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, February 15, 2014

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links - 15th February, 2014.

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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Commentary: Why Pharma Wants EHR Data

FEB 7, 2014 12:29pm ET
Leanne Larson, global head of observational research at clinical research organization PAREXEL International, explains the expanded knowledge base that electronic health records data can bring to the drug development and market access processes:
Bringing a biopharmaceutical product to market in today’s rapidly evolving healthcare system is a complex process.  In addition to the purely scientific challenge of developing new and innovative treatments for diseases of great complexity, gaining broad market access for these products demands answers far beyond those offered by traditional clinical trial data.  Yet broad market and patient access is the ultimate goal – the only way to truly realize the promise offered by these new and often ground-breaking therapies.  
Growing cost pressures in healthcare have dramatically shifted reimbursement and market-access decisions globally, and have altered the data needed to support these decisions.   As these newer requirements take shape, payors have begun to draw a line in the sand – paying only for “what works.” Many payors, in fact, are now entering into risk-sharing agreements with pharmaceutical companies, reimbursing only for drugs that produce measurable improvements in patient health. (Groves, et al. 2013)  
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Lack of interoperability stalls progress

Posted on Feb 06, 2014
By Anthony Brino, Editor, HIEWatch
There’s little arguing that drastic improvement to healthcare data interoperability is necessary. It’s not just electronic health records, either, but also the range of technologies spanning from personal medical devices to massive information systems.
Health networks and physician practices have the most to gain from an interoperable ecosystem and, it follows, the most to lose if it doesn’t go right.
But one could argue that American patients and taxpayers stand to gain or lose just as much — especially the next generation of patients and taxpayers, the kids, tweens, teens and 20-somethings who for the most part have not known a world without the benefits and efficiency of the Internet and a laptop, tablet or smartphone.
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Karen DeSalvo: 5 necessities to reach interoperability

February 6, 2014 | By Ashley Gold
The U.S. healthcare system isn't a catastrophe like Hurricane Katrina, but it's a slow boil, Karen DeSalvo, National Coordinator for Health IT, said Thursday during Health Care Innovation Day in Washington, D.C.
"The pain is greater and greater, breaking the bank for many Americans," DeSalvo (pictured) said to open the event, hosted by West Health Institute and the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT.
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Deadlines extended for attesting to meaningful use in EHR incentive program

Posted: February 7, 2014 - 2:45 pm ET
The CMS is extending the deadline for physicians and other eligible professionals to attest to meaningful use for the Medicare EHR incentive program for the 2013 reporting year and is offering some hospitals a second chance at receiving payment—as well as possible relief from the program's 2015 penalties for failing to comply in 2013.
The new deadline for physicians is 11:59 p.m. March 31, pushed back from Feb. 28. The criteria still must have been met by Dec. 31, 2013, the end of the reporting period for the incentive payments.
“This extension will allow more time for providers to submit their meaningful-use data and receive an incentive payment for the 2013 program year, as well as avoid the 2015 payment adjustment,” the CMS said in a news release.
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The Evolution of Health IT Continues

New roles signal new realities and priorities as hospital information technology changes.

By Neil Versel Feb. 6, 2014 SHARE
The many health care reform initiatives underway are forcing hospital information technology and information management departments to evolve and titles to change. The new names are more than cosmetic, heralding a shift in leadership roles to meet new realities and priorities.
Shane Pilcher, vice president of Stoltenberg Consulting in  Bethel Park, Pa., reports seeing expansions of IT departmental functions and, concurrently, a greater role for chief information officers in recent years. "It's becoming more for helping the organization achieve organizational and strategic goals, not just a business unit," Pilcher says.
Rita Bowen, senior vice president of health information management and privacy officer at HealthPort, a Chattanooga, Tenn.-based seller of health care audit management and tracking technology, says health IT departments really should already be profit centers rather than cost centers for health care providers due to revenue-cycle management improving cash flow and from analytics helping on both the financial and clinical sides of the business.
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Another view

