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, May 17, 2014

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links - 17th May, 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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Do patients with chronic diseases want telehealth solutions?

May 9, 2014 | By Alok Saboo
By Mark Terry
Several recent studies addressed the link between mobile health and individuals with chronic conditions, such as asthma, arthritis, cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), depression, diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, clinically diagnosed obesity, osteoporosis and stroke.
As these conditions represent long-term care challenges, telehealth and its convenience would seem to make it a desirable approach. But is it?
Researchers in the UK recently published a study in the Journal of Medical Internet Research that surveyed 1,478 patients with either depression or cardiovascular disease. The surveys, which were mailed to individuals in 34 medical practices from two different regions of England, looked at sociodemographics, health needs, difficulties accessing healthcare, technology-related factors such as availability and confidence using technology, and the perceived benefits and drawbacks of telehealth. It also evaluted the patients' satisfaction with previous uses of telehealth.
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FTC Concerned with Health Data Sharing Apps

Greg Slabodkin
MAY 8, 2014 8:14am ET
Some of the most popular mobile health and fitness apps are sharing consumer data with third-party companies and putting potentially sensitive information at risk, according to the Federal Trade Commission. The FTC tested 12 apps and found that this kind of information was sent to 76 third-party companies.
"Consumers reveal significant amounts of information about themselves when they use health and fitness apps. This includes everything from basic information about the devices and smartphones they are using to the precise metrics and characteristics of their bodies," said Jared Ho, an attorney in the FTC's Mobile Technology Unit, during a May 7 FTC seminar on the privacy ramifications of consumer generated and controlled health data. 
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Tech helps hospital contain MERS virus

May 9, 2014 | By Susan D. Hall
An Indiana hospital relied on best practices and technology to avoid spreading the deadly MERS virus while treating the first reported case in the United States.
When a man who had traveled to Saudi Arabia arrived at the 427-bed Community Hospital in Munster, Indiana with symptoms of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS)--severe fever, cough and shortness of breath--three technologies helped the hospital identify everyone who came in contact with him, reports InformationWeek.
  • Badges that have real-time location technology (RTLS) identified 50 staff, patients and visitors who had contact with the MERS patient.
  • Staff logged in every patient interaction, including housekeeping, into the hospital's EHR system.
  • The hospital also checked its video surveillance system to make sure it didn't overlook anyone.
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Mind-Controlled Robotic Arm Wins FDA Nod

Published: May 9, 2014
By John Gever, Deputy Managing Editor, MedPage Today
SILVER SPRING, Md. -- The FDA Friday approved marketing of the first powered prosthetic arm that the user can control with his or her thoughts.
Made by New Hampshire-based DEKA Integrated Solutions, the device detects and translates electromyographic activity in nearby muscles -- which the user can consciously control -- into signals that direct specific movements and actions in the prosthetic arm.
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HR Swaps Coming For Many Healthcare Organizations

5/8/2014 12:50 PM
Healthcare organizations look to replace early electronic health records packages with new systems that perform better, integrate across departments, and tap cloud computing.
The honeymoon period didn't last long for some healthcare providers and their electronic health records (EHRs). As providers become more sophisticated and informed, and IT departments grow more comfortable recommending alternatives to long-established vendors, demand for replacement electronic health record (EHR) systems continues to expand.
By 2016, almost 50% of large hospitals will replace their current EHR, health IT research firm KLAS reported. In the first quarter of this year, 40% of buyers said they want to swap out their EHRs, according to a survey by Software Advice. Twelve months prior, 30% sought alternate EHRs, the review and consulting site found. Most providers wanted better performance and integration, the study showed.
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Where Does It Hurt? Log On. The Doctor Is In

Telemedicine Sector Attracts Funding, But Some Physician Groups Worry About Quality of Care

By
Melinda Beck
Updated May 8, 2014 8:20 p.m. ET
Telemedicine services are increasingly embraced by Americans as a convenient alternative to a trip to the doctor's office. WSJ's Melinda Beck examines several services and the concerns that exist among medical professionals. Photo: American Well
Can downloading an app, and describing your symptoms to a doctor you'll never meet, take the place of an office visit? Can sending a "selfie" of your sore throat help diagnose strep?
Those are some of the issues state and federal regulators—and the medical profession itself—are wrestling with as telemedicine spreads rapidly.
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EHRs help California hospitals reduce medical errors

May 6, 2014 | By Marla Durben Hirsch
An electronic health record is one of the primary tools that can decrease the number of medical errors in hospitals, according to a new report published by the office of U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-California, pictured).
The staff report surveyed 283 California hospitals to determine what they were doing to reduce common medical errors, such as surgical site infections and pressure ulcers, receiving responses from more than half (53 percent). While hospitals are taking many approaches to reduce medical errors--such as minimizing blood transfusion--EHRs figured prominently in the hospitals' efforts to reduce errors.
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Physicians rethinking the progress note

Posted on May 08, 2014
By Neil Versel, Contributing Writer
The "SOAP" -- subjective, objective, assessment, plan -- format has been in common use for decades as a way of organizing physician progress notes in medical records, but it was created during a different era, when most everything was written on paper. In the age of electronic health records, some are rethinking the order of presenting information, electing to go with the latter two elements first in what's being called an "APSO note."
An early adopter of the APSO format, C.T. Lin, MD, CMIO of Aurora, Colo.-based University of Colorado Health, explains that physicians often flip right to the assessment page of paper charts to see what previous visits or referring doctors may have found. By this reasoning, it makes more sense to put the assessment and plan first in an electronic note, according to Lin.
Lin was lead author of a paper published in JAMA Internal Medicine in January 2013 that found that SOAP "translates poorly from paper medical charts to the EHR" because it takes a lot of clicking and scrolling to find the assessment and plan. The article detailed a 2010 study at 13 University of Colorado Health ambulatory clinics that produced mostly positive results from an APSO trial.
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Mobile app puts 'doctor in your pocket'

