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."

Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Review Of The Ongoing Post - Budget Controversy 11th June 2014. It Is Sure Going On and On!

Budget Night was on Tuesday 13th May, 2014 and the fuss has not settled by a long shot.
Here are some of the more interesting articles I have spotted this fourth week since it happened. Since the budget was handed down all hell has broken out in the Health Sector and has been continuing.
Senate Estimates on E-Health was on 2nd June - Late in day and we provided coverage last week
We sure do live in interesting times!
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General.

Science going back to dark ages

Date May 28, 2014

Ian Berryman

The Climate Commission has gone. The carbon tax is to be rescinded. The Australian Renewable Energy Agency is to be abolished. The promise of a "Million Solar Roofs" is broken. And in what can only be described as an ideological move, the Abbott government introduced bills to abolish the Clean Energy Finance Corporation, despite it making a profit last year. The Prime Minister has declared war on the Australian renewable energy industry, the environment and science itself.
The overwhelming scientific consensus on global warming is based on evidence, whether Tony Abbott chooses to act on it or not. A sceptic is someone who doubts accepted opinion; a denier is someone who refuses to accept fact. Scepticism is healthy, denial is dangerous, and intentionally dismantling the entire renewable energy industry of a country that is not only wealthy, sun blessed and windswept but also has the highest per capita CO2 emissions in the OECD is criminally reckless. Furthermore, it will cripple our future economic growth.
The global economy has embraced the renewable energy industry. Last year wind power grew by 25 per cent worldwide and solar power by 30 per cent. On May 11, Germany met 74 per cent of its electricity demand with renewable energy.
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Tony Abbott is gutting science just when we need it most

Date June 1, 2014

Ian Dunlop

Australia has an enviable reputation for scientific research, extending long before the heyday of the CSIRO in the 1950s under the visionary leadership of Sir Robert Menzies and Sir Ian Clunies-Ross. On the hottest and driest continent on Earth, our prosperity would be non-existent had it not been for the enlightened application of science. So it has been of mounting concern over recent years to see governments of all persuasions adopt increasingly anti-science agendas.
The federal government is taking anti-science to new heights. Its scorched earth approach discards virtually everything not in line with narrow, free-market ideology, centred on sustaining Australia’s 20th century dig-it-up and ship-it-out economic growth model.  
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Is it time for Medi-change?

Vlado Perkovic, Fiona Turnbull and Andrew Wilson
Med J Aust 2014; 200 (10): 566-567.
doi: 10.5694/mja14.00427
As Medicare turns 30, it is timely to reflect on how well it is delivering on its original principles and what needs to change
Australians are justifiably proud of their health care system. For 30 years, its main pillar has been Medicare, providing free access to public hospitals and subsidised primary and specialist care. In that time, the range of health care interventions available, the way care is delivered and the range of providers have changed dramatically. Moreover, the success of Medicare in supporting access to care has escalated community expectations. It is timely to consider how well our health system is achieving the original principles of Medicare, and the future of Australian publicly funded health care.
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‘Two tier US-style health system’ claim

Joanna Heath

Key points

  • Plans to allow private health insurers to play a bigger role in covering cost of GP visits.
  • Health department asked to provide advice on changes to existing private health insurance arrangements.
Private health insurers could be allowed to play a bigger role covering the cost of visits to GP doctors under plans being considered by the Abbott government.
Department of Health officials told a Senate committee they had been asked for advice on changing the parts of the Private Health Insurance Act covering insurers and primary care.
Health Minister Peter Dutton has previously refused to rule out changing the law, which prevents insurers from paying for services like GP visits which are already eligible for Medicare payments.
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Dutton proved wrong on prevention

4 June, 2014 Michael Woodhead
When he announced the abolition of the Australian National Preventive Health Agency (ANPHA), Health Minister Peter Dutton justified it by claiming the agency was wasting money on sponsoring the Summernats burnout festival.
“Somehow that was going to provide an improvement to our health system,” he sneered in Parliament.
Well this week the head of ANPHA, Louise Sylvan, told the Senate Estimates Committee that the Summernats project was one of the most cost effective health prevention projects she’d been involved with. It succeeded in getting 90,000 downloads of a MyQuit Buddy app , an award-winning smoking cessation initiative.
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Private insurer access to general practice back on agenda

5th Jun 2014
PRIVATE insurer access to general practice is back on the agenda, with the health department admitting it has advised the government on changes to the Private Health Insurance Act.
Dr Richard Bartlett (PhD), first assistant secretary at the department of health, confirmed in Senate estimates proceedings this week that his team had given advice on changes to services covered by private health insurance. 
However, when pressed on whether it was about allowing private health insurers to cover primary care, Dr Bartlett said he could not be specific. 
“I was asked to provide a comment about whether advice had been provided on primary care and private health insurance. I said I had. That is all I said. It went no further and I can go no further,” he said.
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6 June 2014, 6.40am AEST

Federal-state health relations: can anything be salvaged?

T

Author

Director, Health Program at Grattan Institute
The federal budget reignited debate over federal-state relations with a decision to cut $80 billion funding for the state responsibilities of schools and hospitals over the coming years. So how can federal-state co-operation in health make Australia a better country?

Maybe there is a parallel universe where the Commonwealth and states work in harmony to improve the health and health care of Australians. But that is a vision unlikely to be realised in Australia for years to come, after the 2014 federal budget took a wrecking ball to trust in Commonwealth-state relations.
Instead, the blame game is back, and the states can now blame Commonwealth cuts for service shortfalls. But what if we could start again and redesign Australia’s system for delivering health care?

What do health professionals want?

Ask clinicians and they will give you a litany of Commonwealth-state disjunctions that they see in day-to-day practice. Their panacea is often that a single level of government should be responsible for the whole health care system. That is usually the Commonwealth because of its access to more secure revenue growth. The benefits of state responsibility in terms of potential for innovation and local political accountability are forgotten.
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Federal health cuts will hurt ACT, Chief Minister Katy Gallagher warns

Date June 5, 2014 - 10:23PM

Natasha Boddy

Canberra Times reporter

Chief Minister Katy Gallagher says the ACT government will not savage the territory's health system to fund a $47 million budget black hole caused by federal funding cuts, but has warned those losses will need to be made up somewhere.
Ms Gallagher warned budget cuts by the federal government would leave the ACT's health system about $240 million worse off over the next four years. 
"These are cuts that we can't absorb, but we're certainly not going to cut services that impact on families here in Canberra," she said. "We are not prepared to savage our health system to recoup those cuts."
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What's behind the AMA’s silence on rebate cuts?