Neil Paul wonders why it is so hard to get information out of GP systems, and whether the new GP Systems of Choice framework will generate some much-needed changes.
5 February 2014
The idea of breaking banks into their separate components is in the news at the moment.
Now, I’m not expert on banking, so I don’t really have an opinion on this. But it has made me think about the broader issue of whether one company should be allowed to try to do everything in its sector, or whether it should it be broken up if it gets too big.
One argument for size is that the profitable side of a company might keep a non-profitable side going in lean years; and there are numerous companies where only one part makes a profit, or where others are struggling to come good.
One argument for splitting is to introduce competition, especially when there will otherwise be a monopoly or a very limited choice of alternatives. We have experience of this happening, for instance BT being split into wholesale and retail.
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NHS will be dependent on EHRs - Hunt

6 February 2014   Rebecca Todd
The health service will become “totally dependent” on electronic health records over the next five years, health secretary Jeremy Hunt has said.
Speaking at a Cambridge Health Network event on Wednesday evening, alongside NHS England’s director of patients and information Tim Kelsey, Hunt said 2013 had been a tough year for the NHS, but he is feeling “very optimistic and very encouraged” about the strides made in terms of transparency.
He said three things will become an “absolute given” over the next five years. The first is that the health service will become totally dependent on electronic health records and people will wonder how they ever lived without them.
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  • February 4, 2014, 4:26 PM ET

Veteran VC Says Beware of Health IT Bubble: Not Enough ‘Actual Business Plans’

By Timothy Hay

With software executives filling out the roster at this year’s JP Morgan Healthcare Conference, and with the reported IPO plans of medical cost-transparency software provider Castlight Health at a $2 billion valuation, information-technology for the health-care industry is beginning to look nearly bulletproof as a sector.
But with feverish activity and high valuations comes the danger of a bubble, said veteran investor Anne DeGheest, who was an investor and entrepreneur through the tech boom of the 1990s, and who founded Sand Hill Road firm HealthTech Capital several years ago.
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How Texas Children's transformed care through analytics

February 6, 2014 | By Susan D. Hall
Texas Children's Hospital has transformed its quality improvement efforts through data warehousing and analytics, according to a case study from the College of Healthcare Information Management Executives.
Reports that used to take three months now can be done in 30 minutes and real-time data displayed visually for meetings. The hospital estimates that analysis from its data warehouse costs 70 percent less than analysis directly from its electronic health record because it no longer requires IT staff to compile data from disparate systems.
Texas Children's executives estimate they have achieved about $4.5 million of direct benefits from four of its data warehousing projects.
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PHI breaches up 138% in 2013

February 5, 2014 | By Susan D. Hall
More than 7 million patient records were breached last year, an increase of 138 percent from 2012, according to a report from IT security audit firm Redspin.
The report analyzes breaches reported to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services and identifies trends and highlights areas most in need of improvement.
A single incident--the theft of four desktop computers from Downers Grove, Ill.-based Advocate Medical Group--exposed more than 4 million records. Stolen devices also accounted for the second- and third-largest breaches; all three involved unencrypted data. For the past three years, Redspin has cited unencrypted data on mobile devices as one of the highest risks to personal health information (PHI).
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HIPAA data breaches climb 138 percent

Posted on Feb 06, 2014
By Erin McCann, Associate Editor
When talking HIPAA privacy and security, the numbers do most of the talking. 
Take 29.3 million, for instance, the number of patient health records compromised in a HIPAA data breach since 2009, or 138 percent, the percent jump in the number of health records breached just from 2012. 
These numbers, compiled in a February 2014 breach report by healthcare IT security firm Redspin, though, don't tell the whole story, as these are numbers reported to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services by HIPAA covered entities.
Many healthcare breaches still go unreported, industry officials point out, and many breach offenders don't make the list of shame. Moreover, breaches involving the health records of fewer than 500 individuals are not required to be publicly reported, which also skews the final numbers. 
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FDA, FTC most likely to regulate health apps, experts predict