6 May 2014   Sam Sachdeva
A mobile app lets users see their GP through video consultations and order prescriptions on their smartphone or tablet.
Speaking at Wired Health, part of EHI’s Digital Health Festival, Ali Parsa, the creator of the ‘Babylon’ app, said he wants to provide people with a “doctor in your pocket”, and give patients access to GPs and specialist nurses six days a week.
Parsa, the former chief executive of hospital group Circle, said the inspiration for the app comes from the difficulty that most people have in accessing healthcare, compared to how easy it is to obtain music and other products using mobile phones.
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PAC doubts e-referrals success

7 May 2014   Lis Evenstad
The PAC doubts NHS England's ability to make the e-referrals service a success
The Commons’ public accounts committee is “sceptical” about NHS England’s ability to fully utilise the e-referrals service.
In a report on 'NHS waiting times for elective care in England', the  PAC  says that following the introduction of Choose and Book, which has had a poor uptake among GPs and secondary care providers, it is doubtful of the success of the new e-referrals service.
It says that the Choose and Book service, which was intended as one of a number of new, digital services to make the NHS more convenient, “has been a missed opportunity to improve patient care and data quality”.
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Ex-HHS head Donna Shalala: Data sharing with payers requires trust

May 8, 2014 | By Alok Saboo
By Mark Terry
One of the underpinnings of healthcare reform is the idea that by releasing and analyzing healthcare data--population data, test volume, readmission rates, etc.--changes can be made that will lead to lower costs, greater efficiency and higher quality patient care. After all, as most lean and quality improvement methods preach, "If you can't measure it, you can't evaluate it."
At a recent eMerge Americas digital business conference held in Miami Beach, Donna Shalala, former Clinton Administration secretary for the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, spoke out on why healthcare providers are reluctant to share data with payers, InformationWeek reported. 
"We know if we turn over every piece of data to you, you do your analysis--and we get paid less," Shalala, who currently serves as president of the University of Miami, said, according to InformationWeek.
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Mobile health monitoring to be $8B market in 2019

By: Jonah Comstock | May 7, 2014
The market for mobile health monitoring and diagnostics was worth $650 million in 2012, according to a new report from Transparency Market Research. The firm projects that the market will grow at a compound annual growth rate of 43.3 percent from 2013 to 2019. That will put the market at $8 billion in 2019.
Transparency defines the mobile health monitoring and diagnostic space as smartphone-connected cardiac monitors, glucose monitors, blood pressure monitors, pulse oximeters, multi-parameter monitors and sleep apnea monitors. They reported that cardiac monitors have held the majority of the market share so far, followed by glucose monitors and blood pressure monitors.
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Karen DeSalvo: Health IT needs to ‘get real for people’

By KYLE CHENEY | 5/6/14 9:23 AM EDT Updated: 5/6/14 3:14 PM EDT
It took the disaster of Hurricane Katrina to get Louisiana’s doctors to open their minds to new medical technologies, and if health IT is going to win support nationwide, it’ll have to “get real for people,” the Obama administration’s top health IT official argued Tuesday.
“It has to become tangible and real for the person, the family member, the doctor, the nurse,” said Karen DeSalvo, the national coordinator for health information technology, who was a physician in New Orleans when Katrina hit in 2005 and later became the city’s health commissioner. But the technologies also have “to demonstrate benefit,” she added.
Speaking at a POLITICO breakfast panel on connected health, DeSalvo said that without a national embrace of electronic health records and related systems and devices, the United States misses the chance to vastly improve care and prevent disasters like a hurricane from disrupting care.
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When EHR design is a 'what not to do'

Posted on May 07, 2014
By Mike Miliard, Managing Editor
Among the healthcare developers workshopping better approaches to technology design at HxRefactored in Brooklyn next week will be Stephen Buck, who'll offer some "lessons learned" from looking closely at leading EHRs – specifically, how not to design a user interface.
HxRefactored, which represents a coming-together of Health 2.0’s Health:Refactored and Mad*Pow’s Healthcare Experience Design conferences, will take place May 13-14 at the New York Marriott at the Brooklyn Bridge. There, 500 or so designers and developers will gather to explore new and innovative ways to improve healthcare experience for patients and physicians alike.
Buck leads the mobile health product management team for Danbury, Conn.-based health IT firm IMS Health. This past December, IMS launched a SaaS-based app prescribing platform called AppScript, which corrals more than 40,000 downloadable iOS and Android apps, categorizing them and evaluating them -- based on functionality, peer and patient reviews, certifications and more -- to help physicians know which ones would do best for their patients.
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Healthcare data analytics landscape changing rapidly

May 7, 2014 | By Susan D. Hall
Nearly half of healthcare organizations responding to a new survey say they are experiencing a positive return on investment in data analytics and reporting technology.
The survey, by TCS Healthcare Technologies in conjunction with the Case Management Society of America and the American Board of Quality Assurance and Utilization Review Physicians, found the landscape changing quickly from similar measures taken in 2008 and 2010.
Forty-six percent reported positive ROI, compared with 14 percent who reported a negative return, according to an announcement.
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Dermatologist’s virtual visit startup secures $2.9M to expand into more states this year

