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."

Thursday, July 10, 2014

Review Of The Ongoing Post - Budget Controversy 10th July 2014. It Is Sure Going On and On!

Budget Night was on Tuesday 13th May, 2014 and the fuss has still not settled by a long shot.
Here are some of the more interesting articles I have spotted this seventh week since it was released.
It was interesting to see the AMA President continue come out so strongly against the co-payment. Does not bode well for success in the Senate when it changes on July 1. The level of comment on this issue is also seemingly unending.
Listening to the political conversation last week it seems like very little of the Government’s agenda has an assured passage through the Senate any time soon!
What we are also seeing is DoH and indeed much of the Government flailing about - quite unclear on a number of fronts just what is coming next. Every day it seems to look more like a chook raffle! The first headline below says it all! Best I have seen in a good while.
We sure do live in interesting times!
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General.

Govt 'charm' will get budget passed: Pyne

  • July 04, 2014 10:12AM
CHARM - that's how the Abbott government will get its controversial budget through the new Senate.
EDUCATION Minister Christopher Pyne reckons the government will get its agenda passed despite the concerns of key crossbenchers.
"I'm quietly confident that given the charm of members of the government - and the obvious excellence of our program - that we will get most of our program through," Mr Pyne told the Nine Network on Friday.
The government needs the votes of six out of eight crossbenchers, with the Palmer United Party's voting bloc of four key to success.
Negotiations with the new senators have begun in earnest as they prepare to take up their seats in the upper house on Monday.
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Tony Abbott and his fading $25 billion sales pitch

Phillip Coorey
Outside the Senate entrance on Friday morning in sub-zero temperatures, Palmer United Party Senator Dio Wang found himself being grilled over the big issue. Did he, too, think Tony Abbott was a psychopath?
“Not my choice of words,” said Wang, or words to that effect as he politely dissociated himself with the rambling attack on the Prime Minister the day before by his PUP colleague, Jacqui Lambie. Wang, like Lambie, has not yet met the Prime Minister. Unlike Lambie, he will reserve his judgement until then.
Welcome to the new Parliament and the issues commanding its initial focus. Goodness knows what the Prime Minister must be thinking about the task ahead, which begins in earnest next week when his agenda and the nation become hostage to the new Senate and its myriad characters who, Coalition Senate leader Eric Abetz pointed out this week, were “all God’s children”.
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Tony Abbott's changes to universities and health 'a crime, absurd', says Nobel Prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz

Date July 3, 2014

Peter Martin

Economics Editor, The Age

The government's plan to deregulate universities is "a crime" and the move for co-payments for medical services is "absurd" in the view of visiting Nobel prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz.
Asked by Fairfax Media to nominate the two biggest mistakes the government could make that would take it down the American path of widening inequality and economic stagnation, Professor Stiglitz chose the budget changes to university fees and Medicare. Each would make Australia more like the US.
"Countries that imitate the American model are kidding themselves," he said. "It seems that some people here would like to emulate the American model. I don't fully understand the logic."
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Former World Bank economist says Medicare reforms ‘absurd’

3rd Jul 2014
NOBEL prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz has slammed as "absurd" the Abbott government's health reforms, saying they would take Australia down the American path of widening economic inequality and stagnant growth.
Professor Stiglitz said budget changes to Medicare, including the planned introduction of a $7 co-payment, were the biggest mistakes the government could make along with the plan to deregulate university fees. 
Warning that the government should not crib its policy directions from the US, he praised the Australian health system. 
"Your outcome per dollar is probably the best or one of the best. Your equality of access is one of the best," said Professor Stiglitz, who is in Australia on a speaking tour. "Why would anybody… try to make your system like the American system? The US is at the bottom," he told the Sydney Morning Herald
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Health report card reveals excellent grades