6 February, 2014
Healthcare providers face legal risks because of gaps in the national regulatory framework for mobile medical information technologies, according to a pair of articles on telehealth privacy and security in the healthcare policy journal Health Affairs this month. Patients face inadequate protections of their confidential healthcare data as well, the articles noted.
In “Mobile health applications: The patchwork of legal and liability issues suggests strategies to improve oversight,” authors Y. Tony Yang and Ross Silverman reported that, by 2015, half a billion smartphone owners will be using a healthcare application. As the use of these apps proliferates, “a standard of care for their use may emerge” and “failure to use an app could be considered a breach of the standard” under some circumstances.
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MGMA: As ICD-10 Compliance Date Approaches, Industry Still Far Behind

February 4, 2014
Less than 10 percent of physician practices are ready for the switch to the ICD-10 code-set, according to a new survey from the Englewood, Colo.-based Medical Group Management Association (MGMA).
The deadline for the switch to the ICD-10 code-set is Oct. 1, as mandated by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). According to research done by MGMA, which includes responses from more than 570 medical groups where more than 21,000 physicians practice, only a small percentage of the industry is ready.
Along with the lass than 10 percent that are ready for ICD-10, MGMA's research revealed that most practices need a software upgrade. More than 80 percent of respondents indicated that their practice management software would require replacement or upgrading in order to accommodate ICD-10 diagnosis codes, this is up from 73.2 percent in June, when MGMA last conducted this survey. In addition, 81.8 percent say their EHR needs to be replaced or upgraded, a jump from 65.3 percent in June.
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Health IT-Fueled Safety Improvement: Big Gains Predicted for 2014

by Bonnie Darves, iHealthBeat Contributing Reporter Wednesday, February 5, 2014
This year promises to be a busy one on the health IT front, with increasing developments in health information exchanges, the incorporation of meaningful use Stage 2 requirements and the general push toward greater transparency in many areas of health care delivery to boost interoperability.
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Q&A: CEO explains CCHIT's new plans

Posted on Feb 04, 2014
By Mike Miliard, Managing Editor
CCHIT surprised many in the industry this past week when it announced it would be bowing out of the EHR certification game to focus on advisory services and thought leadership. Alisa Ray, executive director and CEO of the standards and testing pioneer, spoke with Healthcare IT News about the rationale behind that decision.
Q: Why is CCHIT going in this new direction?
A: It's a combination of things. Our board has looked at the ONC certification and testing business — and in particular the new requirements for 2014. It's been very variable, from a business perspective. So in terms of just managing operations and trying to keep a full staff synced through the peaks and valleys, it's been very hard to do.
This is our sole line of business right now, ONC testing and certification. So we're very susceptible — if there are updates in the program that slow things down for a little while, if the vendors don't come right away, then there's a lag in our revenue because we get paid by them needing testing.  
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Running on EMPI

FEB 1, 2014
Those who track the progress of health information exchanges may be excused if they follow their intuition and believe that, of all the issues the health care industry faces in tackling the task of getting the right data about the right patient to the right clinician or administrator, the basics of matching patient identity might be more or less accomplished. Obviously, you have to have the foundational data of a patient's identity down before you can start worrying about exchanging anything else.
Excused they may be, but reinforced, no. While executives of some of the nation's pioneering HIE's say they are making significant progress in building their enterprise master patient indexes, there are still plenty of instances of counterintuitive revelation that make them realize there is a long way to go before patients can be assured that, under the worst-scenario "unconscious in an ER" situation, the attending physicians and nurses will know exactly whom they are treating.
"We're trying to make the providers better at care coordination, but quite frankly, we're putting a huge burden on them," says Paul Wilder, vice president of product management at the New York eHealth Collaborative, the non-profit organization responsible for coordinating the Empire State's data exchange effort. "I know how difficult it was for me to get records successfully sent four miles as the crow flies when the records concerned me or someone close to me. Now we want people with 2,000 people on a panel to do it better? It's going to be tough without technology."
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Care.data: a row waiting to happen

