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."

Saturday, August 10, 2013

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links - 11th August, 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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Patient portal mandate triggers anxiety

Posted on Aug 02, 2013
By Zack McCartney, Contributing Writer
Stage 2 of the government’s Meaningful Use Program requires that at least 5 percent of patients view, download, and transmit their health information and send a secure electronic message to their provider. The CMS lowered this objective from 10 percent to 5 percent when it published its Stage 2 final rule.   
With the transition to Stage 2 starting in 2014, even the lowered objective spurred anxiety in the healthcare community over whether achieving the goal of patient engagement is even possible. 
 “I think it’s going to be a rocky transition,” said Zachary Landman, MD, and CMO at DoctorBase, “There really aren’t too many people that are doing effective patient engagement”
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Glassomics eyes Google Glass for health

Posted on Aug 02, 2013
By Eric Wicklund, Editor, mHealthNews
The possibilities for Google Glass in healthcare are, to borrow an overused phrase, endless. A new collaboration in San Diego is looking to explore those opportunities in more detail.
Palomar Health and Qualcomm Life have launched a new incubator specifically focused on Google's computerized eyeglasses, which aren't expected to become commercially available until sometime next year. The incubator, called Glassomics, aims to bring in healthcare experts, developers, clinicians, venture capital interests, universities and others to look beyond the "Wow" factor.
"There's been a lot of interest among various people in healthcare," said Orlando Portale, Palomar Health's chief innovation officer, who created and trademarked Glassomics earlier this month. "There's quite a bit to learn because the user interface paradigm is quite a bit different from" the mobile platform that Palomar has explored in the past.
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HIE 2.0 will be 'clinical network management'

By Anthony Brino, Associate Editor
The future of health information exchanges will be “clinical network management,” according to a 2013 HIE market report by Chilmark Research.
As the market for HIE services slows its growth — now growing in the high single digits — and consolidates, 2013 is set to be the year when most HIEs realize they need to focus on supporting care coordination, or clinical network management, Chilmark said.
Clinical network management could also be thought of as HIE 2.0, according to Chilmark researchers, with HIEs having robust use of query-based exchange; cross-venue medication reconciliation; automated clinical quality reporting to public agencies, Medicare and other insurers; virtually-managed care plans; and population health analytics.
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Study: EMR Risk Stratification Can Reduce Readmissions

August 1, 2013
An electronic medical record (EMR)-enabled strategy that targets scarce care transition resources to high risk heart failure (HF) patients can reduce hospital readmissions, according to a new study in the British Medical Journal Quality & Safety.  
The study, conducted by investigators from PCCI, a non-profit research and development corporation, evaluated 1,747 adult inpatients admitted with HF, acute myocardial infarction, and pneumonia over two years at Parkland Memorial Hospital, a 780-bed teaching hospital in Dallas, Texas. The software sits above the EMR and stratifies patients admitted with HF on a daily basis by 30-day readmission risk, as defined by a published HF readmission reduction electronic model.
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ONC's Blair says public-private HIE 'incredibly disruptive'

By Anthony Brino, Associate Editor
“This is a big experiment we’re conducting,” the ONC’s principal advisor for state HIT-enabled care transformation Hunt Blair said at the CMS eHealth Summit, talking about the confluence of public-private investments in EHR adoption and health information exchange.
“And we’re going to get negative results," Blair added, "that’s what happens in an experiment.”
Blair, who joined the ONC in January after working as deputy commissioner of health reform at the Vermont Department of Health Access, did not mention any negative impacts of health IT or medicine specifically. His point was that meaningful use, health information exchange, value-based payments and care delivery redesign — all part of the federal government’s health reform endeavor — are challenging, with varying results so far across the states and localities.
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ONC contract guidance attempts to level the EHR playing field

August 1, 2013 | By Marla Durben Hirsch
Regular readers of FierceEMR know that I tend to be cynical about new developments. I don't take them at face value and delve deeper to see if there's anything in addition going on behind the scenes.
And so it is with the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT's new "legal" guidance on EHR contract terms.
I love this new guidebook, called "EHR Contracts: Key Contract Terms for Users to Understand." It identifies seven provisions commonly found in vendor contracts, explains what they mean, what electronic health record purchasers need to know, and other related issues.
It's a very good tool, written in plain English.
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7 steps for developing an effective eHealth strategy

August 1, 2013 | By Dan Bowman
Very few health organizations or geographic regions have a proper strategy for the implementation of eHealth, despite evidence that technology's role in healthcare continues to grow, according to research published this week in the Journal of Internet Medical Research. To that end, a pair of researchers from South Africa and Canada outlined seven steps necessary to the development of an effective eHealth strategy.
"Entities will often emulate or adapt practice from elsewhere," the study's authors said. "While emulation or adaptation is common, these approaches are inappropriate: 'emulation' because solutions and approaches must be context-specific, and 'adaptation' because, although a compromise, it remains suboptimal."
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Mobilizing Health Information Technology

by Patricia Flatley Brennan Thursday, August 1, 2013
We've all heard that electronic health record adoption has tripled since 2010, which is especially noteworthy considering that the field of health information technology is still in its relative infancy. But while EHRs are top of mind in most health IT discussions, they're only one facet of a rapidly growing and evolving industry.
It's time to start expanding our health IT focus to encompass devices and applications that are much more accessible to patients, who are increasingly using smartphones and tablets to capture their health data. These data paint a more complete picture of their health and have significant potential to positively change our health care delivery system.
This new kind of data is termed "observations of daily living," or "ODLs." They're the bits of information that are defined and recorded by people during the course of their daily lives, based on health information that is personally relevant and meaningful to them.
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An EMR downtime then and now

Source: John Halamka, MD Date: Aug 1, 2013
On November 13, 2002, the network core at Beth Israel Deaconess failed due to a complex series of events and the hospital lost access to all applications. Clinicians had no email, no lab results, no PACS images, and no order entry. All centrally stored files were unavailable. The revenue cycle could not flow. For two days, the hospital of 2002 became the hospital of 1972.
On July 25, 2013, a storage virtualization appliance at BIDMC failed in a manner which gave us Hobson's choice — do nothing and risk potential data loss; or intervene and create slowness/downtime. Since data loss was not an option, we chose slowness. Here's the email I sent to all staff on the morning of July 25.
"Last evening, the vendor of the storage components that support Home directories (H:) and Shared drives (S:) recommended that we run a re-indexing maintenance task in order avoid potential data corruption. They anticipated this task could be run in the middle of the night and would not impact our users. They were mistaken.
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OHSU: Three Big Breaches in a Year