2 June, 2014 Paul Smith
The Federal Government’s co-payment plan will mean more than a billion dollars coming out of GP Medicare rebates.
But does the AMA care? Australian Doctor investigates.
Federal Health Minister Peter Dutton is just getting to the end of his speech to the AMA faithful.
We are in Canberra for the association's national conference and we have been listening to a lot of scary statistics about the impending financial obliteration of Medicare unless it is "strengthened".
This word is the minister's euphemism for the Federal Government's co-payment plan, which is in turn the euphemism for slashing billion of dollars in rebates for patients to see their GP.
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Fears of US-style health system by stealth

Date June 8, 2014

Jonathan Swan and Fergus Hunter

An Abbott government push to allow private health insurers to cover GP visits would create a US-style two-tier health system and drive up doctors' fees, experts have warned.
TheSunday Age has learnt Health Minister Peter Dutton has told senior health sector sources in private meetings that he is keen to allow private insurers into GP clinics. However, any change would require amendments to legislation.
Under the existing Medicare system all Australians can expect similar quality of care when they visit their doctor. Changing this to create two classes of GP patients would revolutionise Australian healthcare and potentially undermine Medicare more than the proposed $7 co-payment policy, experts say. The revolution has begun quietly with controversial trials undertaken in Queensland. Medibank Private members are receiving guaranteed appointments within 24 hours and after-hours home visits. An expansion of such trials - with superior GP services given to private patients - could endanger Australia's world-class healthcare system, said Australian Medical Association president Professor Brian Owler.
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Medical Research Fund.

Medical research spending at $2.8b

Joanna Mather
Spending on medical research is triple that of other fields, according to official data that scientists said put pressure on the federal government to justify its focus on research while cutting other science programs.
Spending on research and development devoted to medical and health sciences totalled $2.8 billion in 2012, according to the Australian Bureau of Statistics. This represented 29 per cent of spending by universities on research and development and was almost triple the value of the next highest field of research, engineering, at $955 million. The 2012 figures are the latest available.
Research leaders urged the government to concede that medical breakthroughs are underpinned by work in the basic sciences, such as physics and chemistry, while the social sciences enable these breakthroughs to be translated into improved healthcare.
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National Health and Medical Research Council did not provide advice on $20 billion research fund

Date June 4, 2014 - 10:21AM

Dan Harrison

Health and Indigenous Affairs Correspondent

The federal government's main medical research agency provided no input into the Abbott government's budget centrepiece, a $20 billion medical research endowment, despite being its primary intended beneficiary.
National Health and Medical Research Council chief executive Warwick Anderson told a Senate hearing on Tuesday that his organisation had not provided any advice to the government in relation to the creation of the Medical Research Future Fund, which was announced in the May budget.
The Abbott government plans to invest savings from health measures – including the $7 Medicare fee and cuts to hospital funding – into the medical research fund until it reaches a balance of $20 billion, which is expected in 2020.
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Don’t trash medical research fund

IT took 16 years and $1 billion from lab to jab to develop and market the human papillomavirus vaccine, Gardasil.
Since 2006, 144 million doses have been distributed for total worldwide sales of about $13bn. Australia, through CSL and the University of Queensland — where a team led by professor Ian Frazer made the discovery — has so far reaped $800 million in royalties.
Funding for the early stages of Frazer’s research into the human papillomavirus — a trigger for cervical as well as other types of cancers and genital warts — came from the taxpayer.
Between 1986 and 1990 the Nation­al Health and Medical Research Council supplied five grants totalling $156,133. Global reach for the vaccine came via the pharmaceutical giant Merck.
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GP Co-payment.

Doctors under pressure to bear cost of scheme, AMA warns

Date June 2, 2014

Dan Harrison

Health and Indigenous Affairs Correspondent

EXCLUSIVE
Doctors could be forced to churn through patients more quickly in order to absorb cuts to their income linked to the proposed $7 Medicare fee, the new federal president of the Australian Medical Association has warned.
Brian Owler, a Sydney neurosurgeon widely known as the face of the ''Don't Rush'' road safety campaign, said he was concerned the introduction of the fee could hurt the quality of care delivered by doctors, particularly those serving poorer communities where patients would not be able to afford to pay.
From July next year, the government plans to cut the Medicare rebate for a GP consultation by $5, and encourage doctors to charge a $7 fee. As part of the changes, the $6 incentive currently paid to a doctor whenever they bulk-bill a patient will only be paid when the doctor charges the $7 fee, and only when the patient is a child or concession card holder.
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Co-payment overhaul a priority for AMA

2nd Jun 2014
THE Australian Medical Association is working on proposals for a more equitable model of the proposed $7 co-payment for medical services to negotiate with the government before the budget legislation goes to the Senate.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott said on the weekend that the government would be open to “refinement” of the co-payment policy. This was the first confirmation that the headline budget measure could be negotiable, after Health Minister Peter Dutton last week gave the opposite impression. 
“It’s a good sign that he will be flexible,” the AMA’s Council of General Practice chair, Dr Brian Morton, told MO. 
“I think there needs to be an overhaul of the proposal, and we’ve said in principle we are not opposed to a co-payment, but it needs to be refined so there is a greater safety net for the vulnerable and disadvantaged. We are in the process of putting together alternative proposals.”
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Invest co-payments in better healthcare: Hawke minister

FORMER Labor health minister Brian Howe has defended his decision to introduce a co-payment for GP consultations in 1991, arguing it was part of a broader health strategy and savings were to be reinvested into a reformed health system.
Mr Howe told The Australian a $3.50 co-payment introduced in the Hawke government’s 1991-92 budget was aimed at addressing an ageing population and encouraging a greater focus on preventive health and chronic disease management by increasing funding to the states.
The Abbott government has announced a $7 co-payment for GP consultations but is facing ­opposition from crossbench senators. Mr Howe yesterday criticised the current plan for failing to inject funds back into the health system, instead being used to create a $20 billion research fund.
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GP tax fraught with snags

Sinclair Davidson
When Julia Gillard imposed a price on carbon, most people recognised this as being a broken tax promise. Notwithstanding the professed nobility of her cause, few could credibly justify the breach of trust that had occurred, and Gillard suffered the consequences.
The problem for Tony Abbott is that his proposed Medicare co-payment is a tax, and constitutes a broken promise as well.
As with the carbon price, the intentions behind the broken promise are noble. Zero-price at point of sale government services tend to be over-used. Federal governments of both persuasions have long attempted to restrict GP services; co-payments have been suggested before, putting restrictions on the number of foreign doctors, rationing provider numbers, and so on.
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When deep cuts are not healthy