NHS England has sent directions to the Health and Social Care Information Centre to start collecting and linking primary care data to Hospital Episode Statistics. EHI news editor Rebecca Todd takes a look back at the creation of the care.data programme and the concerns many have about its implications for patient privacy.
30 January 2014
Clever use of data can help the NHS make better decisions about planning services and reducing waste, as well as devising new treatments with a direct effect on patient care.
The real 'scandal' of data use, some would argue, is the chronic underuse of the wealth of patient data locked up in various systems in order to benefit the health system as a whole.
NHS England wants to create a new national database of identifiable patient data pulled from hospitals, GPs, social care, community care and other areas. This will be stored in the ‘safe haven’ of the Health and Social Care Information Centre, where it will be linked to create new Care Episode Statistics.
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Study: National telemedicine service expands healthcare access

February 4, 2014 | By Susan D. Hall
A study of adult users of a national telemedicine service found that it appears to be expanding access to patients who are not connected to other providers. Its users were younger, more affluent, had no established healthcare relationships and were less likely to have a follow-up visit, according to research published at Health Affairs.
The study is one of several published in the February issue--including one examining factors in hospitals' decisions to offer telehealth--that focus on the current state of connected health.
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CDS best practices from someone who 'wrote the book'

February 4, 2014 | By Ashley Gold
Luis Saldaña, M.D., chief medical information officer for Arlington, Texas-based Texas Health Resources, offers up tips on clinical decision support implementation in a recent interview with Becker's Hospital Review.
Saldaña was part of the national team of HIT experts who wrote "Improving Outcomes with Clinical Decision Support," a manual for CDS implementation.
While Texas Health Resources employs a specific vendor system for its electronic health record, Saldaña says it also has added some third-party vendors for functionalities like a drug interaction checker.
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HIT Execs: Our Infrastructure Isn't Prepared for Disaster Recovery

February 3, 2014
Most healthcare IT executives say they do not have the technology infrastructure in place to be fully prepared for a disaster recovery incident, according to a new report from MeriTalk, an Alexandria, Va.-based public-private partnership focused on government IT issues.
For the report, “Rx: ITaaS + Trust," Meritalk surveyed 100 health IT executives and used data from Hopkinton, Mass.-based EMC Corporation, which surveyed 283 health IT executives. The majority showed that if there was an unplanned outage, they would be ill prepared to fully handle it.
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EHR in the Cloud Portends Big Shift in HIT

Scott Mace, for HealthLeaders Media , February 4, 2014

An electronic health record system provider is offering to equip small physicians practices with cloud-based software on a shoestring. The move is making high-end EHRs that cost tens of millions of dollars to get up and running look like dinosaurs, at least at small health systems.

One reason physicians have gravitated to mobile devices is the steep discount that phone carriers have passed along to customers to get their hands on the latest hot smartphone. Now that same trend has come to the doctor's office desktop—without the usual two-year commitment.
Practice Fusion, which for several years has given away free, web-based EHR software to small practices of 15 physicians or fewer, upped its game last month by announcing that it would make available one Chromebook per practice to anyone willing to sign up for its cloud EHR.
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Countdown to ICD-10

FEB 1, 2014
From patient accounting systems to sticky notes and "cheat sheets" posted in exam rooms, ICD-9 codes permeate the health care environment, translating the information in medical records to numbers on claim forms and ensuring that providers get paid for the care they give. But all those old codes have to be rooted out and replaced by October 1.
ICD-10, the next-generation code set, is really coming this time, two decades after its original development and many years after its adoption world-wide for public health research and miscellaneous other purposes. Ready or not, U.S. providers will be required to code their claims with the exponentially more complex ICD-10 codes, or not get paid by either government or private payers. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services will not be backing down from the deadline as it has before.
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The CEO View of HIT