JUL 29, 2013 6:06pm ET
Unauthorized use of cloud computing storage services in two departments of Oregon Health & Science University has resulted in the organization notifying more than 3,000 patients that protected health information may have been compromised. The incident is the third major breach for OHSU in the past year. The previous breaches on the HHS Office for Civil Rights’ public Web site included an unspecified theft on July 4, 2012, affecting 702 patients, and the theft of a laptop on Feb. 22, 2013, affecting 1,114.
Here is the statement on the latest breach from the university:
Oregon Health & Science University is notifying 3,044 patients that their OHSU health information was stored on an Internet-based email and/or document storage service, also known as a “cloud” computing system.
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Epic holdout questions install craze

Posted on Jul 31, 2013
By Bernie Monegain, Editor
In a recent blog post, John Halamka, MD, chief information officer of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, offers his views on why the Epic EHR has gained unprecedented momentum in the market among providers nationwide -- not least among an elite group of hospitals in Boston.
So far, though, BIDMC, which is among that exclusive Boston-based group, is sticking with its in-house built EHR.
An Epic system – or other client-server technology – might relieve some demands on Halamka and his IT team, but it would not likely be as flexible.
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Go-live gone wrong

Posted on Jul 31, 2013
By Bernie Monegain, Editor
Though it seems that much of the healthcare industry is finally on board with making the transition from paper to digital records, the transformation comes with a high price. Much anticipated, and sometimes hyped, electronic health record system rollouts cost millions of dollars and often end up causing chaos, frustration, even firings at hospitals across the country.
Case in point: Maine Medical Center in Portland, Maine, a 600-bed hospital that is home to the celebrated Barbara Bush Children’s Hospital, and a part of the MaineHealth network.
Maine Med’s go-live last December of its estimated $160 million Epic EHR system seemed at first to go off without a hitch. But four months later, the hospital network’s CIO, Barry Blumenfeld, MD, (pictured at right) was out of a job, and, in an April 24 letter to employees, Maine Medical Center President and CEO Richard W. Petersen announced a hiring freeze, a travel freeze – and a delay in the further rollout of the EHR throughout the rest of MaineHealth.
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4 tips for hospitals moving to cloud-based storage

July 31, 2013 | By Ashley Gold
Boston-based Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center recently moved to cloud data storage, due in large part to their volume of medical records, according to CIO of the Beth Israel Deaconess Care Organization Bill Gillis. Speaking to Becker's Hospital Review, Gillis and Bob Dupuis, practice director at Arcadia Solutions--which built BIDMC's custom network storage system--explained why they think it will work.
"We got space at a cloud storage facility and were able to build our own cloud that we now manage and maintain," Gillis said. "In 2007, not a lot of organizations were using cloud-based storage, but we were just going with something we thought would work--and it did."
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VA: 80,000 vets used telehealth in 2012

July 31, 2013 | By Dan Bowman
Roughly 80,000 veterans took advantage of telehealth tools in more than 200,000 remote consultations in 2012, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs announced this week.
The figures were touted Tuesday at the VA's first Connected Health Showcase in Washington, D.C., according to a story published at Military.com. In addition, the VA said that its telehealth program has reduced bed days for veterans by 58 percent and hospital admissions by 38 percent.
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Health data breaches usually aren’t accidents anymore

Personal medical information is being targeted because of the value it holds and the relative ease thieves have getting their hands on it.

By Pamela Lewis Dolan amednews staff — Posted July 29, 2013
During the past decade, the health care industry has adopted new practices and technology to protect against patient data breaches. But as protection of data becomes more sophisticated, so have the ways in which the data are exposed.
Data security firm ID Experts examined some of the biggest breach cases from the past decade and talked with data security experts to understand how the trends have changed during the past 10 years. The report identifies future threats to data security and gives advice on how organizations can respond to those threats.
One of the biggest changes during the past decade is the data being targeted. Ten years ago, it was personal identifiable information. Now, said Rick Kam, president and co-founder of ID Experts in Portland, Ore., personal health information is being targeted, mainly because of the value it holds and the relative ease thieves have getting their hands on it.
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EPRs essential for HES expansion plans

22 July 2013   Rebecca Todd
Hospitals will need electronic patient record systems to meet NHS England’s “ambitious” plans for extracting a hugely expanded hospital dataset from April 2014.
A consultation starts today on the commissioning board’s proposal to require a much larger dataset be electronically provided by hospitals from the start of the next financial year.
NHS England proposes to extract data including all tests and results, investigations performed and medications prescribed, as well as nursing observations.
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Despite EHR, Patient ID Problems Persist

Scott Mace, for HealthLeaders Media , July 31, 2013

If you think that moving to electronic health records will eliminate mistaken identity in healthcare, you are mistaken.
This article appears in the June issue of HealthLeaders magazine.
The change from fee-for-service to coordinated care is challenging providers to solve a longstanding need to identify patients more precisely to avoid waste, fraud, and substandard care.  
For years, the healthcare industry has recognized the problem of errors related to improper patient identification. If you were to think that moving to electronic health records would eliminate mistaken identity in medicine, you would be, well, mistaken, according to a variety of healthcare executives interviewed for this story.
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Report: Building blocks for a health sector digital ecosystem are falling into place, slowly

Even advanced economies are a long way short of delivering a digital ecosystem for the healthcare sector, but a report finds progress is being made, and some cause for optimism.
That’s our interpretation of Accenture’s latest cross cultural study of digitised health care service delivery called "The Digital Doctor is in" which found that across eight advanced economies, in only two – England and Spain – are doctors routinely accessing digital clinical data about patients.
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Tool Lets Employers Calculate Their Cost for Hospital Errors

JUL 29, 2013 3:29pm ET
The Leapfrog Group, a coalition of employers seeking improved quality of care at lower prices, has introduced software to enable health care purchasers to see how much they spend unnecessarily because of medical errors in hospitals.
Also available with the Hidden Surcharge Calculator is a white paper from Leapfrog. The organization estimates that a patient admitted to a hospital with a safety grade of “C” or lower generates $7,780 in hidden surcharges because of errors.
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Cloud storage debacle marks hospital's third privacy incident in a year

July 30, 2013 | By Dan Bowman
Information for more than 3,000 patients at Oregon Health & Science University was put at risk when medical residents stored the data on a password protected cloud computing system, the institution announced this week. The potential data breach is the third such reported incident to occur at the university in less than a year, and the fifth since 2008.
In May, a faculty member at the university's school of medicine found that residents in the Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery were using Google Drive and Google Mail to maintain a spreadsheet of patients that was accessible among department members in real time. A subsequent investigation determined that similar practices had taken place in the hospital's Department of Urology and in Kidney Transplant Services. Those patients impacted--3,044 in all--were admitted to the hospital between Jan. 1, 2011 and July 3 of this year.
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Docs rarely 'game' CDS systems to reduce alerts