Date June 3, 2014

Peter Martin

Economics Editor, The Age

It took Mark Latham to say the unsayable. “If a cure to cancer is to be found, most likely it will happen in Europe or the United States,” he wrote in the Weekend Financial Review. Spending scarce funds to find a cure ourselves is a waste of money, a political fig leaf to cover the electoral pain of the GP co-payment.
Anyone who doubts that the Medical Research Future Fund is a fig leaf or an afterthought, needs to only look at the pattern of leaks and speeches leading up to the budget. Ministers spoke often about the need to restrain the cost of Medicare, scarcely at all about the need to boost medical research.
They weren’t able to prepare the way for the medical research future fund because it didn’t come first. It isn’t that pharmaceutical benefits, doctors rebates and future hospital funding are being cut to pay for the fund. It’s that the fund was evoked late in the piece to smooth the edges of the cuts.  
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Opposition Continues To Grow To $7 Medicare Co-Payment

By Kristen Ochs
As protests continue to grow over the Abbott Government's proposed $7 Medicare payment, Kristen Ochs looks at the industry response to a policy that will impact most on the poor and unwell.
Thousands of Australians took to the streets last weekend to demonstrate against health spending cuts announced in the recent federal budget. The introduction of a co-payment for out-of-hospital medical services has raised fears that the age of universal health care is over.
From July 1, 2015 a $7 fee will be charged for all GP consultations, including childhood immunisation appointments and nursing home visits, as well as blood tests and x-rays. This will be capped at 10 payments per year for concession card holders and children. There are no family-caps, so a single parent with three children would still have to pay up to $70 per child, per year.
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GP co-payment will prevent two-tiered health system that favours the rich, Joe Hockey says

By political reporter Latika Bourke
June 3, 2014
Treasurer Joe Hockey has warned Australians to expect a two-tiered health system that will favour the rich if the $7 GP co-payment is not passed.
The Government is battling to find support for its GP fee in the Senate because the Greens and Labor oppose it.
Under the Government's proposal, doctors would be paid $2 and the remaining $5 would be poured into the $20 billion Medical Research Fund.
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No modelling undertaken to determine co-payment impact on EDs

3rd Jun 2014
THE government undertook no modelling on whether a co-payment would impact hospital emergency departments, health officials revealed during a Senate budget estimates grilling.
"You asked whether we had modelled what might occur with the introduction of a co-payment. We have not done that," said Health Department deputy secretary Kerry Flanagan in response to questions from Greens' Senator Richard Di Natale on Monday. 
Ms Flanagan said the department had relied on "past evidence of what may occur with attendances if you introduce a change either in an emergency department or in the GP space", including the four-hour target in emergency departments. 
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Nursing homes residents to be adversely affected by GP co-payment plan

The Abbott government is facing intense scrutiny of its cuts to Medicare benefits for GP visits.

01.Budget 2014: $7 GP co-payment plan criticised

The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP) has criticised the Abbott government for forcing GPs to either charge vulnerable patients a co-payment or absorb the cost in their take-home pay. 
The government has announced a raft of cuts to health care and health insurance in the 2014 Budget. Under the co-payment plan, all Medicare Benefit Schedule (MBS) rebates for GPs will be reduced by $5 – including for surgery consultations, after-hours consultations, home visits and visits to aged-care homes. While GPs will have the choice to absorb the reduced rebate, they would take a cut to their income if they decide not charge patients the $7 co-payment.
The co-payment is proposed to come into effect on 1 July 2015 but will face difficulty in securing Senate approval, with Labor, the Greens and Palmer United Party all opposing the plan.
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Co-pay is antithesis of ‘closing the gap’

5 June, 2014 Dr Justin Coleman
As part of Australian Doctor's Stop the Co-pay Cuts: GPs Make the Difference campaign, we are asking doctors to share their stories of how the Federal Government's budget proposals will affect them and their patients.
Here Dr Justin Coleman shares his fears.
Imagine yourself in charge of Australia’s health budget — heaven forbid!
On your desk are two cash-filled buckets, marked ‘primary care’ and ‘specialist/hospital care’. Your job is to remove some money from one or the other bucket, to be spent elsewhere.
Unrestrained by short-term political gain and beholden to no interest groups (we are only imagining), your decision requires going back to basics.
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16, 17, 19: the three numbers that undermine the co-payment plan

4 June, 2014 Paul Smith
This is an argument by numbers against Peter Dutton's co-payment plan.
The numbers come from a survey of sick Australians who were asked whether they avoid taking medications, seeing their doctor or skipping tests or follow up consults because of cost.
Compiled by the Commonwealth Fund, the results are not about future impact of a policy yet to be implemented but the effects of the system in the here and now.
It shows that Australia is doing worse than 11comparable countries bar the international health system's basket case - the US.
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Co-payments will kill us all! Well, some of us, anyway……

Jennifer Doggett | Jun 06, 2014 10:38AM |
GP and writer Dr Justin Coleman makes a case for re-allocating funding from specialist services to primary care………….oh and along with Dr Tim Senior, Professor Stephen Duckett, Dr Lesley Russell, Professor Jeff Richardson, the AMA, CHF, AHHA, AHCRA, ANMF, and many others he also doesn’t think the GP co-payment is a good idea. He writes:
Imagine yourself in charge of Australia’s health budget – heaven forbid! On your desk are two cash-filled buckets, marked ‘primary care’ and ‘specialist/hospital care’. Your job is to remove some money from one or the other bucket, to be spent elsewhere. Unrestrained by short-term political gain and beholden to no interest groups (we are only imagining), your decision requires going back to basics.
Basics, of course, means health consumers. Patients. People. You reckon doctors can generally look after themselves, so you are only interested in patient outcomes. Which pile of cash is currently giving patients the most ‘bang for their bucket’?
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Co-payment policy 101

Jennifer Doggett | Jun 03, 2014 5:28PM
The Government has been strongly criticised for its selling of the GP co-payment policy but many experts and stakeholder groups would disagree that the problems with the proposed $7 bulkbilling co-payment are merely cosmetic. 
The following 8-step guide highlights some key pre-requisites for the development and implementation of a new health care co-payment.  It should assist in assessing whether or not the proposed Budget initiative is fundamentally bad policy or just suffering from a poor sales pitch. 
8 Steps to a Successful Co-payment    
1.       Reflect community views
Find out what the community thinks about health care funding BEFORE attempting to introduce any new co-payments.  Are Australians concerned about our level of health care expenditure or are we comfortable with spending around the OECD average on health services?  Do we want to fund health care completely through progressive taxation or are we happy to contribute a certain component of health funding through direct payments?  If so, what proportion of health expenditure should be made up of out-of pocket payments, given that we already pay for a higher proportion of our health care costs through direct payments than do citizens of most other countries? Finding out community values and priorities for health funding before introducing a new payment will help avoid nasty shocks at the polls later on.
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Hospital Impacts.