May 6, 2014 4:39 pm by Deanna Pogorelc | 0 Comments
A Pennsylvania dermatologist has rounded up some new capital to grow his mobile telehealth startup.
Iagnosis, co-founded and led by Dr. Mark Seraly, has closed $2.85 million in angel funding. It’s part of a larger $7.25 million Series A round that included conversion of all existing convertible debt, Iagnosis said in a statement.
The Pittsburgh-based company is working on rolling out its DermatologistOnCall service across the country and will use the capital to continue doing so.
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Medication Error Rates Falls 58% With Electronic Reconciliation Tool

Written by Akanksha Jayanthi (Twitter | Google+)  | May 06, 2014
Implementing an electronic tool for medical reconciliation at hospital admission reduced the error rate from 5.9 errors per 1,000 admissions to 2.5 errors per 1,000 admissions, a decrease of 58 percent, according to an abstract of a study presented at the 2014 Pediatric Academic Societies Annual Meeting.
Researchers at Boston Children's Hospital introduced the tool into the electronic health record from November 2011 to June 2012. The tool presents a split-screen display, with pre-admission medications appearing on the left side of the screen and a modifiable list of post-admission medication orders on the right side of the screen.
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Hospitals making headway in HIE

By Diana Manos, Senior Editor
Despite the often-heard doom and gloom about interoperability, the reality of hospitals engaging in health information exchange appears to be brighter. 
HIE among U.S. non-federal acute care hospitals has been trending upward since 2008, in fact, and it took some major leaps forward in 2013. 
More than six in ten hospitals (62 percent) electronically exchanged health information with providers outside of their system during 2013, according to a new Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology data brief based on a  survey conducted by the American Hospital Association. What's more, the practice of HIE increased 51 percent from from 2008 to 2013. 
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Health IT not a cure-all for improving patient engagement

May 6, 2014 | By Dan Bowman
By Mark Terry
As the expression goes, you can lead a horse to water, but you can't make it drink. To that end, although you can get patients to sample an eHealth solution, getting them to continue its use and to use it in a meaningful way is a more significant challenge, according to one practitioner.
Amy Bucher, a psychologist who regularly contributes to Wired's InnovationInsights blog, recently wrote about the psychological principles that apply to getting patients to utilize mobile health apps. They include:
  • Autonomy or free choice
  • Competence, or mastery and growth
  • Relatedness, or social connection
Bucher pointed out, however, that despite these all being embedded in most eHealth applications, users often don't engage. Too much variety and lack of professional guidance likely were among two of the more likely reasons, she said.
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Big data may require more privacy protections

May 6, 2014 | By Susan D. Hall
Existing efforts to ensure the privacy of patient health information may be inadequate in the era of big data, according to a newly published White House report.
The 85-page report "Big Data: Seizing Opportunities, Preserving Values" is the result of a 90-day review of big data and privacy ordered by President Obama in January. It includes public input, as well as that from academic researchers, privacy advocates, regulators, the technology industry and others, a fact sheet explains.
It calls predictive medicine the ultimate application of big data in health, noting its potential to prevent disease or tackle it early based on a person's health status and genetic information. The report also says that big data has the potential to affect future generations and to extrapolate risk to others, singly or as groups.
"Using big data to improve health requires advanced analytical models to ingest multiple kinds of lifestyle, genomic, medical, and financial data," the report says. "The complexity of complying with numerous laws when data is combined from various sources raises the potential need to carve out special data-use authorities for the healthcare industry if it is to realize the potential health gains and cost reductions that could come from big data analytics."
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Many Communities Do Not Have Broadband Capabilities to Support Telemedicine, Survey Finds

Written by Ayla Ellison (Twitter | Google+)  | May 05, 2014
Many economic development professionals and consultants are not satisfied with their communities' broadband capabilities and believe their current internet speeds could not support video-based telemedicine, according to a recent study based on the results of a U.S. survey from the International Economic Development Council.
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ONC reports on hospital EHR adoption in 2013

May 5, 2014
Fifty-nine percent of non-federal acute-care hospitals had at least a basic electronic health record system in 2013, up from 44% in 2012, according to a report released today by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology.
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Retire ICD-9 Before it Turns 40

Scott Mace, for HealthLeaders Media , May 6, 2014

ICD-9, envisioned in 1975 and oblivious to all that has occurred in the ensuing 39 years of medicine, needs to go. Everyone in healthcare knows it.

This weekend, in a park in Palo Alto, California, TCP/IP will have its 40th birthday party. The communications protocol that undergirds the Internet is just a few years younger than ICD-9, the ninth revision of the International Classification of Diseases.
ICD-9, envisioned in 1975 and oblivious to all that has occurred in the ensuing 39 years of medicine, needs to go. Everyone in healthcare knows it. Last week, CMS once again tried to put a stake in the ground, announcing its intent to publish a rule that implements ICD-10 for billing codes on October 1, 2015.
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Disaster recovery demands smart planning