July 30, 2013 | By Susan D. Hall
A vast majority of physicians entered accurate data into an imaging clinical decision support system, according to a new study that found little evidence of attempts to "game" such systems to avoid intrusive computer alerts.
The study, conducted by researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, compared data entered in the emergency department for the use of CT angiography (CTA) for the evaluation of patients with suspected pulmonary embolus (PE). They chose this data because the orders can be compared directly with lab results to determine whether the tests ordered are appropriate. They also looked at downstream effects of erroneously entered information in an article recently published online in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association.
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Emis-TPP data sharing called off

26 July 2013   Rebecca Todd
An agreement to work on direct sharing of information between TPP and Emis users has collapsed.
EHI reported in March that the GP IT system suppliers were working on a “groundbreaking” data-sharing agreement.
The companies said they were looking for sites to pilot the technology, which would allow clinicians using one system to view patient records from the other system.
However, talks have broken down.
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5 ways health IT impacts consolidation

Posted on Jul 29, 2013
By Jeff Rowe, Contributing Writer
Most health IT professionals are probably more focused on implementing or maintaining systems than they are tracking larger healthcare trends, such as the pace at which hospitals and practices are being bought and sold.
The fact is, however, that information technology – even if it's not a direct driver of healthcare consolidation – can certainly be a significant factor in the decision-making of healthcare administrators, affecting both the choice to consolidate and how successfully a consolidation is carried out.
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Political Heat Scorches Meaningful Use Timetable

Scott Mace, for HealthLeaders Media , July 30, 2013

Until recently, MU has had a bipartisan aura about it. But now the desire for a delayed deadline for Stage 2 is growing among healthcare providers and technology vendors. Could this be the moment that MU becomes another partisan issue in Washington?
July has been full of FUD—fear, uncertainty, and doubt—for electronic health record technology.
Committees in both the House of Representatives and the Senate have heard officials make the case for providers to get more time to comply with Stage 2, beyond the current September 30, 2014 deadline.
The AHA and AMA joined the call for delay. And CHIME renewed its call for a delay of Stage 2.
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CMS Clarifies Meaningful Use Clinical Quality Measure Specs

JUL 26, 2013 1:57pm ET
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has added three new Frequently Asked Questions relating to clinical quality measure specifications under the electronic health records meaningful use program:
QUESTION: When new versions of clinical quality measure (CQM) specifications are released by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), do developers of Electronic Health Records (EHR) technology need to seek retesting/recertification of their certified complete EHR or certified EHR module in order to keep its certification valid?
ANSWER: No. The minimum version required for 2014 Edition certification is the version of CQM specifications released by CMS in December 2012.  EHR technology that has been issued a certification based on the December 2012 version will remain certified even when CMS releases new versions of CQM specifications.
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Analytics means we 'roll up our sleeves'

Posted on Jul 29, 2013
By Mike Miliard, Managing Editor
UPMC has invested more than $1.6 billion in its IT infrastructure over the past five years, according to Pamela Peele, chief analytics officer of UPMC Health Plan. That's more money, she points out, than its home city has spent on three pro sports stadiums combined – "and we take sports seriously in Pittsburgh."
Those massive investments have paid big dividends, said Peele, speaking July 24 at the The Institute for Health Technology Transformation's Denver Health IT Summit, and showed how UPMC's strategies could be useful even for smaller organizations without that sort of financial muscle.
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4 reasons DICOM needs an upgrade

July 28, 2013 | By Mike Bassett
The Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) standard for distributing and viewing any kind of medical image may not be the best method for Internet-based multi-organization exchange, according to testimony heard at a recent hearing of the Clinical Operations Workgroup of the Health IT Standards Committee.
According to a recent blog post from FierceHealthIT Advisory Board member John Halamka (pictured), co-chair of the committee and  chief information office at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, two officials of LifeImage--CEO Hami Tabatabaie and CTO Michael Baglio--testified that image exchange should be divided into two categories: local and long distance.
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Message matters: The persuasive impact of health blogs

July 29, 2013 | By Ashley Gold
Health-focused blogs and journals can have a positive impact on patients, but they're much more effective when written in non-narrative form by authors to whom readers can relate, according to a new study in the Journal of Medical Internet Research.
Author Amy Shirong Lu, Ph.D., of Northwestern University, set out to examine how message type and source similarity--the number of shared characteristics between writer and readers--persuade readers to adopt a specific health behavior, such as running for exercise.
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Axial Exchange raises $5M, adds enhancements to hospital app platform

By: Aditi Pai | Jul 26, 2013
Raleigh, North Carolina-based Axial Exchange, a mobile app developer, raised just under $5 million from undisclosed investors, according to an SEC filing. Axial Exchange is backed by a syndicate of venture capital firms, led by Canaan Partners.
The company recently announced a series of enhancements to its mobile patient engagement app which include prioritizing elements related to day-to-day health management including medication adherence, access to all health system resources available to patients, and a new design approach that focuses users on the health information, instead of the design elements of the app.
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ONC Unveils Final Health IT Safety Plan

by Helen R. Pfister and Susan Ingargiola, Manatt Health Solutions Monday, July 29, 2013
On July 2, the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT released a final version of its Health IT Patient Safety Action and Surveillance Plan. ONC had released a draft of the plan for public comment in December 2012. The plan is a significant piece of the federal government's efforts to ensure the safety of electronic health records and other health IT tools. In addition to the Health IT Safety Plan, the government is considering whether:
  • A comprehensive risk-based regulatory framework is appropriate for health IT; and
  • Regulatory guidance relating to mobile health apps, in particular, is necessary.

