like to have their own "secure" electronic record. This is followed by "all you need to do is give us your Medicare Card and your Licence and we will set the record up for you." The initial data is 'transcribed by hand onto an clipboard then entered later on a portable device off site-after a given individual has signed the clipboard form containing their personal information.

When I asked one of the data collection person what they are doing she informed me they were registering the people for their SECURE medical record and that she understands it is secure because "she has been told it is secure"!!! An individual who signs up is then given a small pamphlet to take and read about the e-record. Personally I have a lot of difficulty with this data collection process-not only from patient data security but the real risk of transcription errors in the data recording. On straw polls in this institution ~0% of doctors know what a PCEHR is and for the rest of the staff I am sure the figure is not much more. This whole process seems like a political stunt to enhance the PCEHR registration numbers for a project that has been very costly and doomed to failure-implementation wise and politically.

3/21/2013 08:59:00 AM

Anonymous said...

Think you've nailed it Terry - a pretty cynical bid to boost registration numbers! It's also happening in some GP clinics, where people persuade you to sign up in the waiting room.

Who are these DoHA people - casual staff employed for the "campaign"?

Exactly what information are they collecting and what details are they entering later into the system?

And how many patients thus railroaded will actually go home and look up their record to see what's there, or otherwise make use of the record as intended?

3/21/2013 10:23:00 AM

Anonymous said...

Terry Hannan has highlighted a very disturbing activity which he describes as - a political stunt to enhance the PCEHR registration numbers.

It reeks of a blatant invasion of privacy. To waylay people inside the protected environment of the walls of a public hospital is sickening. Many people are just holding themselves together wrestling with illnesses and deep personal traumas.

To use the credibility and reputation of a trusted public hospital environment in this way is inexcusable. They should join the American Express sales people at the airport terminals if they want to use such enrollment techniques.

Handing out a simple explanatory flyer to people as they pass without interrupting their thoughts is probably still unacceptable in the protected confines of the hospital environment.

Good governance suggests that the Hospital Board should immediately instruct the Hospital Executive to terminate that activity without delay.

3/21/2013 10:30:00 AM

Anonymous said...

I say a PCEHR sign up team in the mall at Bondi junction last week, little desk, big signs. Clearly a broad push all over the place to get numbers up. What is the cost per sign up I wonder? Smells desperate to me.

3/21/2013 11:06:00 AM

Anonymous said...

Yes, there is a big push on...

At CHIK in Melbourne, apparently

http://ehealthspace.org/news/pcehr-big-push-says-doha-secretary

3/21/2013 12:37:00 PM

Anonymous said...

How much (more) is being spent on this PCEHR activity and what funding bucket is this being sustained by?

+$1B and counting.

3/21/2013 06:55:00 PM

Paul Fitzgerald said...

How can accosting complete strangers in a hospital corridor/waiting area and taking their Medicare Number and Driver's Licence not be a breach of Privacy? This is enough to get a stolen ID up and running. Surely the Feds don't have an immunity to the Privacy Laws that we mere Plebs need to follow? And as someone else suggests, at what cost?

3/21/2013 10:10:00 PM

Anonymous said...

But they pretty much are immune...

the bill says: "While each jurisdiction will be legally bound by the arrangements set out, the Crown will not be liable for pecuniary penalties or subject to prosecution for offences. While the Crown cannot be liable to be prosecuted for an offence, or liable for a pecuniary penalty, this does not mean that all action against the Crown is precluded.

"If the Crown in any of its capacities does not comply with its obligations under this bill, other remedies are potentially available. For example, it may be subject to a declaration or injunction, investigated by the Information Commissioner under the Privacy Act, investigated by the Ombudsman, subject to Parliamentary scrutiny or subject to claims for breach of statutory duty.

"Further, while the Crown may have immunity in certain regards, the employees and contractors of the Crown will not necessarily have any such immunity. Finally, nothing in the Bill prevents an individual who suffers loss or damage from seeking to recover that loss or damage from the person who caused it."

From: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/australian-it/government/personally-controlled-electronic-health-record-system-coming/story-fn4htb9o-1226203867730

3/22/2013 09:16:00 AM

Anonymous said...

Unbelievable - what will they stoop to next?

So just how "secure" is the data of the poor, sick individual who has been bullied into giving it to some bureaucratic types with clipboards in a hospital corridor?

What happens to it between the time it is captured on the clipboard and entered on a PC or iPad or whatever? Can't wait for the first time a clipboard full of personally identifiable information is stolen, lost, left in a taxi etc. How is Ms Halton going to explain that away?

Don't seem to remember this registration method being in any of the previous "design" briefs......

3/22/2013 05:29:00 PM

Our commenters have provided a rich set of comments to all this - thanks team!

The one that really worries me is the power imbalance between the hospitalised patient and the ‘clip-board wielding’ bureaucrat. What should happen is that the hospital patient be given a brochure and once at home and feeling better they should then consider if the NEHRS is for them. Anything else is just unfairly coercive in my view.

There is also this obvious issue that we have paid bureaucrats - who clearly must be paid for their time, wandering about doing all this recruiting. Or worse we have caring staff who have better and more useful things to do being diverted from their primary task. All this is happening when no one has seen any business case or evidence that the system will make the least difference to real world clinical outcomes.

I will leave it to others to comment on the obvious privacy and security implications of all this. Someone really needs to ask the Privacy Commissioner to have a close look at how this is all being done.

All this is not to ignore the great work being done in Dungog where 2% of the population have signed up for the NEHRS. What you are not told is the population of Dungog is a massive 2102 souls - so 40-45 people have signed up.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dungog

Here is the NEHTA headline:

2% of Dungog and surrounding area have registered for an eHealth record

Here is the link:
http://www.nehta.gov.au/media-centre/nehta-news/1013-2-of-dungog-and-surrounding-area-have-registered-for-an-ehealth-record
And this is what the NEHTA Benefits and Evaluation Team spend their time doing.

Sorry but WTF!
David.