FEB 1, 2014
Ask chief executive officers of provider organizations for their views on health information technology and you'll get the same answer again and again: It's all about better, accountable and patient-centered care. And that means it's all about interoperability and data.
Take a look at the ongoing and planned I.T. initiatives at a small critical access hospital in Bonham, Texas, and there isn't much difference with what's going on at an 11-hospital delivery system.
Twenty-five bed Red River Regional Hospital in Texas swapped out its core financial and clinical information systems from its incumbent community hospital vendor, and got new systems from Healthland, which CEO David Conejo says gives much better service to hospitals of all sizes below 200 beds. The previous vendor told Conejo he could spend $80,000 in upgrades to support analytics and patient-centered care, or just continue with what the hospital already has.
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Healthcare's slack security costs $1.6B

Posted on Feb 03, 2014
By Erin McCann, Associate Editor
If you're shirking your security systems' obligations all to save a few pennies, better think again. Chances are, it will end up costing much more down the road -- a whopping $1.6 billion more. 
Most healthcare organizations nationwide, some 61 percent to be exact, reported a security related incident in the form of security breach, data loss or unplanned downtime at least once this past year, according to a new health IT report by MeriTalk, a public-private organization working to improve government information technology. 
These security events cost U.S. hospitals an estimated $1.6 billion each year. Breaking it down by incident, hospitals should expect to hand over on average $810,000 per security breach, which occurs at nearly one in five healthcare organizations nationwide.
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Middleton still untangling CDS promise

Posted on Feb 03, 2014
By Anthony Brino, Editor, HIEWatch
Blackford Middleton, MD, first came across the term “clinical decision support” in 1983.
That’s when he was in medical school, at SUNY Buffalo, discussing health data management. “I thought that for the medical students and doctors it was ridiculous that we were carrying around clipboards to transfer data between hospital information systems,” said Middleton in a recent interview with Government nHealth IT. Today, Middleton is chief informatics officer at Vanderbilt University Health System and chair of the American Medical Informatics Association board.
Even back then, the year before Apple’s first personal computer went to market, he and his classmates thought it would be worthwhile for information systems to help clinicians with the complexity of diagnosis — and that endeavor continues.
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Most health IT execs unprepared for a data breach

February 3, 2014 | By Ashley Gold
Health IT executives aren't exactly prepared to weather any storm--most don't feel prepared for security breaches or unplanned outages, according to a new survey.
More than half (56 percent) of the survey's respondents said they would need eight hours or more to restore 100 percent of data lost in a breach. The majority of the 283 health IT executives surveyed--82 percent--said that their technology infrastructure is "not fully prepared for a disaster recovery incident."
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Cleveland Clinic's David Levin: Getting value out of health IT will be 'messy'

February 3, 2014 | By Ashley Gold
Can healthcare IT deliver value? According to David Levin, chief medical information officer of Cleveland Clinic Health System, it can--but getting there is "going to be messy."
"A good place to begin is by remembering that health IT is a means and not an end in itself," Levin writes in Healthcare Informatics. "Sure many of us in the field love the technology, love to tinker and to dream about the next cool piece of hardware or software... But our strategic lens should be on HIT as an enabler of the delivery of high value healthcare."
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Study: Care Team Cohesion Affects Clinical Usefulness of EHRs

Written by Helen Gregg (Twitter | Google+)  | January 31, 2014
Care coordination benefits achieved through the use of electronic health records depends on the cohesion of the primary care team, according to a study in Health Services Research.
Researchers administered three annual surveys to more than 500 primary care clinicians in a large integrated delivery system coinciding with the system's staggered implementation of an integrated EHR system. The researchers then used the responses to examine the effect of EHR use and team cohesion on care coordination, as indicated by timely clinician access to patient information and treatment agreement and responsibility agreement among the clinicians.
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HHS issues rule granting patients direct access to lab test results