Health reform and activity-based funding

Shane Solomon
Med J Aust 2014; 200 (10): 564.
doi:  10.5694/mja14.00292
Independent evidence-based evaluation will determine the success of activity-based funding in Australia
In August 2011 the National Health Reform Agreement (NHRA) was signed by the Council of Australian Governments. New financial arrangements to enable the federal, state and territory governments to work in partnership were a key component of the NHRA,1 with one aim being to “improve patient access to services and public hospital efficiency through the use of activity based funding (ABF) based on a national efficient price”.2
The NHRA established the Independent Hospital Pricing Authority (IHPA) to determine a national efficient price (NEP) for public hospital services that are able to be funded on an activity basis (see http://www.ihpa.gov.au). The NEP underpins activity-based funding and is used by the states and territories as an independent benchmarking tool to measure the efficiency of their public hospital services.
Activity-based funding is payment for the number and mix of patients treated, reflecting the workload and giving hospitals an incentive to provide services more efficiently. Most countries that have introduced activity-based funding systems have done so with two broad aims: to increase the transparency of how funds are allocated to services; and to give hospitals incentives to more efficiently use those funds.3
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Hospital funding uncertainty

Nicole MacKee
Friday, 30 May, 2014
THE federal government’s plan to abandon activity-based funding for payments to state hospitals from 2017–2018 in favour of indexation has been cautiously welcomed by a health funding expert.
Professor Johannes Stoelwinder, professor and chair of health services management at Monash University, said while he reserved judgement on the amount the federal government contributed to state hospital funding, the new funding mechanism was an improvement on the previous government’s reforms.
  
“It clearly places the states in the role of purchasing hospital services and removes the Commonwealth from duplicating that role”, Professor Stoelwinder told MJA InSight.
He was commenting on an MJA article by Shane Solomon, chair of the Independent Hospital Pricing Authority (IPHA), which said significant progress had been made in establishing activity-based funding since the National Health Reform Agreement was signed in 2011. (1)
Mr Solomon described activity-based funding as payment for the number and mix of patients treated, reflecting the workload and giving hospitals an incentive to provide services more efficiently.
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Pharmacy.

The discount threat

2 June, 2014 Chris Brooker
Are discounters the biggest threat facing community pharmacy?
One Pharmacy News reader thinks so. In response to a recent story, he sent the following comment:
Forget Government Policy Changes for a while and consider Discounters, they are the enemy here.
Go to websites of discounters and check on say Ramipril 10 mg, Rosuvastatin 40mg, Atorvastatin 40mg,Clopidogrel 75mg and Atenolol 50mg for their general price to customers.
I think you should be a very concerned proprietor?
The discounters have seen an opportunity to slash general prices but still get the full return from PBS concessional scripts, while trying to drive us to the wall and build their market share. Much like Coles/Worth have done to other markets.
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Discounters driving down pay: survey

3 June, 2014 Chris brooker
Some discount pharmacy chains may be paying pharmacists lower than average wages, driving down pay across the sector according to Professional Pharmacists Australia.
A PPA survey of employed pharmacists showed that pharmacists who said they were working for Chemist Warehouse were earning substantially less on average than other community pharmacists.  
While findings were not definitive for other discounters, PPA said the figures, from their annual pharmacy remuneration report, “confirm the suspicion within the industry that discount pharmacy is driving down wages”.
The responses indicated that pharmacists working at Chemist Warehouse seem to be earning on average $5.61 an hour less than the average rate of pay in community pharmacy across pay classifications, said Dr Geoff March, President of Professional Pharmacists Australia.
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Co-payment impact on pharmacy not considered: Government

4 June, 2014 Chris Brooker
Changes to the PBS co-payment system proposed in the 2014 Federal Budget were included without any modelling or research on their impact on pharmacists, Department of Health officials have admitted.
Under questioning by the Senate Estimates Committee on Monday, Felicity McNeill, first assistant secretary, Pharmaceutical Benefits Division said no modelling or research had been undertaken on the impact of the increased safety net on pharmacists.
It was one of a series of admission of a lack of pre-Budget research on PBS related measures, which prompted Senator Jan McLucas (ALP) to comment: “It is a bit troubling that not a lot of work has been done that will tell us what might happen with the public - in terms of access to and compliance with their medication regime”.
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Comment:
It seems the fuss is not yet settled - to say the least. Will be fascinating to see how all this plays out. Parliament this week will be very interesting indeed! It is clear the GP co-payment issue is red-hot and right now it is hard to see how this measure will pass.
To remind readers there is also a great deal of useful health discussion here from The Conversation.
Also a huge section on the overall budget found here:
Enjoy.
David.

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Here Are Some Interesting Things That Seem To Be Going On In E-Health At Present.

A few little matters have come to my attention in the last few days.
First I noticed that we saw a Senate Estimates Hearing that did not really ask a single hard question.
All my ideas were clearly avoided - see here as well as the comments on the same blog.
Second it seems that the time being spent on e-Health is getting a bit shorter.
This most recent one was hardly 20 minutes where those before the election seemed to be well over 30 mins if not more.
Third it really seems that both political sides realise that they have ‘blood on their hands’ in terms of Labor having rather messed things up with the PCEHR and the present Government seemingly making a very considerable meal of working out what comes next. They both realise that e-Health has got to be as close as one could imagine to a shared political liability!
Of course it was the Howard Government that launched NEHTA which it has not to be said has also not covered itself with glory!
See this blog for coverage of this:
Lastly no one seems to have noticed two key NEHTA facts:
1. NEHTA was not  at Senate Estimates at all - first time for the last couple of years.
2. NEHTA does not have a single job vacancy as of today.
See here:

Careers

We have roles for people who want to be challenged and inspired.
NEHTA is a dynamic company that draws together highly motivated people who are committed to getting the job done. We look for people who apply to their work a rigorous approach to analysis, design and evaluation, and who are keen to really make a difference.
NEHTA will handle any personal information that you submit as part of a job application in accordance with the Privacy Act 1988. This includes your CV and any other personal information that you submit to NEHTA via its website or by post, email, telephone or in person.
NEHTA may also collect personal information about you from your nominated referee(s). NEHTA will only use the personal information that it has collected in order to consider and facilitate your application for employment. If your application is not successful, NEHTA may keep your personal information on file and may use it to contact you about other employment opportunities that may be of interest to you.
If you wish to access or seek correction of the  information that NEHTA holds about you, or you do not want NEHTA to keep your application on file, please contact careers@nehta.gov.au. For more information about NEHTA’s data handling practices including how you can make a  privacy complaint and how NEHTA deals with such complaints, please view our privacy policy.

We have roles for people who want to be challenged and inspired.