Background

The Health IT Safety Plan, which was a joint effort between ONC and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, addresses recommendations made by the Institute of Medicine in its 2011 report, titled, "Health IT Patient Safety: Building Safer Systems for Better Care." In the report, IOM acknowledged that EHRs have the potential to reduce medical errors but also have the potential to cause them. Thus, the report called on the government and the private sector to maximize the safety of health IT-assisted care.
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Berwick Names 11 Monsters Facing Hospital Industry

Cheryl Clark, for HealthLeaders Media , July 29, 2013

Former acting head of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, Don Berwick, MD, acknowledges healthcare providers have come a long way in the last few decades, but it's "by no means enough."
"And the wild things roared their terrible roars and gnashed their terrible teeth and rolled their terrible eyes and showed their terrible claws."
Where the Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendak
Like this line from Maurice Sendak's celebrated children's book, America's hospitals face some terrible monsters, 11 of them to be exact, said Don Berwick, MD, former acting administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
"We're scared of the truth, the next wave of what we have to do to transform healthcare. And it crosses some scary landscape. It's stuff we don't want to think about and don't want to talk about," he told some 1,400 executives assembled for the American Hospital Association's Leadership Summit in San Diego last week.
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4 Strategies for Securing HIT Leadership Talent

Chelsea Rice, for HealthLeaders Media , July 29, 2013

Competition among healthcare recruiters to place well-qualified and experienced health information technology executives is fierce.These strategic tips can help.
With ICD-10, health insurance exchanges, and Meaningful Use deadlines bearing down on them, hospitals and health systems are in a bind to recruit and retain the right health IT executives to implement and manage increasingly complex health information systems.
More than half (52%) of hospitals and health system executives say "inadequate staff with expertise" is their top HIT challenges over the next three years, according to the HealthLeaders Media Intelligence Report, Healthcare IT: Tackling Regulatory, Clinical, and Business Needs.
Unfortunately, competition among hospital recruiters to place effective and experienced HIT executives is fierce.
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The high cost of health care

Searching for a diagnosis

Jul 24th 2013, 18:24 by C.H. | NEW YORK
AMERICA spends more on health care than any other country in the world. What is more, spending within America varies dramatically from one region to the next. This is well known. Less understood is how best to change it. The health system is enormously complex. Differing views on reform inspire rowdy protests and send pundits into frothy-mouthed rants. To lower health spending, it would help to know what drives it up. A huge new report from America’s Institute of Medicine (IOM) helps provide an answer.
In the study, commissioned by Congress, the IOM looked at the geographic variation in spending within Medicare, the health programme for the old, and within the commercially insured population. It is the biggest ever analysis of why some regions spend more than others. Crucially, the factors driving the variation in Medicare spending are different from those affecting private coverage.
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Enjoy!
David.

Friday, August 09, 2013

This Seems To Be A Useful And Current Introduction To HL7 - Worth A Browse.

This is an interesting review - from the point of Imaging Specialists wanting to grasp some HL7 basics.

What do I need to know about HL7?

By Herman Oosterwijk, AuntMinnie.com contributing writer

July 25, 2013 -- During the recent Society for Imaging Informatics in Medicine (SIIM) annual conference, there was an overriding message to healthcare imaging and IT professionals that they should learn more about HL7, especially as image-enabling the electronic medical record (EMR) is becoming a very hot item.
HL7 is not rocket science, and like any other standard, being able to "talk" HL7 is just a matter of knowing the most common terms and where to look for what information.
Most healthcare imaging and IT professionals don't really have to be experts; there are enough of those within an institution. However, the problem is typically how to communicate with vendors and the HL7 experts and know enough to visualize any issues and bring them to the surface. By the way, we are concentrating on version 2.x, as version 3 is a completely different story and will be covered elsewhere.
First of all, even though the HL7 standard is extensive and covers many domains, ranging from billing to housekeeping and dietary to genomics, we are only concerned with a small subset in the case of imaging. Therefore, instead of the more than 70 different messages, we are only concerned with three specific to our domain: patient admission, order, and result management.
In a typical scenario, an order for a CT exam might be placed in a computerized physician order-entry (CPOE) system, which in many cases is part of the EMR. This triggers an order message, which is called ORM. Each HL7 message has an event code embedded, of which there are no less than 130 defined. Again, we only use a couple, in this case O01 (order).
If this concerns an outpatient, the actual order would not trickle down to a modality for the study to be performed until the patient arrives. A clerk or receptionist will register the arrival, which triggers an arrival message that is encoded as an ADT (admission, discharge, transfer) message with a trigger event code A01. This will cause the requisition to become an active work item that will appear on the worklist for the CT modality upon request by the CT technologist.
The worklist is created by mapping the HL7 order information into a DICOM worklist item, which is exchanged using a modality worklist query. After the CT technologist selects the patient from a list, the images are created during image acquisition and the DICOM header contains the information copied from the worklist.
Images are sent to a PACS and, upon completion of the exam, they appear on a workstation for a radiologist to read. The order was also sent to a reporting system, which is typically a voice recognition system, so that when the radiologist selects a new patient from the list, the information needed to identify the report is available and automatically displayed on the report screen. A report is created, signed off, and exchanged by the reporting system with the EMR or radiology information system using an ORU (observation result) transaction.
Let's look at a typical HL7 message, and we'll see that it's really not that hard to interpret these messages as long as you know how to read them. The message below is a sample order message.
Click link to see image.
An HL7 message contains so-called segments that have a three-character segment ID and are delimited by a carriage return. In our sample message, we can recognize the first segment ID, i.e., the MSH; it contains general information about the message itself such as the initiator, receiver, date and time of message, and version number, in this case version 2.3.1.
The following segments are the PID, which contains patient identification information; PV1, which holds the patient visit information; ORC, which has common order information; and OBR, which contains information about the details of an exam, diagnostic study/observation, or assessment that is specific to an order or result.
The transaction has many different components, all of which have a fixed location and are separated by the control character "|". The message content uses ASCII text encoding; therefore, it is not hard to interpret what it says in the OBR. In this case, it says that a right shoulder x-ray is scheduled for the patient Barry identified in the PID. However, if we want the referring physician, we need to go back to the interface specification to find out which of the MDs identified in the ORC segment is the referring physician, who is the performing physician, and who is the attending physician.
What are the most common issues that we encounter in the imaging area related to HL7? First of all, the saying goes, "If you have seen one HL7 interface, you've seen one HL7 interface," meaning that no two are alike. Each institution has its own customizations, and many vendors make changes to their interfaces.
Because of the variability, we use interface engines to map messages and make our HL7-to-DICOM convertors (brokers) very flexible and configurable. In addition, there are inconsistencies and differences between the HL7 and DICOM protocol encoding that can cause issues. The HL7-related problems that I have experienced and expect are common are described below.
Lots more here:
Worth a browse for the basics and to see how HL7 and DICOM interact and can be interfaced.
David.

Thursday, August 08, 2013

Big Data Moves To Improve Care and Reduce Costs. Looks To Be Working.