Posted: February 3, 2014 - 3:00 pm ET
A new federal rule on the exchange of health data removes legal barriers that stop medical laboratories from providing lab test results directly to patients and their designees, such as developers of their personal health records systems. The rule preempts laws in 13 states and lifts a federal exemption effective in 26 more states.
Previously, in those 39 states, patients could receive or view their lab test results only through their physician or other authorized healthcare provider, or by their provider's leave.
The 101-page final regulation amends the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Act, which regulates 239,000 healthcare testing labs.
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Information Governance for the Health Care Industry: Now Is the Time

by Lynne Thomas Gordon Monday, February 3, 2014
In the past decade, society has witnessed the ascendancy of some astonishing leaps of technology, such as the smartphone and social media. Moreover, these innovations have contributed to an even quieter evolution taking place: the growth of the types and amounts of data.
Within the health environment, data are everywhere: clinical, financial, patient-generated and more. As organizations implement electronic health records, as new care delivery mechanisms such as accountable care organizations proliferate and as increasing demands for accountability, reliability and security must be met, health care organizations are awash in data.
That's why now is the time for health care organizations to start implementing programs of information governance.  
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Going Digital with Patients: Managing Potential Liability Risks of Patient-Generated Electronic Health Information

Abstract

Summary: Patients are increasingly using new electronic tools such as personal health records and mobile applications to track details about their health, and sharing those details with their physicians. However, some physicians are reluctant to receive digital data from patients due to professional liability concerns. In Project HealthDesign, a research program funded by Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, clinical care teams tested the incorporation of patient-generated, digital information into clinical care. The research teams documented the professional liability concerns voiced by physicians and other clinicians during the study and the steps they took to manage them. The approach they took to managing these concerns could be helpful to providers seeking to engage patients in their care using technology.
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Enjoy!
David.

Friday, February 14, 2014

This Is Looking Very Ominous For Health Expenditure Over The Next Few Years. A Bit Of A Worry.

This popped up on Sunday.

Health set for scalpel

  • February 08, 2014 10:00PM
FORMER drug squad cop Peter Dutton spent most of the election campaign in witness protection.
What passed for Coalition policy on health was a flim-flam affair packed with previously announced policies.
Tony Abbott promised to "maintain existing levels of health funding, but try to ­ensure some of that money is redirected from bureaucracies to frontline services." That is code for cuts by another name - "savings".
Now Health Minister, Dutton's modus operandi was to starve the health debate of oxygen, allowing Tony Abbott to focus on boats, the carbon tax and Labor's soap opera.
As a political strategy it proved effective. But what many in the health sector are wondering now is: What does Dutton actually plan to do?
The answer, as the Commission of Audit finalises a report proposing tough savings in the health portfolio, is about to come more sharply into view.
It should prove interesting because Dutton, an economic conservative, is far more interested in marking out his credentials as an economic manager in the portfolio than playing Santa Claus.
The Queensland Right-winger is already a permanent member of the budget razor gang - cabinet's expenditure review committee - which gives another hint about his ­future ambitions.
Over summer, Dutton let speculation that a $5 fee could be levied on bulk-billed GP ­visits run and run.
While co-payments are clearly in the Commission of Audit's sights, it's not clear the government will proceed with a plan that leaves it open to ­serious politician pain and a "GP tax" campaign. Particularly when it would raise only a modest $750 million over the forward estimates.
Put that in the context of a $64 billion-a-year federal health budget. Include other spending, including by the states and private sources, and spending on health doubles.
Lots more here:
This is a very interesting summary of Minister Dutton’s attitudes and - given he is a dry and a mate of Mr Hockey’s - it would bode pretty badly for the PCEHR and Medicare Locals.
Other articles on the financial topic last week include:

Quest for more cost-effective Medicare

The economy
Alan Mitchell
Medicare is 30 years old this month and an obvious target for the Abbott government and its Commission of Audit as they search for savings to return the budget to a sustainable surplus.
But the savings should be a consequence of legitimate reform.
An out-of-pocket charge for currently bulk-billed general practitioner consultations should not be out of the question; it was seriously considered by the Hawke government and it could be easily accompanied by measures to assist cash-constrained families.
But if the government is serious about getting the budget back to surplus in the years ahead and strengthening Medicare for the challenges of population ageing, it should do much more than put a small charge on GP visits.
The most important change under way in healthcare is Kevin Rudd’s reform of public hospital funding.
This centres on the introduction of US-style case-mix funding, which was used to great effect by the Kennett government in Victoria.
Lots more and some ideas here:
Also we had this.