No positions currently advertised.
Page source is here
To me this all points to the NEHTA being closed down looking rather more likely that not - but then I would say that! What do you think?
I have to say it would be very interesting to get the views of the experts who read here on just how successful NEHTA has been over time with the various foundation projects (IHI, SMD, NASH, SNOMED, AMT etc.) FWIW my feeling is that an objective score card would hardly be a glowing endorsement.
Separately I should just mention that we are having another round of ructions in the e-Health Standards space. Again this is an area where NEHTA and DoH have comprehensively failed in my view.
David.

Monday, June 09, 2014

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 9th June, 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

A surprisingly active week with Qld investing more in Health IT in its recent budget and all sorts of commentary on the move by Apple into Health IT.
Also of great interest is the progressive drip-drip of information on just how bad the roll out of the NBN has been and just how badly the previous Government was at large scale project implementation. The worry is, of course, that the current Government will not be much better!
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Still no date for e-Health review response: take-up remains in single digits

The take-up of electronic health records in Australia is still languishing in single digit percentages among eligible recipients — with no immediate plans for publicity or education campaigns to boost voluntary take-up numbers, a Senate Estimates hearing has been told.
Department of Health Chief Information and Knowledge Officer Paul Madden told an Estimates hearing this week that just 1.66 million Australians have so far registered themselves for an e-Health record.
Based on Australia’s population of 23 million, the Estimates committee heard that this amounted to around eight per cent.
The critically low figure will be of serious concern to all sides of politics across state and federal jurisdictions given attempts to introduce a national electronic patient record have now been going for around a decade and have consumed more than $1 billion.
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$200m for Queensland health service IT upgrades

Summary: The Queensland government has committed almost AU$200 million for health services IT software and hardware, in its latest budget, delivered today by Treasurer, Tim Nicholls.
By Leon Spencer | June 3, 2014 -- 07:32 GMT (17:32 AEST)
Queensland's state budget, delivered today by Treasurer, Tim Nicholls, will see almost AU$200 million ploughed into IT hardware and software for the state's health services, over 2014-2015.
This year's budget sees a 6.4 percent increase in spending for the Department of Health, with the department receiving AU$199.8 million to fund the provision of ICT equipment and software in a bid to continue the replacement, upgrade and state wide rollout of information and technology equipment to support the eHealth strategy and the national Health Reform agenda.
According to the budget papers, AU$139.9 million will be invested in IT equipment to replace, upgrade and provide future capability to support the eHealth strategy's asset replacement program.
Meanwhile, AU$59.9 million will be invested in the continued state-wide rollout of eHealth clinical and administrative support systems, including integrated electronic Medical Records (ieMR) and delivering systems for results reporting, order entry, medications management, clinical notes and discharge summaries.
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QLD to splurge $200M on health systems

$457.3 million also allocated over the next 15 years for integrated wireless network to support public safety and emergency staff
Byron Connolly (CIO) on 03 June, 2014 16:17
The Queensland government has earmarked $199.8 million for ICT equipment and software to improve the state’s health services in its 2014-15 Budget handed down today.
The government said $139.9 million will be spent this year to replace and upgrade information and communication technology equipment to support its e-health strategy and reform agenda.
A further $59.9 million will be invested in the continued roll out of e-health clinical and administrative support systems including integrated electronic medical records and systems for results reporting, order entry, medications management, clinical notes, and discharge summaries.
Queensland Health will outlay $81.1 million this financial year to continue the $327 million, four-year Backlog Maintenance Remediation Program to address high priority and critical operational maintenance, life cycle replacements and upgrades, according to budget papers.
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Apple's first step into health tracking small but powerful

Date June 3, 2014 - 10:21AM

Samantha Murphy Kelly

Apple has marked its first steps into the health and fitness-tracking market with the introduction of its new Health app for iOS, which will debut to iPhone owners this fall.
Although Apple mentioned daily tracking capabilities and partnerships with companies like Nike and the Mayo Clinic, there wasn't anything revolutionary included in the announcement (which was already slim on details) that isn't on the market now.
But that's not to say something big isn't coming. Apple is likely just getting started.
"The app is a good move for Apple because anything that can simplify healthcare is smart, but what they did today was just make an entrance into the space," said Skip Snow, a healthcare analyst at Forrester Research. "There are many apps out there that already offer what they plan to do, but we know there's a lot more to come."
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Apple iOS 8 to offer health and home features, work more closely with mac

Date June 3, 2014
Apple has introduced new health and connected-home features for the software powering the iPhone and iPad, laying the groundwork for a busy second half of the year as the company seeks to rev up its growth.
The company announced the new mobile software, iOS 8, at its annual developer conference in San Francisco. The update, which Apple expects to release between September and November this year, includes HealthKit, which lets people monitor their health and acts as a data hub for fitness apps, and HomeKit, which includes home-automation elements so people can control locks, garage doors and lights from their devices.
Apple also showed new mobile search features that give direct links to relevant web pages if users are making certain common queries, letting people avoid Google. The company added new text messaging features, including a predictive typing tool, and a new feature to help people store more photos on their iPhones.
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Apple takes app-based approach to health tech with HealthKit

Summary: Don't expect Apple to come out with a FitBit of its own anytime soon. The iPhone maker is focusing on health from the inside of iOS.
By Rachel King for Between the Lines | June 2, 2014 -- 18:33 GMT (04:33 AEST)
In contrast, Apple is taking more app-centric approach in promoting its healthcare tech strategy to consumers.
Introduced during the opening keynote of the iPhone maker's annual Worldwide Developers Conference on Monday, HealthKit functions as a dashboard for a number of critical metrics as well as a hub for select third-party fitness products.
Users can input information about their diets and how they sleep while tracking calories burnt and blood pressure, among other body stats.
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What's in a name? Aussie 'HealthKit' firm unhappy with Apple

But anyone who thinks this is the start of a serious legal fight is simply wrong
Ryan Faas (Computerworld (US)) on 07 June, 2014 01:46
An Australian company has made a big deal this week of taking umbridge with Apple's use of the name HealthKit. That company, whose chief product is an app and service that allows users to aggregate health data from a variety of sources and send that data to their doctors, is named HealthKit.
It's obvious why the company's co-founder, Alison Hardacre, has -- intentionally or not -- started a media firestorm about Apple's use of the name. Apple's HealthKit, unveiled during the company's Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) keynote on Monday, is based on what appears to be the same concept and uses the same name.
Stories about the brouhaha have spread throughout the tech and mainstream media. Most of them include comments from Hardacre originally published in Australia's Business Spectator, as well as a statement that she's considering legal action against Apple.
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Department of Health takes IBM outsourcing agreement to tender

Agency looking for a new approach to outsourcing
Byron Connolly (CIO) on 02 June, 2014 10:52
The Department of Health has gone to tender for a new IT outsourcing service provider, more than 14 years after an original $350 million contract was signed with IBM Global Services.
Since 1999, IBM has maintained its grip on the Health outsourcing deal, winning several contract renewals with the latest extension granted in 2010. But in a new tender, the department has invited other suppliers in the industry to tender for the lucrative contract.
Health said it was looking for a “new approach for the provision of ICT infrastructure and support services and the associated management and governance services”.
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Sick, vomit, diarrhea: key words on the social media radar of food safety authorities