The Wall St Journal finds some very interesting data on big data use.
July 11, 2013, 10:43 p.m. ET

Hospitals Prescribe Big Data to Track Doctors at Work

Marnie Baker, a pediatrician whose job is to win over colleagues to data-tracking efforts, shows equipment to fellow doctor David Kim.
Marnie Baker, a pediatrician at California's MemorialCare Health System, has an easy manner and ready smile. Now, though, her job is to be the bearer of a serious and, for some of her colleagues, unwelcome message.
She's the voice of a program that digitally tracks their performance, informs them when they don't measure up—and cajoles them to improve.
MemorialCare is part of a movement by hospitals around the U.S. to change how doctors practice by monitoring their progress toward goals, such as giving recommended mammograms. It isn't always an easy sell. At one clinic earlier this year, physicians grilled Dr. Baker, who is director of performance improvement at a MemorialCare-affiliated physician group.
Cardiologist Venkat Warren said he worried that "some bean-counter will decide what performance is." He wondered whether doctors would be pushed to avoid older and sicker patients who might drag down their numbers.
"If it isn't cost-cutting, what is it?" Dr. Warren asked.
"It's providing better value," Dr. Baker responded.
Encounters like these are one result of the changes sweeping American health care. Technology is making it easier to monitor doctors' work as patients' details are compiled electronically instead of on paper charts. Software makers are selling new tools to crunch the data. Software called Crimson offered by the Advisory Board Co. now includes information on more than a half-million doctors, up from fewer than 50,000 in 2009.
At the same time, more physicians are going to work for hospital systems, which are under pressure to hit quality goals and cut costs. Many are striking deals with insurers that pull them away from traditional "fee-for-service" reimbursement, which pays for medical procedures individually.
Insurers—which themselves increasingly track physician results—are moving toward providing a set payment for the overall care of a patient. This system means that doctors who provide costlier-than-average care could break the budget.
The federal health law is speeding these trends. Under the law, hospital payments and penalties from the federal Medicare program will be linked to their performance on quality gauges, particularly rehospitalizations, which are costly. The law also created a new Medicare initiative for "accountable care organizations," providers that get extra rewards for efficiency and quality performance.
To succeed under the new health-care economics, hospital executives say, they must lean on doctors, who make nearly all the key decisions on what treatments, tests and drugs patients get. "The last frontier is the physicians," says Thomas Heleotis, vice president of clinical effectiveness at Monmouth Medical Center, part of New Jersey's seven-hospital Barnabas Health system.
Lots more with useful graphics here:
Note that this is all about assisting clinicians to do a better job - and at the same time deliver better more consistent care while reducing costs. Health system nirvana!
Note also the information on which this is based is the individual’s EMR and not some amorphous database somewhere.
A really well researched article. Enjoy!
David.

Wednesday, August 07, 2013

An App For Your Mental Health Coming To A Phone Near You!

This appeared a little while ago.

Developers creating apps to treat mental health issues

By Sanjena Sathian

Globe Correspondent  
 July 08, 2013
JESSICA RINALDI FOR THE GLOBE
“Treasure of Bell Island,” from Blue Marble Gaming Co., is a video game designed to help people who have had a traumatic brain injury.
Late at night, in the middle of a panic attack, 25-year-old Zoe Quinn used to get out of bed to play video games. By the light of her computer screen, she immersed herself in another universe, and her anxiety slipped away.
Now, the Dorchester woman wants to make gaming for others what it was for her: a therapeutic, purposeful way out of dark times. Her passion makes her part of a growing movement among gamers and doctors alike to use the medium to educate the public and diagnose, and even treat depression or anxiety.
Quinn has created a simple, free, Web game called “DepressionQuest.” Players click through the deeply realistic narrative of a first-person character, making choices for the character about work, friends, and family. The game shows options for dealing with depression, such as seeking therapy or medication, or reaching out to friends.
“DepressionQuest” isn’t clinically tested. (Though she got advice from a therapist, she warns that suicidal people should not play.) But Quinn wanted sufferers of depression to know they’re not alone — and show those who haven’t experienced depression what it’s like. “Games require a certain degree of empathy — from the nature of the interaction, immersing yourself in the experience,” she said. “The world of games is changing. It’s not just Mario or Call of Duty.”
Game developers hope that one day they might supplement therapy and support groups by putting mental health care into patients’ homes or pockets. The demand for therapists far outstrips the supply nationally, and many who most need help with mental health issues can’t afford or reach treatment, or don’t seek it out.
‘Games require a certain degree of empathy — from the nature of the interaction, immersing yourself in the experience.’
But most of the games have yet to go through rigorous testing to see whether they work — or might inadvertently harm patients — and the makers aren’t yet allowed to make health claims for their products. While drugs must be approved by the federal government and states license many therapists, games are unregulated.
More here:
Also we have this link:
First on the web and now on your phone. I hope there will be some review processes put in place to evaluate and certify such apps so they can be used and recommended with confidence as it seems they are likely to really be able to help many.
David.

Tuesday, August 06, 2013

Telstra Increases Its Focus On E-Health. An Interesting Choice Of Direction.

The following press release appeared a few days ago.

Telstra invests in electronic health record specialists IP Health

Media Release
02 August 2013
Telstra has finalised an investment in Australian electronic health record specialist IP Health, which provides medical practitioners with access to complete patient information on their smartphones and tablets.
IP Health’s core product, Verdi, gives hospital clinicians and administrators a single view of patient information aggregated from multiple systems in a hospital. It extracts information in real time from a hospital’s existing paper or electronic databases, enabling information to appear to derive from a single source for simultaneous sharing.
Telstra Ventures Managing Director, Matthew Koertge, said the investment in IP Health aligned to Telstra’s strategy of developing new growth businesses and would build capability in Telstra’s Health portfolio.
“This investment fits with Telstra’s new health business unit by complementing our existing mobility and hosting solutions and expanding our offering to hospitals. IP Health will be an important asset as we continue to build capability in this area,” Mr Koertge said.
“There are more than 1300 hospitals in Australia, most using multiple systems. This new partnership will help IP Health accelerate its growth by combining our strong and trusted brand, our technology know-how and scale with an innovative software solution.
“IP Health’s Verdi software operates on top of existing systems, is modestly priced, quick to implement and compatible with all hospital systems. Patient information is available on mobile devices for clinicians to use anywhere which is important for specialists who work across multiple hospitals and practices,” he said.
IP Health CEO, Ashley Renner, said the Verdi solution enables doctors to access and update patient information and treatments, greatly reducing risks and improving response times.
“Many doctors are called upon out-of-hours to respond to patient needs. Verdi enables those doctors to have the patient’s full history at their fingertips.
“This means that if a doctor is called at home for an emergency they could monitor a live read of a patient’s ECG on their iPad, cross check their pathology results from a number of laboratories and make a recommendation to the nurse on call.
“Having this information on hand means that more accurate decisions can be made more quickly – and at the end of the day that saves lives,” Mr Renner said.
There are currently more than 5000 clinicians using Verdi at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre and satellites in Victoria, and the Mater Hospital group in Queensland.
Director, Division of Cancer Medicine at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre in Melbourne, Professor John Zalcberg, OAM, said that Verdi made life much easier and saved time for busy clinicians using the medical record to monitor their patients.
“Everything is available and trackable. We also know who has looked at what record when, which is important in terms of clinical trials and maintaining confidentiality and privacy.
The Telstra Health Solutions Clinical Workbench, powered by Verdi is currently available to all hospitals in Australia.