Posted on May 05, 2014
By Rick Cook, Contributing Writer
Disaster recovery traditionally hasn't had a very high priority in healthcare IT. Everyone knew it was important, but it came far down the list of spending priorities. That's changed significantly in the past five years.
One of the things that has highlighted disaster recovery's importance is the growing use of electronic health records and the concomitant growth of networking and interconnection. If a facility loses access to its computers it loses access to EHRs, treatment plans and other vital information that directly affects patient care.
Part of the challenge is the sheer size of electronic health records. These aren't just electronic versions of scanned paper documents, but photographs, X-rays, videos and all sorts of associated data. The volume for even a small medical practice is measured in gigabytes, and much of that has to be immediately available for patient care.
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Patients want online access to records

Posted on May 05, 2014
By Mike Miliard, Managing Editor
More than half of people with chronic conditions say the ability to get their electronic medical records online outweighs the potential privacy risks, according to a new survey by Accenture.
Two-thirds, meanwhile, believe patients should have the right to access all of their healthcare information.
The results of the poll suggest a public increasingly frustrated by lack of sovereignty over their own health data.
The vast majority people surveyed by Accenture – 87 percent – say they want to control their health data. But 55 percent report they don't have very much or any control over their medical information.
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U.S. home health tech market to hit $5.8 billion by 2018

May 5, 2014 | By Alok Saboo
By Mark Terry
Driven by federal mandates and financial stimulus built into the HITECH Act, the U.S. home health technology market will double to reach $5.8 billion by 2018, according to a new report published by IHS.
Both devices and services are starting to converge giving consumers more comprehensive solutions, according to report author Roeen Roashan, an IHS analyst for consumer medical devices and digital health. 
"As they become more comprehensive, the gap between clinical care and home health becomes more narrow, which is necessary to provide patient centered care," Roashan recently told Forbes.
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Twitter Has 3 Times More Adverse Drug Event Data Than FDA, Study Finds

Written by Ayla Ellison (Twitter | Google+)  | May 02, 2014
A new study has found Twitter contains more than three times as many reports of adverse reactions for 23 commonly used medications than the Food and Drug Administration.
For the study, researchers analyzed 61,000 tweets they found scanning Twitter using keywords related to the commonly used prescription drugs.
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Are the Prescriptive Measures, Timeline Making Meaningful Use Less Meaningful?

by Kate Ackerman, iHealthBeat Editor in Chief Monday, May 5, 2014
WASHINGTON -- Some hospital executives are questioning whether health care organizations are really meeting the spirit and intent of the HITECH Act as they race to check off the boxes necessary to comply with Stage 2 of the meaningful use incentive program. 
Last week, the College of Healthcare Information Management Executives hosted a Capitol Hill Public Policy Forum where hospital CIOs and information management executives reflected on the health IT progress their organizations have made since the passage of HITECH Act more than five years ago, as well as the challenges they face going forward.
Many of the executives said the meaningful use incentive program aligns with and complements their own organization's health IT strategy. However, they said that the program's prescriptive nature and the rigorous timeline has led to challenges that could be detracting from its real goals.
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Enjoy!
David.

Friday, May 16, 2014

This Is A Very Interesting Trend That Needs To Be Closely Watched. Is This A Possible Route For Australia?

This appeared a few days ago.

DirectTrust Reaches 200,000 Individual Accounts, Begins Testing

Greg Goth
MAY 2, 2014 1:04pm ET
A non-profit trade alliance that advances secure health information exchange via the Direct Protocol has expanded its trusted, national network to include 26 Direct exchange health information service providers. Washington, D.C.-based DirectTrust has also begun extensive HISP-to-HISP interoperability testing to ensure continued reliability of the network.
 The 26 HISPs now provide Direct exchange services to more than 5,000 healthcare organization--including medical practices, clinics, hospitals, pharmacies and laboratories-- with nearly 200,000 individual Direct accounts and addresses nationwide.
 “This network’s growth--more than 20-fold in nine months--has exceeded everyone’s wildest expectations,” said DirectTrust President and CEO David C. Kibbe, M.D. “Meaningful use is only meaningful to the extent that health data and information can follow the patient from one clinical setting to another--securely.
The full article is found here:
Here is a summary from the web page:

Welcome to DirectTrust  

The DirectTrust network now serves over 4,000 health care organizations and over 200,000 individual Direct users who are exchanging tens of thousands of Direct messages and attachments nationwide each month.  With the new federal interoperability requirements for EHRs to be Direct enabled, the network will expand and these numbers exponentially increase during 2014.  Whether you are a health care professional, medical practice, hospital, pharmacy, clinical lab, or individual patient/consumer, there are DirectTrust members ready to onboard you with Direct exchange services right now.  As of mid-April, 2014, 13 EHNAC-DirectTrust accredited HISPs, and an additional 13 HISPs in EHNAC-DirectTrust accreditation candidate status, are participants in the DirectTrust anchor bundle, offering their subscribers a broad network of secure Direct connectivity both locally and nationally, via EHRs,HIEs, and web portals.  To find a DirectTrust network service provider ready to serve your community, see this page, and feel free to contact us at admin@DirectTrust.org with your questions and comments.  Expect Direct!
DirectTrust is an independent non-profit trade association created by and for participants in the Direct community, our common goal being to establish and maintain a national Security and Trust Framework in support of Direct exchange. We define the Trust Framework as a set of technical, legal, and business standards, expressed as policies and best practices recommendations, which members of the trust community agree to follow, uphold, and enforce. Based on this Trust Framework, DirectTrust has partnered with EHNAC to offer an Accreditation Program for HISPs and other trusted agents involved in Direct exchange, and has launched a Trust Anchor Bundle Distribution Service for accredited entities' use.  
Members of DirectTrust now include over 120 representatives from Health Internet Service Providers (HISPs), Health Information Exchanges (HIEs), Certificate Authorities (CAs), consultants, state agencies, and EHR vendors, as well as health care providers and provider organizations who are their purchasers and subscribers. We support both provider-to-provider Direct exchange as well as patient-to-provider Direct exchange.
In March, 2013, DirectTrust was awarded an ONC Cooperative Agreement to further our work in accreditation, trust anchor distribution services, and ongoing governance of the DirectTrust community. The Cooperative Agreement was renewed for a second year by ONC on March 25, 2014.  A part of the Exemplar Health Information Exchange Governance Program, the purpose of the grant award is to "increase interoperability, decrease cost and complexity, and facilitate trust among participants using Direct for health information exchange of personal health information for health care improvements"
DirectTrust operates in a manner consistent with the governance rules for the Direct Project and the NwHIN promulgated by HHS, ONC, and the mandates of the HITECH Act. DirectTrust is competitively neutral, and we welcome new participants.
The full web-site is here.
This is certainly a trend to watch closely! It might turn out to be very important indeed!
David.