Date June 3, 2014 - 12:15AM

Matthew Hall

Australian health authorities are tracking a New York City initiative that uses social media and restaurant review websites to investigate cases of food poisoning.
A collaboration between the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, Columbia University and popular review site Yelp resulted in the discovery of previously undocumented cases of food-borne illness originating in restaurants.
The project was initiated after an investigation by New York City authorities into an outbreak of gastrointestinal disease linked to one particular restaurant. It was discovered in that particular case customers had reported illness on Yelp but not to the department of health.
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George Brandis is blocking path to better online security: Labor

Paul Smith
Labor has accused the Coalition government of failing to take online security threats to Australian consumers seriously, by stalling legislation it previously supported to govern the way companies must disclose details of privacy breaches.
In March, parliamentary secretary to the shadow attorney-general Lisa Singh proposed legislation to make it ­compulsory for corporations and ­government to notify people if their ­privacy was breached and personal details compromised, but she said a lack of government support meant it was unlikely to succeed.
Laws to mandate data breach disclosure were up for approval in the previous Parliament, but never made it through before the federal election.
Senator Singh said the recent breach of customer information at online giant eBay had highlighted the potential ­damage of data breaches, and accused Attorney-General George Brandis of obstructing the passage of legislation, which was widely acknowledged to be needed.
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Robotic surgery can cut the cost divide

It is still the experience and skill of the surgeon, rather than the technique, that is paramount in achieving good results, although robotic surgery is gaining popularity. 
Jill Margo
Robotic surgery has come of age and is mature enough to deal with men’s ­private business in public hospitals.
It is widely available in the private sector and now there’s a push to make it equally available in the public sector.
In public hospitals, most men have open surgery, which is some $4000 cheaper, but a new analysis has shown that robotic operations can be as cost effective.
Funded by the Department of Health, a group of urologists from Melbourne’s Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre audited all radical prostatectomies in Victoria over the past three years. There were more than 5000 cases.
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Pressure mounts on healthcare system

When Robert Mackey, 70, was diagnosed with prostate cancer two years ago, his urologist recommended robotic surgery that would cut his recovery time but was rarely used in public hospitals. The cost: up to $20,000.
Fortunately for Mackey, a retired instrument maker, the Victorian government agreed to pay.
“It was imperative that I keep working to support the family and I needed to return to employment as quickly as possible,” Mackey says.
His experience exemplifies the pressures on Australia’s health system. As doctors push for the best care available for their patients, state governments are stuck with the ever-growing bills.
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Invisible barcode can trace bomb makers

John Ross

SCIENTISTS have developed an invisible barcode that can be used to trace bomb makers and detect fake drugs.
American biomedical engineers say the “nanoparticle barcodes” can be secretly added to solid and liquid drugs without any measurable side-effects.
They can be added to DNT, an organic compound which is used to produce TNT, allowing investigators to trace where explosives were made by analysing “thermal signatures” in bomb debris.
The new approach “will greatly enhance forensic investigation by its technical readiness, structural covertness and robustness”, the researchers report in the journal Scientific Reports.
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Graph databases find answers for the sick and their healers

The Neo4j graph database is proving to be popular in the medical community for connecting different entities
Joab Jackson (IDG News Service) on 07 June, 2014 04:53
A novel form of database that focuses on connections between entities, called a graph database, is finding a home in the health care industry.
"In health care, it turns out, there are quite a number of problems that involve understanding the connections between things," said Philip Rathle, vice president of products at Neo Technologies, which sells support subscriptions to its open source Neo4j graph database.
Diseases may have multiple symptoms. Doctors may belong to multiple heath care networks. There are also relationships between different types of organizations, such as insurance companies and hospitals. In the realm of bioinformatics, multiple connections exist among genes and proteins.
"There are a lot of connections happening, and graphs are good at matching connections," Rathle said.
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Joint OpenEHR / FHIR review of Allergy-related Resources

Posted on June 3, 2014 by Grahame Grieve
I’m really pleased to announce a new initiative as part of the ongoing development: we’re going to do a joint review of the FHIR resources for Allergy/Intolerance (AllergyIntolerance and AdverseReaction), and the openEHR archetype for the equivalent content (openEHR-EHR-EVALUATION.adverse_reaction.v1). The review is going to be done on the openEHR CKM, on a newly prepared archetype that shows the essential content models of the existing archetypes and resources (they’re quite different)
The review will open in the next week or so (final details still being nailed down) and will be open to everyone – the openEHR community, the HL7 community, and anyone else interested in representing allergies in clinical systems, or exchanging records of them between systems.
Note that OpenEHR and FHIR have different a purpose with regard to why resources and archetypes are defined and differing philosophy about how things are done, so we’re not expecting to get exactly the same content models at the end of this process, but we are intending to get consistent content models between the FHIR and openEHR communities. Note for the HL7 community: any changes proposed to the FHIR resource are then subject to the HL7 ballot process, and we are hoping that we can work with the openEHR community when we resolve the ballot content, so that we can continue to have aligned models.
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The Australian Association of Practice Managers (AAPM) and NEHTA are hosting webinars commencing in June

Created on Monday, 02 June 2014
The Australian Association of Practice Managers (AAPM) and NEHTA are hosting a series of webinars commencing in June.
Opportunity to gain CPD Points
These webinars are free for AAPM members and presentations will be available on both the AAPM and NEHTA websites following the webinars.
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An app to eyeball in emergencies

20th May 2014
Dr Rosemary Atkinson  
DEVELOPED by ophthalmic and emergency clinicians in NSW as a guide for medical staff in EDs across NSW, this app is the modern form of the hardcopy and online manual which has been available for NSW Health junior doctors for many years.
It provides a quick guide to recognising the important signs and symptoms of common eye emergencies as well as providing basic management and a referral guide.
Key features
The common eye emergencies are divided into Trauma, The Acute Red Eye and Loss of Vision. Under each of these headings are the potential differential diagnoses. Each condition includes information on immediate action (if any), history, examination, treatment and follow-up including when to refer to an ophthalmologist.
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Online pharmacies 'may endanger patient health'

Date June 3, 2014

Beau Donelly

Online prescription services are undermining GP and pharmacy standards and can put patients at risk, health experts warn.
Doctors selling drugs over the internet without meeting patients face-to-face have come under fire for writing prescriptions without seeing their medical records.
Critics say the services make it easier to self-diagnose and discourage patients from going to their doctor to ensure medications are not causing adverse reactions.
There are also concerns about confirming patient's identities and that some imported drugs may not meet Australian standards.
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Experts warn of dangers of online drug renewals