Grim diagnosis for state

By  JODIE STEPHENS
Feb. 3, 2014, 1 a.m.
AUSTRALIA'S health expenditure grew at an average 4.9 per cent a year between 2002-03 and 2011-12, according to a Productivity Commission report released last week. Health Minister Peter Dutton said the figures showed why the federal government needed to cut waste for a sustainable health system. JODIE STEPHENS speaks to Tasmanian health figures about why health costs are rising, and what needs to be done.
And the health funding analyst says Tasmanians are particularly vulnerable.
Mr Goddard said the Tasmanian population was older, sicker and poorer than others, making it more dependant on the public health system.
"That's why this is serious," he said.
"If we don't get a lot better as a nation, a lot of people are going to die unavoidably and a disproportionate number of those people will be Tasmanians."
The cost of health is back in the public spotlight after the federal government approved a 6.2 per cent rise in health insurance premiums, and the Commission of Audit received a submission suggesting a $6 patient co- payment on GP visits.
In a report released in November, the Productivity Commission also recommended raising taxes and lifting the pension age to cover increasing health and aged care costs, caused by an ageing population.
But Mr Goddard said an ageing population had little to do with increasing health costs.
"The real drivers have been the cost of drugs, the cost of technology and the constant advent of new and expensive techniques," Mr Goddard said.
Tasmanian Health Organisation North chief executive John Kirwan said rising demand was the key issue at Launceston General Hospital.
Emergency presentations at the LGH increased by 21.6 per cent in the five years to 2013, while raw separations (episodes of admitted patient care) rose 14.7 per cent from 2010 to 2013.
"What we're seeing is just more numbers, higher acuity, and interesting challenges that come from bariatric patients and others," Mr Kirwan said.
More here:
Really does make one feel sad for the Tasmanian Health Budget in the longer term.

Coming months crucial to govt's legacy

  • Peter van Onselen
  • The Sunday Telegraph
  • February 01, 2014 10:00PM
The divisions within the Coalition's federal cabinet are well worth watching in the coming months and years.
Who wins the battle over the ideological direction of the government when it comes to subsidising businesses will be a key determinant of whether or not this government is regarded as a good one when the history books are eventually written.
The popularity chasing path of subsidising industries to allegedly "save jobs" has support from quarters such as industry minister Ian Macfarlane and agriculture minister Barnaby Joyce.
Let's put them in the red corner.
In the blue corner we have treasurer Joe Hockey, receiving strong support from health minister Peter Dutton. They are trying to hold the line on traditional liberal economic values.
Most of the cabinet are on Hockey and Dutton's side, but support is fragile for a number of reasons.
First, because in Liberal Party cabinets the power ultimately resides with the Prime Minister more than anyone else, and it is far from clear that Tony Abbott supports Hockey and Dutton's corner.
"Who wins the battle over the ideological direction of the government when it comes to subsidising businesses will be a key determinant of whether or not this government is regarded as a good one when the history books are eventually written."
Secondly, unpopularity is a real risk when Liberals choose to support economic rationalist decision making. That's why the government capitulated by offering Cadbury millions of dollars in assistance, and Hockey buckled and blocked the GrainCorp takeover by the American company ADM.
More here - including more comments on Ministers Dutton and Hockey from a different source.
Seems to me the likelihood of some big changes in Health is really on the cards.
David.

Thursday, February 13, 2014

This Is Actually Pretty Big News For E-Health Globally Where Australia Has Shown Considerable Leadership of A Very Important Global Project In Interoperability.