Thursday, May 15, 2014

One Really Has To Wonder Why The UK NHS Is Having Trouble Showing Return On Health IT Investments.

This appeared a little while ago.

RoI evidence needed for tech strategy

2 April 2014   Lis Evenstad
NHS England’s IT strategy will focus on telehealth, customer service and integrated digital care records, Beverley Bryant has said.
The technology strategy was due to be published in December last year, but was then delayed until March and has now been pushed back until June this year.
Speaking at a Westminster Forum yesterday, the director of strategic systems and technology at NHS England said the reasons for the delay included a lack of evidence about the return on investment that technology could deliver.
Another reason is that NHS England needs to do more work with its stakeholders. “We are not going to develop a tech strategy for just the NHS,” Bryant said.
“If our mantra is integration, our mantra is interoperability; so we need it to speak to all health and care. [That means we need a] bit longer to converse and draw in partners from across the wider care system.”
“We also need some evidence. I need an evidence base saying ‘if you spend money in an organisation this is what you can expect in return on investment’. Creating that is going to be key in convincing Treasury and future government that this is not only good for patient experience and safety but for efficiency and finance.”
Lots more here:
On the assumption the smarties in the UK NHS know what they are doing in this regard I really look forward to the new strategy to see what they say and to see just how certain the ROI is with the various applications they are planning.
As it stands I find this a very interesting statement!
David.

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 14th May, 2014.

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

All the news this week would seem to be all about the Budget. By the time you read this a lot more newsprint will have been turned into fish wrappers and we will be able to decide what we will do next.
Other than that it is interesting to see how many new apps are coming out these days and how little we are hearing about the e-Health, NEHTA and the PCEHR.
Maybe the Budget will change this - or not!
Note - Coverage of the Budget Outcomes will come next week when the dust settles.
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Govt blocks PCEHR review release

news The Federal Department of Health has moved to block the public release of a report reviewing the troubled Personally Controlled Electronic Health Records project, stating that there are not sufficient public interest reasons for the report to be released, despite the fact that Health Minister Peter Dutton has stated the document contains “a comprehensive plan for the future of electronic health records in Australia”.
The PCEHR project was initially funded in the 2010 Federal Budget to the tune of $466.7 million after years of health industry and technology experts calling for development and national leadership in e-health and health identifier technology to better tie together patients’ records and achieve clinical outcomes. The project is overseen by the Department of Health in coalition with the National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA).
However, in July last year the Government revealed it had failed to meet it initial 500,000 target for adoption of the system, with only close to 400,000 Australians using the system at that point.
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Ownership of patient records, just one challenge in e-health

Date May 7, 2014 - 12:17PM

Cynthia Karena

From wireless to wearables, Australia’s health care system is on the cusp of a digital technology revolution, but issues of privacy, ownership of patient records and cyber security need to be ironed out first.
That's the view of Kenneth Morgan, special advisor to the vice chancellor of Flinders University on cyber security and resilience, who discussed the future of e-health at CeBIT’s eHealth conference in Sydney this week.
"People will have more control over their health. This is the digital health revolution," he said.
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Software saves GPs from guideline overload

7 May, 2014 Michael Woodhead
A decision support tool embedded in practice software can help GPs who are overwhelmed by guidelines on how best to manage cardiovascular risk in their patients, Australian research has shown.
GPs increased their screening and treatment of cardiovascular risk factors when they had decision support embedded into Medical Director or Best Practice software, a study carried out in 60 GP practices found.
In a review of management of more than 10,000 patients at high risk of cardiovascular disease, practices using the decision support tool increased screening for risk factors such as smoking, lipids and BP by 10% (63% vs 53% in a usual care group).
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Australians with Hearing Loss to Have Faster, Easier Access to Hearing Services

Page last updated: 05 May 2014
PDF printable version of Australians with Hearing Loss to Have Faster, Easier Access to Hearing Services - PDF 260 KB

5 May 2014

A new website will help thousands of people with hearing loss receive the support they need sooner by making it easier to find information and apply for services, the Assistant Minister for Health Fiona Nash said.

The website gives eligible Australians better access to services available through the Australian Government Hearing Services Program. One in six Australians experience hearing loss.

“With just a few clicks, people can check their eligibility and apply for services online. It gives Australians better access to up-to-date information about hearing, what services are available and who provides them,” Minister Nash said.
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Streamline your Supply Chain

Australia’s health sector is embracing supply chain reform and making significant progress towards an interoperable system that delivers substantial quality and efficiency benefits for providers and consumers.