Date June 5, 2014

Beau Donelly

An online service that offers prescription drugs without a visit to a GP has been launched amid warnings it could put patients at risk.
Health experts have expressed concern that doctors are selling drugs on the internet without meeting patients face to face or without access to their medical records.
NSW-based prescription service Doctus promotes itself as a convenient and safe alternative to visiting the GP. It offers 450 medications that have ''minimal potential for abuse or adverse side effects'', including drugs for blood pressure, cholesterol, emphysema, asthma, STDs and non-narcotic pain relief.
Patients complete an online questionnaire that is reviewed by a doctor. If approved, they are charged $25 for the prescription plus the cost of buying the drugs and postage.
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Palliative care in the spotlight

2 June, 2014 Amanda Davey
Linked with inadequate care for dying patients, the widely popular Liverpool Care Pathway (LPC) has been given the boot in the UK, a development that could have implications for doctors here.
Used to develop end-of-life care pathways (EOLCPs) in Australia, the LCP was found to be fraught with legal, ethical, safety and clinical practice difficulties, along with poor diagnosis of dying in clinical care.
Now with its demise, there is an urgent need to examine current palliative guidelines, according to Dr Raymond Chan, a cancer researcher at the Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital.
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SmartWard Pty Ltd Selects AdaCore Tools for Hospital Information System Development
AdaCore has announced the adoption of its GNAT Pro Ada Development Environment and CodePeer static analysis tool by the Australian healthcare informatics companySmartWard Pty Ltd for use in implementing its state-of-the-art patient care management system. The SmartWard system needs to be highly reliable and secure from unauthorized access, it has to provide real-time response and 24×7 availability, and it also must be easy to use by hospital staff. After evaluating alternative potential approaches, the company selected the Ada language and AdaCore software development tools as the best solution for meeting these requirements. The SmartWard system replaces a paper-based, manual approach that is time-consuming and error prone.
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The NBN's ballooning fibre repair bill

The latest figures on the rollout of the National Broadband Network are a bit of a mixed bag for NBN Co and Communications Minister Malcolm Turnbull.
The construction process is showing signs of stability but getting people on the fibre to the premises (FTTP) footprint connected is still proving to be a problem. It’s a legacy issue that NBN Co needs to get on top of lest it end up sinking the entire project.
One hurdle, it would seem, is defective fibre connections, which have reportedly stopped about 118,000 premises from getting connected.
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A third of NBN not working, figures reveal

Date June 6, 2014

David Ramli and James Hutchinson

Sources close to NBN Co said it would cost more than $100 million to fix the buildings already passed, ­including up to $40 million in extra fees to contractors. Photo: Rob Homer
About 118,000 homes and businesses that should be connected to the national broadband network can’t use the service because of defective fibre connections.
The government-owned company building the network is set to pay ­contractors tens of millions extra to fix the problems and resolve a two-year negotiation stalemate.
Figures obtained by Fairfax Media reveal that more than 118,338 premises counted as covered by the NBN as of last week need millions of dollars of repairs.
The underground pipes that connect the buildings to fibre cabling on the street are damaged or missing.
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Emotional robot for sale in Japan next year

Date June 6, 2014
Zoom in on this story. Explore all there is to know.
A cooing, gesturing humanoid on wheels that can decipher emotions has been unveiled in Japan by billionaire Masayoshi Son who says robots should be tender and make people smile.
Son's mobile phone company Softbank said that the robot it has dubbed Pepper will go on sale in Japan in February for 198,000 yen. Overseas sales plans are under consideration but undecided.
The machine, which has no legs, but has gently gesticulating hands appeared on a stage in a Tokyo suburb, cooing and humming. It dramatically touched hands with Son in a Genesis or ET moment.
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This Is the Richest, Most Colorful Picture of the Universe Ever

By Chris Taylor1 hour ago
Gaze upon the vastness of creation, ye mighty, and despair.
The Hubble telescope may be on its last legs — it's expected to cease functioning sometime between 2014 and 2020 — but for now, the trusty 24-year old orbital camera is still sending back scenes of unsurpassing beauty in the heavens. Such as this picture NASA released Tuesday, a photograph 11 years in the making:
What are we looking at here? Some 10,000 galaxies. Light that goes back 12 billion years, almost all the way to the beginnings of the universe (take that, Creationists). And an image that, for the first time, stretches across the full spectrum of light, from infra-red to ultra-violet, catching what looks like just about every frequency in between.
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Enjoy!
David.

Sunday, June 08, 2014

It Seems Apple Has Decided To Take An Interest In Health IT. Big News?

Possibly on of the biggest bit of news in E-Health came from a very recent Worldwide Apple Developers Conference in San Francisco.
Here is some of the coverage:

Apple health app may bring HIE evolution

Source: Evan Schuman Date: Jun 4, 2014
Apple is rolling out an app to piece together healthcare information from many third-party apps, including from health systems, to give consumers and providers a new comprehensive medical view, setting the stage for new approaches to information exchange.
The new offering is called Apple HealthKit, although the app itself is simply called Health. It is impressive in its ability to present patients and doctors with a holistic view of medical data. The power of HealthKit, though, relies on changes in an Apple development tradition, where data for any app cannot be accessed by any other app or (for the most part) by the operating system. Although that data-sharing promises huge potential healthcare benefits, it also raises serious questions about security and privacy.
Apple's vision is that Health would collect a wide range of healthcare information – temperature, blood pressure, pulse, exercise speed/duration, photos/videos of a rash or the patient demonstrating motion limitations, glucose level, oxygen saturation, sleep apnea monitors, daily diet, etc. – via assorted Apple apps, from medical facilities, fitness apps from a bicycle manufacturer, sporting goods chain or perhaps a cereal company.
When data that a patient feeds into a trusted healthcare app, such as one from Mayo, is shared with other apps, there is the potential for that data to be lost in a data breach of one of those other third-party apps. If that happened, the Mayo patient would likely blame Mayo, even if the fault was within another company.
"Who allowed that Mayo data to migrate to that other app?" would be the patient's question.
"Our legacy is trusted and affordable care," said Dr. John Wald, the medical director for the Mayo Clinic's public affairs and marketing operation. "If we lose that trusted aspect, we've lost everything. We are committed to maintaining that trust."
And here:

Apple and Epic: A privacy disaster? — DeSalvo introduces interoperability roadmap — We stand amended