About IP Health

IP Health is an electronic medical records specialist with over 20 years experience helping hospitals access patient records when and where required. Verdi is the latest version of their interactive and updatable software, built with clinicians for clinicians.

About Telstra Ventures

Telstra Ventures invests in breakthrough companies that are strategically important to Telstra. Its investment strategy focuses on high growth opportunities that offer technology and solutions which leverage Telstra’s assets and enable Telstra to offer new products and services to its customers. Based in Australia and Silicon Valley, Telstra Ventures works closely with quality entrepreneurs to build significant companies. Telstra Ventures is a corporate venture capital group founded in 2011 as a wholly owned subsidiary of Telstra Corporation.
Here is the link:
There is also some press coverage here:

Telstra finalises eHealth investment

The investment in IP Health builds on Telstra’s health portfolio and its strategy to develop new growth businesses
Telstra has completed an investment in electronic health operator IP Health, which provides patient information to medical practitioners on their smartphones and tablets.
Telstra did not disclose the amount it invested in IP Health. It builds on Telstra’s health portfolio and its strategy to develop new growth businesses, according to Matthew Koertge, Telstra Ventures’ managing director.
“This investment fits with Telstra’s new health business unit by complementing our existing mobility and hosting solutions and expanding our offering to hospitals. IP Health will be an important asset as we continue to build capability in this area,” Koertge said in a statement.
 “There are more than 1300 hospitals in Australia, most using multiple systems. This new partnership will help IP Health accelerate its growth by combining our strong and trusted brand, our technology know-how and scale with an innovative software solution.”
In May this year, Telstra and Seven West Media signed a $10.4 million agreement with HealthEngine for a stake in the online health directory business, which allows patients to make GP and dental appointments online and through its mobile app.
More found here:
It is good to see Telstra is paying attention in the e-Health space and actually making some investments
While it looks to be a little out of date the web site for IP Health has some very interesting case studies and shows what looks like some pretty useful capabilities.
See here:
I wonder could they do something about making the NEHRS / PCEHR more useful?
David.

Monday, August 05, 2013

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 5th August, 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

A really quiet week it seems with continuing discussion on just where the PCEHR is going and what might happen with the election coming closer and closer.
Enjoy the read and we will be back next week.
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Expedition to promote e-health records

30th Jul 2013
NATIONAL E-Health Transition Authority clinical lead Dr Mukesh Haikerwal will make an impromptu trip to a remote WA town to promote e-health after a GP called for the system to be scrapped in the national media.
Dr Haikerwal confirmed he would make the trek to Geraldton, about 400km north of Perth, after Dr Edwin Kruys was quoted in The Australian saying the personally controlled electronic health record “will be added to the global scrap heap of IT failures” and called for it to be abandoned.
“I always listen,” Dr Haikerwal told MO last week.
“I have the ability to improve and bring confidence to the system, and, my god, we need to do that — this is the way to do it.
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Health files online

July 30, 2013, 7 p.m.
PATIENTS will soon be able to have pathology and diagnostic imaging results added to their eHealth records on the internet.
Health Minister Tanya Plibersek said the federal government will spend $8 million to upgrade medical software used by doctors to put records online.
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Personal electronic health records: the start of a journey

James Reeve,  Robert Hosking,  Yvonne Allinson
Summary
Technology is poised to drive dramatic change in the way healthcare is delivered. Many countries are using health information technologies to improve the safety of healthcare and reduce costs.
There is an evolving capability for health information to be accessed and exchanged between healthcare providers in real time.
Shared electronic health records are increasingly seen as having a key role in facilitating access to and exchange of data, promoting engagement with self-management, and supporting continuity of care.
Sharing electronic health records with consumers supports the move to more informed patients becoming active partners in their own health care.
Consumers can access their own health information, contribute to their health record and interact more effectively and efficiently with the health system.
Key words: drug information, electronic prescribing
Aust Prescr 2013;36:70-3
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Telstra invests in electronic health record specialists IP Health

Media Release
02 August 2013
Telstra has finalised an investment in Australian electronic health record specialist IP Health, which provides medical practitioners with access to complete patient information on their smartphones and tablets.
IP Health’s core product, Verdi, gives hospital clinicians and administrators a single view of patient information aggregated from multiple systems in a hospital. It extracts information in real time from a hospital’s existing paper or electronic databases, enabling information to appear to derive from a single source for simultaneous sharing.
Telstra Ventures Managing Director, Matthew Koertge, said the investment in IP Health aligned to Telstra’s strategy of developing new growth businesses and would build capability in Telstra’s Health portfolio.
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Telstra finalises eHealth investment

The investment in IP Health builds on Telstra’s health portfolio and its strategy to develop new growth businesses
Telstra has completed an investment in electronic health operator IP Health, which provides patient information to medical practitioners on their smartphones and tablets.
Telstra did not disclose the amount it invested in IP Health. It builds on Telstra’s health portfolio and its strategy to develop new growth businesses, according to Matthew Koertge, Telstra Ventures’ managing director.
“This investment fits with Telstra’s new health business unit by complementing our existing mobility and hosting solutions and expanding our offering to hospitals. IP Health will be an important asset as we continue to build capability in this area,” Koertge said in a statement.
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Qld and NZ to share health data

Summary: The governments of Queensland and New Zealand have signed an agreement to share health data, IT procurement, strategies, and planning.
By Corinne Reichert | July 31, 2013 -- 02:50 GMT (12:50 AEST)
Queensland Premier Campbell Newman and New Zealand Health Minister Tony Ryall have signed an agreement for cooperation and shared planning between their respective healthcare systems.
Announced today in Wellington, the Arrangement for Collaboration on Strategic Health Initiatives will specifically see the governments share data and strategies in relation to IT procurement, assessment, and implementation; rural and indigenous health systems; telehealth; the promotion of healthcare and the distribution of information on prevention; services efficiency; and information on business, finance, and human resources in healthcare.
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Medical Board eyes doctors' Twitter posts