Streamline your Supply Chain

Underpinning this interoperable system are unique identification of trade items and locations, as well as the National Product Catalogue (NPC), and an eProcurement solution designed to streamline the electronic purchasing process. Download the brochure for more information.
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3D-printer hearts ‘in 10 years’

  • Chris Smyth
  • The Times
  • May 08, 2014 12:00AM
A human heart made with a 3D printer will be implanted in a patient within a decade, claim scientists who have made a “bio-assembly robot” to build the organ.
Children born with a hole in the heart will have the defect fixed by parts printed from their own cells in half that time, says a team that has already printed networks of blood vessels.
Stuart Williams, of the University of Louisville in Kentucky, believes the 3D printing technique that has been used to create noses and facial implants will lead to custom-made organs and could even remedy some “design flaws” in the human heart.
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Ausmed app to educate nurses on-the-go

Monday 12 May marks International Nurses Day (IND) and also the launch of an app that will allow Australia’s 350,000 nurses and midwives to top up their Continuing Professional Development (CPD) registration requirements online.
The app - Ausmed On-the-Go - is being launched by Melbourne-based nursing education and technology company Ausmed Education, which next Monday will begin streaming 168 hours of lectures via its new app.

Ausmed Founder and CEO Cynthea Wellings said the app was designed to help nurses access high quality professional education “anywhere and at any time”, regardless of their shifts and other commitments.
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Queensland technology ranks in disarray

Date May 8, 2014 - 6:27PM

Sylvia Pennington

Queensland's plans to overhaul the way it purchases and implements technology within government have been thrown into disarray, following the resignation of two top bureaucrats responsible for the state's IT reform agenda.
Handpicked to replace former executive director of ICT renewal Glenn Walker, who left suddenly in January after just nine months in the role, Jenny Beresford lasted four weeks before throwing in the towel this week.
Ms Beresford’s deputy, Tom O’Neill, who joined the department last November, after stints with UXC and several Queensland government agencies, has also resigned.
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Tuesday, December 17, 2013

How to fix the PCEHR and salvage eHealth
Fixing the PCeHR is entirely possible, all that is required is wherewithal to bite the proverbial bullet.
It can be done with 5 simple steps.
It can also be cash flow positive in the first year.
Step 1
Accept that the basic PCeHR concept is fundamentally flawed. It is flawed for all of the following reasons:
A) No average patient wakes up in the morning and goes "Gee, what I want today is a jolly good PCeHR".
Because of this fundamental reality there is no driver for "opt in" from the patient perspective, and, for better or worse, there never will be.
No amount of advertising will ever fix this because most patients will never really know what a medical record does, or why they need one. There is nothing wrong with that. They don't need to.
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Here comes Apple Health - excess cash to fund major new initiative

Apple’s shares have again broken the US$600 barrier, their highest in over 12 months. The company’s market capitalisation now exceeds $US 500 billion and a new hiring spree has signalled that Apple is moving into healthcare in a big way.
It is the wealthiest company the world has ever seen. It is spending up to US$30 billion on a share buyback scheme, which makes its existing shareholders even wealthier and concentrates that wealth in even fewer hands.
The company is awash with cash. It has more than it knows what to do with. But it is finding ways of spending it. And it’s odds on that a major health initiative is on the cards. Not just gimmicky wearable monitoring – a serious new Apple Health strategy is looming
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Museum app puts disease on your screen

BACK in the 1980s, a night at the museum wasn’t a schlock movie franchise but a reality for medical students boning up on diseased tissues.
Gary Velan spent hours at the University of NSW’s Museum of Human Disease. “Some people even slept in the museum because there was so much to learn,” says Dr Velan, now the head of UNSW’s pathology ­department.
Three decades on, medical students can sleep in their own beds, thanks to what may be a world first in mobile technology. In a digital exodus that took 20 years, the museum’s 2000-plus images have migrated — first on to a database, then a CD-ROM, then a website and now iPhones, iPads and iPods.
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Complexity or Cost of Interoperability a Barrier to EMM Deployment, 60% of Respondents Said

SYDNEY, Australia, May 7, 2014 –
InterSystems, a global leader in software for connected care, today announced the results of a recent survey of 30 Australian hospitals, finding that 100% expected electronic medication management (EMM) to lead to increased patient safety.  However, 60% cited complexity or cost of interoperability as a significant barrier to deployment.
InterSystems conducted the survey at the Third Annual Electronic Medication Management Conference in Sydney from 25-26 March 2014. Twenty-six public hospitals and four private hospitals participated in the survey, highlights of which include:
·         Among the 30 surveyed hospitals, all but one were deploying or planning to deploy EMM systems.
·         In addition to increasing patient safety, 79% expected EMM to improve productivity and efficiency.
·         Lack of funding was cited as a key barrier to EMM deployment by 60% of hospitals.
         EMM systems needed to interoperate with another 12 systems on average.
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  • May 7, 2014, 8:20 a.m. ET

MMRGlobal Names Health IT Insurance Executive Joseph Gonzalez and Leading Australian Physician and eHealth Innovator Dr. Joseph Grace to Advisory Boards