This appeared last week and marks a really big milestone:

FHIR DSTU is published

Posted on February 3, 2014 by Grahame Grieve
We have now published the DSTU version (draft standard for trial use – effectively a beta) of FHIR at http://hl7.org/fhir.
Note that this is now stable and suitable for production implementations, and that development moves to http://hl7.org/fhir-develop, though I think we’ll all be taking a rest before starting work again.
Please note that we are serious about the draft standard for trial use. Implementers should read this section before depending on the specification: http://hl7.org/implement/standards/fhir/dstu.html.
Getting to this point has been a huge team effort, and so many people have contributed. There’s a formal credits page here: http://hl7.org/implement/standards/fhir/credits.html, though this doesn’t cover many people who contributed in a less formal – but not less real – fashion. I also wrote a brief foreword as a separate post.
The post is here:

FHIR Foreword

Posted on February 3, 2014 by Grahame Grieve
FHIR is not a book, and it was not written by a single author; it’s a draft standard, and it was produced by a whole team of people. The formal credits page lists a lot of people, and even that’s being selective. Even though so many people have contributed, I thought I’d post my own personal foreword here:
2½ years ago, I drafted a demonstration, a concept of something that we could do – a better approach to health interoperability. I had no idea that it would turn into a project and a specification that involved this much work, that showed so much promise, and most of all, that there would be so many people to thank.
Ewout Kramer came back to HL7 specifically for the FHIR project, and I’ve been ever so grateful to depend on Ewout for being able to see both the implementer and specification author perspective, and to see across the whole specification. Lloyd Mckenzie imagined the future first, and has been a steady hand editorially, and also has guided FHIR through the HL7 community and processes. Josh Mandel joined the team late, but brought a hard-nosed focus to serving implementation that I greatly appreciated.
Chuck Jaffe was the one who ensured that FHIR came to HL7 in the first place, and that the key, important and difficult stipulation – that FHIR be free – was accepted by the HL7 leadership and community. Without Chuck and the rest of the HL7 leadership (particularly John Quinn), the conditions that let FHIR grow would never have existed in the first place. Thanks.
 Lots more of the team mentioned here:
This summary from HL7 explains what FHIR is.

1.7 Introducing HL7 FHIR

FHIR® – Fast Health Interoperable Resources (hl7.org/fhir) – is a next generation standards framework created by HL7. FHIR combines the best features of HL7’s Version 2, Version 3 and CDA® product lines while leveraging the latest web standards and applying a tight focus on implementability.
FHIR solutions are built from a set of modular components called “Resources”. These resources can easily be assembled into working systems that solve real world clinical and administrative problems at a fraction of the price of existing alternatives. FHIR is suitable for use in a wide variety of contexts – mobile phone apps, cloud communications, EHR-based data sharing, server communication in large institutional healthcare providers, and much more.

1.7.1 Why FHIR is better

FHIR offers many improvements over existing standards:
  • A strong focus on implementation – fast and easy to implement (multiple developers have had simple interfaces working in a single day)
  • Multiple implementation libraries, many examples available to kick-start development
  • Specification is free for use with no restrictions
  • Interoperability out-of-the-box– base resources can be used as is, but can also be adapted for local requirements
  • Evolutionary development path from HL7 Version 2 and CDA – standards can co-exist and leverage each other
  • Strong foundation in Web standards– XML, JSON, HTTP, Atom, OAuth, etc.
  • Support for RESTful architectures and also seamless exchange of information using messages or documents
  • Concise and easily understood specifications
  • A Human-readable wire format for ease of use by developers
  • Solid ontology-based analysis with a rigorous formal mapping for correctness
Full page here:
Be assured there is going to be a lot more come on this topic over the coming over the next few years.
Congratulations to all involved (especially Grahame and all the Australians) and isn’t it good to see what can be achieved without the dead hand of Government and such-like pushing their own agendas - which in Australia at least are looking a touch off the pace right now.
As I have been saying for a while the less complex the better and this is a major step in that direction.
David.