2 August, 2013 Antonio Bradley
Errant or inappropriate posts Twitter and Facebook could soon attract the wrath of the Medical Board of Australia as it expands its realm to include doctors' rapidly expanding digital lives.
Draft changes to the medical profession's Code of Conduct — the cornerstone document used to hold doctors to account — include explicit warnings about the use of social media.
The draft code, which is to be released within days for public consultation, stresses that its edicts no longer apply only to "traditional face to face consultations".
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eHealth records leading to reduced errors

As the adoption of the personal e-health record (PCEHR) in Australia starts to snowball, we are likely to see fewer medication errors and improved diagnostic and treatment decisions according to a recent global survey  of 3,700 doctors.
However, there is still concern among health professionals that PCEHR adoption is too slow because Australian eHealth records are opt-in (rather than opt-out), with the AMA this week calling for the establishment of a PCEHR clinical advisory group.
Health Minister Tanya Plibersek announced on July 17 that around 520,000 patients and 5000 health organisations (including GP practices and hospitals) had registered for the PCEHR, and over 16 million health documents had been uploaded to the system.
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AMA repeats calls for DORA national roll-out

30th Jul 2013
THE AMA has repeated its call to have an online service that helps GPs monitor patient use of controlled drugs rolled out nationally, amid reports of deaths from overdoses of a powerful prescription painkiller.
The ABC reported that at least three people had died in three months from overdosing on fentanyl in NSW country towns.
The drug is indicated for chronic pain that does not respond to non-narcotic analgesics and is available as a patch for slow release. 
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Orion Health rolls out converged cloud

IaaS will reduce costs, speed delivery time
New Zealand health technology solutions provider Orion Health is introducing a converged cloud service to support its global managed health services.
The company provides solutions to clinicians in more than 35 countries and helps facilitate data exchange between hospitals and health systems.
HP has provided Orion Health with an infrastructure as a service (IaaS) called CloudSystem Matrix. Designed for private and hybrid cloud environments it will allow the company to build a catalogue of applications for deployment.

Orion Health sells stake in HealthLink, settles two court cases

Orion Health CEO Ian McCrae says he was offered a good price for the company's 52.4 percent stake in HealthLink
Orion Health has agreed to sell its majority stake in HealthLink to HealthLink management, averting a court case scheduled to be heard next week.
Orion held 52.4 percent of HealthLink.
Two separate High Court proceedings were scheduled: the first over royalty payments and the second over differing views between the shareholders of the direction of HealthLink.
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The PCEHR

Posted on by Dr Thinus
Today I had a couple of patients asking me about the PCEHR. I advised them that our practice is ready and able to play this game but there were so many unresolved issues that we would not actively promote this to anyone. Two of the main issues are:
  1. Each Healthcare Provider signs a participation agreement with the Government – it is sixteen pages long but one paragraph stands out. It states: “You grant us a perpetual, irrevocable, royalty-free and license-fee free, worldwide, non-exclusive licence (including a right to sub-license) to use, reproduce, copy, modify, adapt, publish and communicate (including to other healthcare provider organisations and to organisations that store health information) material you have uploaded to the PCEHR system for the purposes of the PCEHR system”   
To me this poses an unacceptable risk to the patient
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PCEHR: Who is the customer? (slideshow)

When starting up a project, service or business, an important question is: Who is the customer? This is not always the one who pays the bills. There may be other users or stakeholders. I’ve said it before: Everybody has to be on the same page for a project to be successful.
I’m not sure who the customer is in the case of the PCEHR. At first glance this seems to be the health consumer, as they have some control – unlike clinicians. Most GPs agree on one thing: the current PCEHR is not making their jobs easier or adding value. Are they customers too? Are there others?
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Big Oz needs telehealth

26 July, 2013 Dr Moyez Jiwa
Telehealth has been pitched as the answer to the rural doctor shortage, but many GPs remain wary of being denied the option to physically examine patients. 6minutes spoke to GP and researcher Dr Moyez Jiwa, from Curtin University, about his recent study of GPs and their attitudes to doctoring from afar.
What do GPs think of video consultations?
We found one-third of GPs wanted to take on video consultations for follow-up patients, a third were unsure, a third were not in favour of it. Australian-trained GPs were generally not keen, compared to IMGs, and we think that's because there's not an established telehealth culture. But arguably there should be because our country is huge.
What are the problems with Australia's video consultation model?
A major issues is funding. It's not funded for GPs' consults. We also need more evidence this is effective and safe. The big concern was physical examination. There's a debate about whether history alone is enough and in what circumstances. It also gets complicated if the patient has multiple morbidities.
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Mercy Health saves costs with networking upgrade

The not-for-profit rolls out software-based wide area network optimisation
Queensland health provider, Mercy Health, has saved costs and improved data replication since the deployment of a software-based wide area network (WAN) optimisation solution.
According to Mercy Health's IT operations manager, Mohamed Elalfy, a hardware based WAN product would have cost three times more over a four-year time frame.
Based at Rockhampton, the organisation delivers services to rural and central Queensland.
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Online cannabis, ecstasy sales booming

Date July 31, 2013

Daniella Miletic

Social Affairs Editor, The Age

Researchers examining the ways illicit drugs are bought and sold through the internet have discovered a sharp rise in the number of people using the online market place to sell Australians cannabis and ecstasy.
The study, by the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, is the first to monitor sellers of illicit drugs to Australians. It found that while the internet does not yet compare to the backstreets as a place to get drugs, the amount of online sellers – both domestic and international – is increasing.
From August 2012 to February 2013 researchers reported a 32 per cent jump in the number of sellers using the Silk Road marketplace – a marketplace much like eBay where transactions are encrypted, anonymous and made using the online currency Bitcoin – to sell cannabis, ecstasy and MDMA. They found the number of sellers, mainly international, rose by 92 to 374. Domestic retailers had increased by about 22 per cent, to 44, by February.
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Australia's biggest supercomputer is off and racing

Date August 1, 2013 - 8:46AM

Farz Edraki

By the time you finish reading this, Australia's biggest supercomputer will have carried out 144,000 trillion calculations. Or 1200 trillion calculations a second.
Officially launched on Wednesday at the National Computational Infrastructure (NCI) computing centre at the Australian National University in Canberra, the supercomputer - dubbed ''Raijin'' after the Japanese god of thunder, lightning and storms - will be used by researchers to run complex scientific models.
At 70 tonnes, Raijin is capable of performing the same number of calculations in one hour that 7 billion people would have taken 20 years to perform using calculators. Whereas an average laptop has four central processing units, the supercomputer has 57,472.
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Watson and the future of cognitive computing