MMRGlobal Names Health IT Insurance Executive Joseph Gonzalez and Leading Australian Physician and eHealth Innovator Dr. Joseph Grace to Advisory Boards
LOS ANGELES, CA--(Marketwired - May 7, 2014) - MMRGlobal, Inc. (OTCQB: MMRF) ("MMR"), a leading provider of patented Personal Health Records (PHRs), MyEsafeDepositBox storage solutions, and MMRPro document management and imaging systems for healthcare professionals, today announced the appointments of Joseph Gonzalez to the MMR Board of Advisors and Dr. Joseph Gracé to the Company's Medical Board of Advisors. Mr. Gonzalez co-founded Secure EDI Health Group and has served as the primary consultant for initiatives with the nation's leading companies in the financial, healthcare, and clinical data verticals for over 15 years. He will assist the Company in forming strategic relationships with major Health Information Technology solution providers. Dr. Gracé will assist MMR with the Company's ongoing licensing and sales initiatives in Australia in advance of scheduled meetings with MMR executives and strategic partners later this summer.
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Phone app to detect mood changes in bipolar patients

9th May 2014
A SMARTPHONE app that monitors qualities of a person’s voice during phone conversations has shown promise for detecting early signs of mood changes in people with bipolar disorder.
Bringing together the expertise of mental health researchers, computer scientists, and sound engineers, the app could help people with bipolar disorder predict mood swings with enough time to receive help from their treating doctors. 
Participants in the pilot study all had a rapid-cycling form of type 1 bipolar disorder and a history of being prone to frequent depressive and manic episodes.
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Apnea app aims for dream run

THE backers of a planned ­e-health biotech float have targeted the $7 billion global market for the diagnosis of obstructive sleep apnea, the potentially fatal form of heavy snoring.
The proponents of Appian Medical claim that, rather than spending an uncomfortable night at a sleep clinic, sufferers can self-diagnose via a mobile-phone app that records and interprets the unwanted nocturnal noise.
Through his private company Appian, the American e-health entrepreneur Michael Thomas has licensed SnoreSounds, a mathematical formula developed by University of Queensland researcher Udantha Abeyratne.
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Heart device to send alert to doctor

  • May 04, 2014 9:00PM
  • Brigid O’Connell
  • Herald Sun
VICTORIANS with potentially fatal irregular heart rhythms will be the first in the country to access the world’s smallest cardiac monitor, which alerts their doctors if they need medical help.
The implantable device, a third the size of a AAA battery, will continuously monitor the patient’s heartbeats for up to three years and wirelessly download the data on to their doctor’s computer.
St Vincent’s Private Hospital electrophysiologist Dr Uwais Mohamed will today implant the device in a Victorian patient when it is launched as part of the World Congress of Cardiology in Melbourne.
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Summary of #FHIR progress at the HL7 WGM in Phoenix

Posted on May 10, 2014 by Grahame Grieve
Well, another HL7 Working Group Meeting (WGM) has come to an end. It was a big week for FHIR, so here’s a summary of the more significant outcomes:
  • The “FHIR” track was the single biggest track (at least, that’s what was reported). Though I did wonder whether that simply reflects that we’re better at keep track – next meeting the way that works will change slightly. But certainly this meeting had the broadest participation in the development of FHIR yet
  • This reflects that solid interest through out HL7 in leveraging the FHIR specification
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Three good ideas before breakfast

The Digital Lifesaving Project is a new collaboration between data scientists, mental health support agencies, professionals and the Royal Society for the encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (The RSA), who are working to identify social-media based cues to assist with suicide prevention.
Interested parties include Dr Helena Christenson from the Black Dog Institute, Susan Beaton and the Suicide Prevention team from beyondblue, Sue Murray, the chief executive of Suicide Prevention Australia and also representatives from R U OK.
The project is the brainchild of workplace change consultant Paul Vittles, who is chair of the Australian branch of The RSA and came up with the idea for the Digital Lifesaving Project last year, at the fifty-year anniversary of Lifeline.
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Long distance patient care: Diabetes specialists treat sufferers via the internet

By Kaitlyn Opie

May 10, 2014, 3:30 a.m.
DIABETES specialists based at Alfred Hospital will now have a direct link to Sunraysia patients via an eHealth initiative.
The Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute has 12 diabetes specialists, with four involved in the Tele-health project.
The institute’s diabetes services manager Neal Cohen was in Mildura this week to speak to health care providers and iron out any service delivery issues.
“The idea is to be able to provide specific services to the region, in partnership with the Royal Flying Doctor Service,” Associate Professor Cohen said. 
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What is an ‘open platform’?

The word ‘platform’ is starting to reach the same status as the word ‘internet’ – part of the bedrock, but many have no idea what it really is. In e-health particularly, ‘platform’ is often mixed up with ‘open source’, ‘APIs’ and ‘standards’ in ways that don’t always make sense. Regardless, public policy in the NHS, US ONC and in other countries is being formulated without necessarily a clear common understanding. I’m going to try to address some of the ambiguities here.
The key thing to understand about a platform is that it represents progress away from being locked-in to a monolith of fixed commitments, toward an open ecosystem. This is true both technologically and economically. Any platform operates in two environments: development, and deployment, and these need to be understood distinctly to understand how to use the platform concept properly.
Before going further, I will point readers to Ewan Davis’ blog post on the same topic, in which he articulates some of the same conclusions as I do here, but via different reasoning – particularly about the difference between open source and open standards. Well worth a read.
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Patient privacy slows healthcare sector's cloud adoption: EMC