By ASHLEY GOLD | 06/05/14 10:01 AM EDT
With help from Arthur Allen and David Pittman
APPLE + EPIC ARE PAIRING UP TO TAKE YOUR HEALTH DATA: eHealth’s David Pittman takes a look at the Apple HealthKit announcement and what it means for patient privacy in an article coming out later today. Pretty perfect timing-we’re at the Health Privacy Summit this week, where the topic of who owns patient data and how to protect it is present in everyone’s mind. “Patient privacy watchdogs raised questions regarding privacy and data collection with health apps in Apple’s new operating system, worrying it could usher in a new era of trampled privacy rights…Privacy laws that govern what doctors and hospitals can and cannot do with patient information don’t apply to mobile health apps, meaning they are largely free to sell and disseminate the information collected.” Stay tuned for the full story coming this morning for Pros.
eHealth tweet of the day: @VinceKuraitis: Apple & Epic working together — like 2 porcupines mating. #HealthIT https://twitter.com/VinceKuraitis/status/473850891779715072/photo/1
And here:

Apple Includes Comprehensive Health Platform In iOS8

Greg Goth
JUN 2, 2014 9:58pm ET
As expected, Apple announced a major health platform in its new iOS8 mobile operating system at its Worldwide Developers Conference in San Francisco.
The company's Health app and HealthKit API platform include partnerships with Nike and Mayo Clinic, which Apple says will facilitate integration of personal health information across applications and among healthcare providers of a consumer's choosing.
"The new Health app gathers the information you choose from your various health apps and fitness devices, and provides you with a clear and current overview in one place," Apple said in announcing the new platform. "iOS 8 offers developers the ability for health and fitness apps to communicate with each other. With your permission, each app can use specific information from other apps to provide a more comprehensive way to manage your health and fitness. For example, the Nike+ apps using NikeFuel will be able to pull in other key HealthKit metrics such as sleep and nutrition to build a custom user profile and improve athletic performance."
And here:

Apple reveals tracking app HealthKit and partners with Mayo Clinic, Epic

By: Jonah Comstock | Jun 2, 2014        
company announced its rumored native health tracking platform, which we now know to be called HealthKit. Rumors have circulated that the tracking platform would be called HealthBook, though we noted previously that was probably not the official name.
“Developers have created a vast array of healthcare devices and accompanying applications, everything from monitoring your activity level, to your heart rate, to your weight, and chronic medical conditions like high blood pressure and diabetes.” Apple senior vice president of Software Engineering Craig Federighi said at the event. “But up until now the information gathered by those applications lives in silos. You can’t get a single comprehensive picture of your health situation. But now you can, with HealthKit. HealthKit provides a single place that applications can contribute to a composite profile of your activity and health.”
The platform HealthKit comes with a user-facing app simply called “Health”. 
“With Health, you can monitor all of the metrics you’re most interested and your activity, but not just that,” said Federighi. “You can use third-party applications. Now we carefully protect your privacy, so you have total control over which applications have access to your health information. But you can of course provide different activity, weight, heart rate information to the Nike app. And Nike’s working to integrate HealthKit, so they use that information to help you in your personalized fitness goals.”
And here:

Apple's first step into health tracking small but powerful

Date June 3, 2014 - 10:21AM

Samantha Murphy Kelly

Apple has marked its first steps into the health and fitness-tracking market with the introduction of its new Health app for iOS, which will debut to iPhone owners this fall.
Although Apple mentioned daily tracking capabilities and partnerships with companies like Nike and the Mayo Clinic, there wasn't anything revolutionary included in the announcement (which was already slim on details) that isn't on the market now.
But that's not to say something big isn't coming. Apple is likely just getting started.
"The app is a good move for Apple because anything that can simplify healthcare is smart, but what they did today was just make an entrance into the space," said Skip Snow, a healthcare analyst at Forrester Research. "There are many apps out there that already offer what they plan to do, but we know there's a lot more to come."
And last here:

Apple iOS 8 to offer health and home features, work more closely with mac

Date June 3, 2014
Apple has introduced new health and connected-home features for the software powering the iPhone and iPad, laying the groundwork for a busy second half of the year as the company seeks to rev up its growth.
The company announced the new mobile software, iOS 8, at its annual developer conference in San Francisco. The update, which Apple expects to release between September and November this year, includes HealthKit, which lets people monitor their health and acts as a data hub for fitness apps, and HomeKit, which includes home-automation elements so people can control locks, garage doors and lights from their devices.
Apple also showed new mobile search features that give direct links to relevant web pages if users are making certain common queries, letting people avoid Google. The company added new text messaging features, including a predictive typing tool, and a new feature to help people store more photos on their iPhones.
Apple's rivalry with Google was evident. Chief executive officer Tim Cook made several digs at Google's Android mobile software, including criticising it for having weak security.
The event was also used to announce the new version of Apple's home operating system for Macs, dubbed Yosemite, which includes a streamlined toolbar for using the calendar, clock and calculator. Apple also includes redesigned icons for apps included in the system - even the trash bin for holding unwanted files.
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This looks like a very interesting initiative and it certainly has involved some of the very big names (Epic, Mayo Clinic etc.)
Of course we all remember the failed efforts on Personal Health Records from Google  and the very slow progress that Microsoft has made with HealthVault.
Given the false starts we have seen in the past my feeling is we simply wait and see while keeping an active watching brief on what is happening and how well it is working.
Clarity on just what problems the HealthKit is intended to solve will also be of interest over time.
I thought a little sad a tiny Australian Start-Up had got caught up in this and may be disadvantaged.
See here:

What's in a name? Aussie 'HealthKit' firm unhappy with Apple

But anyone who thinks this is the start of a serious legal fight is simply wrong
Ryan Faas (Computerworld (US)) on 07 June, 2014 01:46
An Australian company has made a big deal this week of taking umbridge with Apple's use of the name HealthKit. That company, whose chief product is an app and service that allows users to aggregate health data from a variety of sources and send that data to their doctors, is named HealthKit.
It's obvious why the company's co-founder, Alison Hardacre, has -- intentionally or not -- started a media firestorm about Apple's use of the name. Apple's HealthKit, unveiled during the company's Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) keynote on Monday, is based on what appears to be the same concept and uses the same name.
Stories about the brouhaha have spread throughout the tech and mainstream media. Most of them include comments from Hardacre originally published in Australia's Business Spectator, as well as a statement that she's considering legal action against Apple.
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David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 221 – Results – 8th June, 2014.

Here are the results of the poll.

Should A Formal Business Case Be Developed And Made Public To Justify The Planned Changes And Investment In The PCEHR?

For Sure 84% (59)

Probably 9% (6)

Neutral 1% (1)

Probably Not 0% (0)

No - Not Needed 6% (4)

I Have No Idea 0% (0)

Total votes: 70

Very interesting. Good participation with a clear majority (90%+) of those who responded saying we need a proper justification and testing of any PCEHR repair proposals. Also very, very few fence sitters this time as well.

Again, many thanks to all those that voted!

David.