IBM's Watson made a memorable TV debut in 2011, and some of the concepts behind it may a more deep-going impact on the world
"I expected Watson's bag of cognitive tricks to be fairly shallow, but I felt an uneasy sense of familiarity as its programmers briefed us before the big match: The computer's techniques for unraveling Jeopardy! clues sounded just like mine," game-show contestant Ken Jennings wrote after his game show loss to IBM's Watson supercomputer.
"...Just as factory jobs were eliminated in the 20th century by new assembly-line robots, Brad [Rutter] and I were the first knowledge-industry workers put out of work by the new generation of 'thinking' machines."
"'Quiz show contestant' may be the first job made redundant by Watson, but I'm sure it won't be the last," Jennings concluded.
Watson's 2011 victory was a publicity triumph for its creators at IBM. But according to the company, it also symbolised the birth of a new era of intelligent systems – or 'cognitive computing'. Cognitive computing, according to IBM, involves systems that interact naturally with human, learn from their experiences and generate and evaluate evidence-based hypotheses, says
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Archaeopteryx 'not the only bird-brain'

ARCHAEOPTERYX'S contested status as the world's first bird is looking a little shakier, after researchers discovered that its contemporaries were smart enough to fly.
US scientists who analysed Jurassic fossils believe some “paravian” dinosaurs, which were previously considered land-bound, had big enough brains for flying.
They include the scavenger Tsaagan – part of the feathered dromaeosaur group which also included the fearsome Velociraptor – and long-legged “troodontids” including the Zanabazar.
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Enjoy!
David.

Sunday, August 04, 2013

It Looks Like A Refresh Of The National E-Health Strategy Will Come Soon. We Sure Need It. - Article Draft.

Over the last few months I have been hearing that a range of stakeholders have and are being consulted as to their views on what will be the best way forward for e-Health in Australia, recognising that we need e-Health to work well as a part of the larger response to addressing the rising cost of healthcare in the context of the ageing society.
In thinking about any strategic change in direction the first thing to do is to assess just where we are now. As I see it now we have reasonable basic use of Electronic Health Records and practice management systems  among GPs, rising but much less use among specialists, rising levels of the use of private secure clinical messaging service use and gradual improvement in the levels of private and public hospital automation. Adoption of actual use of the Government’s Personally Controlled Electronic Record (PCEHR) is still very low with less than three per cent  registered for the service and many less than that actually using the service.
Despite claims to the contrary no review or evaluation has yet been conducted so, other than the odd anecdote, no one has any idea as to how useful the PCEHR will turn out to be. Interestingly there also seems to be an emerging level of resistance among GPs to the use of the PCEHR based system.
This presentation found on the web and written by a Geraldton GP Dr Edwin Kruys summarises some of the key perceived issues with use of the system.
Issues covered include information ownership, the real purpose of the PCEHR and so on.
Most especially there is a lot of concern regarding this paragraph in the PCEHR Participation Agreement with many not clear just why such broad and ongoing permission is provided.
“7.3 You grant us a perpetual, irrevocable, royalty-free and licence-fee free, worldwide, non-exclusive licence (including a right to sub-license) to use, reproduce, copy, modify, adapt, publish and communicate (including to other healthcare provider organisations and to organisations that store health information) material you have uploaded to the PCEHR system for the purposes of the PCEHR system.”
The full document can be downloaded from here:
As well as concern about the PCEHR and just where it is heading there is also rising concern regarding the way Standards Australia is managing the process of developing Standards in the e-Health domain. This most especially revolves around the way volunteers working on the relevant committees are being treated and the excessive non-technically qualified input and pressure being applied by DoHA bureaucrats.  
The common thread in all this is that the views of clinicians and professionals are being treated with less importance and respect that the reasonably ought to be and that this is having long lasting implications for how effective e-Health can be in the future.
As they say I believe it would be fair to describe the progress in e-Health under Labour as being something of a curate’s egg - good in parts.
As to the future it is my belief that what is needed are a few major initiatives.
These include most importantly a major revamp of the leadership and governance of e-Health nation- wide.
Additionally we need to re-orientation of the focus of e-Health so it is clear that the major objective of e-Health is the support of clinicians to assist them in delivery and co-ordination of quality and safe care for their patients. Within this it seems it would also be useful to reshape the PCEHR to become a patient resource to assist patient engagement with their health problems and to improve the communication between patients and their clinicians.
Improving clinician support will involve taking steps to improve the useability of systems, the support of clinician workflow and the breadth of information and decision support.
Lastly - at the highest level - we need to work to improve the direct information flows between all the actors of the health system to assist co-ordination and safety. What is needed here is to properly join up practices, hospitals, laboratories, community care and so on to optimise the content and quality of these flows.
There is a lot of detail that sits under each of these steps and what I am hoping is that the Strategic Refresh will, in general, agree with the directions I am suggesting and hopefully provide some rich detail of the steps needed.
In summary, in my view,  the present PCEHR initiative is not a clinician friendly plan and it is not at all popular with both clinicians or patients. Improvements are more than possible and could preserve the value of most of the investment made so far and actually get better clinician and patient engagement and use.

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Comments welcome!
David.

Breaking News - Federal Election Called For September 7, 2013

I wonder what this will mean for e-Health?

Here is the announcement email

It’s on.

A few moments ago I saw the Governor-General and asked that she dissolve this parliament and call the Federal Election for September 7.

Australians now face a choice. And the choice couldn’t be starker.

I have a positive vision about the country we can be. In this election I’ll be talking with Australians across the county about better schools for our kids, investing so we can create good jobs, and about how the NBN can help keep our economy strong.

Tony Abbott has a different approach. He’ll bang on with the same negativity that we’re all sick of. He’s only got three word slogans because he doesn’t have the ticker to debate his real agenda.

Right now the only thing standing between Australia and an Abbott-led government is you, me, and as many Australians as we can rally to fight for the kind of nation we all want to live in.


We’ve got one hell of a fight on our hands. Abbott and a few millionaires will out-spend us. But if we join together we can even the playing field. Chip in $5 to get us off to a strong start:
www.alp.org.au/donate

It’s time to rally the troops.

Kevin

PS – I mean what I say: we can win this if we work together. Now’s the time to step up – please make our campaign stronger by donating now: www.alp.org.au/donate




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Sound to me the next 5 weeks are going to be pretty willing.

David.