Summary: Across the world, the healthcare sector is facing the challenge of protecting patient privacy while trying to keep up to date with technological innovations.
By Aimee Chanthadavong | May 6, 2014 -- 03:55 GMT (13:55 AEST)
The potential use cases of patient data within the healthcare system can be invaluable, according to Andy Crowne, senior director of EMC Industry Solutions Information Intelligence.
Speaking with ZDNet at EMC World 2014, Crowne said that big data — the data that is captured through patient information — can play a large role in helping the healthcare sector find cures and eventually prevent illnesses, but believes there's still a long way to go before it becomes a reality.
According to Crowne, while healthcare systems worldwide still need to make notable infrastructure developments to support data capture, such as moving to the cloud, the main challenge the sector faces is handling patient privacy.
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Sydney Children’s Hospital Network looks to COTS

SCHN CIO looks at federating Lync with Skype for telemedicine
Rohan Pearce (Computerworld) on 05 May, 2014 14:18
The Sydney Children’s Hospital Network has been looking at how to employ more commodity software for telemedicine, the SCHN chief information officer, Bill Vargas told the CeBIT eHealth 2014 conference this morning.
The SCHN includes the Westmead and Randwick children’s hospitals, Bear Cottage, the Newborn and Paediatric Emergency Transport Service (NETS), the Pregnancy and Newborn Services Network (PSN), and the Children's Court Clinic.
“Telemedicine is probably one of the things we’ve been looking at,” Vargas said. The SCHN has “invested very heavy into telemedicine specifically for areas like telepsychiatry,” the CIO added.
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The Best Way to Manage All Your Passwords

Rating Secure Password Managers Dashlane, LastPass, 1Password, PasswordBox

By Geoffrey A. Fowler
May 6, 2014 2:36 p.m. ET
Using a different password for every online site and service is critical to your cyber security. Personal Technology Columnist Geoffrey Fowler shows you how password manager programs can help keep track of all those unique logins.
There's a war raging between hackers and companies, and you're caught in the crossfire. Every time a company gets hacked, you have to change your password. And don't you dare reuse it somewhere else.
Dreaming up a different password for every site and service is the only way to keep your stuff safe online, but it's also a gigantic nuisance. There's one thing you can—and should—do to help: Get a password manager program.
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The surprisingly simple way ancient Egyptians moved stones to build the pyramids

Date May 6, 2014 - 10:13PM

Terrence McCoy

Few have travelled to the pyramids of Egypt and not wondered how an ancient civilisation without modern technology could have constructed structures so large they can be viewed from space. Some have theorised they were built inside out.
On the flakier side, some say aliens did it.
Perhaps the most confounding mystery of all involves how incredibly large stones made their way to the middle of the desert without massive mechanical assistance. No camel, even the Egyptian kind, is that strong.

Less was more for dinosaurs

  • Oliver Moody
  • The Times
  • May 08, 2014 12:00AM
IF you want to see a dinosaur, look out of the window. Biologists have long known birds are the last survivors of that lumbering race of lizards but until now no one had worked out how they did it.
Why did the 90-tonne argentinosaurus die out while the bird-like Avialae, weighing about the same as a handful of teabags, thrive? A group of scientists at universities around the world have proposed an answer: it was precisely because they were small.
“Weighing” dinosaurs, usually by measuring the thickness of their leg bones, the paleontologists mapped out how the different sizes had fared throughout their evolution. The species that were lightest, including Qiliania graffini, a bird ancestor weighing 13g and named after the lead singer of the punk rock band Bad Religion, proved to be far more genetically adaptable.
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Enjoy!
David.

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

It Seems indecisiveness Reigns In The Department Of Health. Can’t Figure Out What To Do After Four Months!

This appeared tonight.

Budget 2014: E-health records system gets $141m to continue on

Summary: Australia's e-health system will push on in its current form while the federal government plans a response to a recent review into the system.
By Chris Duckett |
Until the Australian federal government, and its Minister for Health Peter Dutton respond to the recently completed review into Australia's personally controlled e-health records (PCEHR) system, the PCEHR will push on with AU$140.6m in funding for this financial year.
Perceived as an underutilised system, earlier this year it was revealed in Senate Estimates that the system had moved from 900,000 registered users in November 2013 to 1.4 million customers by late February 2014.
Dutton, however, aimed up at the lack of clinicians using the system, what he labelled as a rushed implementation by the former government, and stated that the federal government would look to make the system more "practical".
Lots more here:
Seems the Government is clueless - after 4 months can’t figure out what to do.
Astonishing! Clearly the Department and the Minister are not in agreement on the way forward.
David.

Government Continues Funding Of the PCEHR For One Year While Decides What To Do!

From Budget Papers:

"The Government will provide $140.6 million in 2014-15 for the continued operation of the Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record (PCEHR) system while the Government finalises its response to the review of the PCEHR.

This measure supports the Government’s commitment for a shared electronic health record for patients."

Can't decide what to do it seems!

David.


Budget 2014-15: Sad E-Health Geeks Guide To Where To Look First For Information.

I have just reviewed last year's Budget Papers and the main place to look for information on the fate of e-Health and the PCEHR is the section titled Outcome 10.

Simply download and search for PCEHR and/or eHealth and you will be well informed quite quickly unless the format has been altered. They keep doing this to confuse all those who try to keep track of here the money is coming from and going to!

Part 3 of the Consolidated Papers also has one reference.

Hope this helps for those who are keen to see what is happening.

The papers usually appear on the Departmental Web Site (www.health.gov.au) just after the Treasurer gets up to speak. 7.30 pm today.

David.