Date July 1, 2014

Ross Gittins

It’s good news week. There are lots of bad things happening in the world and journalists regard it as their job to dig them out and wave them in front of your face. No piece of disheartening news should go unreported.
But good things are happening, too. And I often think people would enjoy reading the news more if we didn’t ignore so many of them.
One of the main jobs of the federal government’s Australian Institute of Health and Welfare is to produce a report card on the state of Australia’s Health every two years. The latest edition is just out and it’s crammed with good news.
Perhaps our most basic desire is to delay our death, and on this score we’re doing particularly well. "Australians have one of the highest life expectancies in the world and can expect to live about 25 years longer, on average, than a century ago," the institute says.
In 1910, a baby boy could expect to live for 55 years and a baby girl 59 years. Today it’s 80 and 84. That puts us sixth highest on the world league table for boys and seventh for girls, but the countries coming top – Iceland and Japan – beat us by less than two years. And we leave the Yanks for dust.
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Labor says Federal Budget is “concerning” for HIV sector

Shadow Health Minister tells the Star Observer there is “nervousness” in the HIV sector over possible funding cuts.
HIV prevention efforts could be hampered by the introduction of the new $7 GP co-payment and funding cuts in the recent Federal Budget, Shadow Health Minister Catherine King has told the Star Observer.
The Labor health chief’s comments follow a meeting in Sydney with a number of groups including health body ACON, the Australian Federation of AIDS Organisations (AFAO), the National Association of People With HIV Australia and Organisation Intersex International.
“I think it’s really concerning,” said King.
“The GP tax will have a significant effect on the community both in terms of access to general practice, in terms of keeping people well but also on prevention and making sure that we continue down the pathway of reducing incidence of HIV.
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Private health insurance carrot feels more like a stick

Date June 28, 2014

Colin Cosier

Video journalist

When I turn 31 this week I’ll join a group of Australians who will be financially penalised for not having private health insurance. I’m not alone. Just more than half of all Australians are not insured.
I’m not covered because I don’t earn enough money to justify the premium and I don’t need it because I’m already covered under our perfectly adequate public health system, Medicare.
But, as a 1983 vintage, I’m about to cross the government’s starting line for the Lifetime Health Cover initiative.
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Health Department Moves.

Subsidy for diagnostic HbA1c moves closer

30 June, 2014 Melissa Davey
The final hurdle is in sight for government-funded diagnostic HbA1c testing for diabetes, with Federal Health Minister Peter Dutton considering a recommendation that the test be listed on the MBS.
The Medical Services Advisory Committee, the gatekeeper to the MBS, recommended HbA1c be funded for diagnosis of diabetes earlier this year.
Dr Graham Jones, spokesman for the Royal College of Pathologists of Australasia, said the college was strongly requesting funding approval for diagnostic HbA1c testing, in order to bring Australia in line with international recommendations.
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Funding for nurses in GP surgeries threatened by ruling

By SAM RIGNEY

July 2, 2014, 10:38 p.m.
CHANGES to multidisciplinary care in GP surgeries will place even more strain on the region's 650 overworked doctors, according to the Hunter's primary healthcare body.
Hunter Medicare Local said its members had raised concerns over a new Department of Health ruling which says nurses can no longer have the time they spend contributing to health assessments claimed under the Medicare Benefits Schedule.
Traditionally the time nurses spent on the assessments would be added to the GP's time when deciding whether to bill for a brief, standard, long or prolonged consultation.
Hunter Medicare Local board member and GP Dr Milton Sales said those patients were typically bulk billed, meaning the nurse's activity would become unfunded.
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Govt backflip on MBS claiming for nurses

3rd Jul 2014
THE government has swiftly scrapped a policy to disallow Medicare rebates for practice nurses who perform health assessments, only days after it was revealed.
The backflip came in response to a storm of protest by doctors, nurses and practice managers after the position was revealed on an obscure Medicare website on Monday.

GPs and managers were outraged, saying they would have to dismiss practice nurses who played a key part in their business plans and warning the move would have a serious impact on community health, especially for the elderly.
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Medicare backflips in GP nurse saga

3 July, 2014 Paul Smith
The looming GP nursing crisis has been averted after Medicare appears to have binned it is warning to doctors they cannot include nurse time when claiming MBS health assessments.
The warning was issued by Medicare on Monday but has now mysteriously been disappeared.
It declared that Medicare had been offering the "incorrect" advice to doctors over the last four years on the use of the items which underpin the Healthy Kids Checks and assessments for refugees, elderly patients and those at high risk of chronic disease.
The time nurses spent on the health assessments could not, as previously suggested, be added to the doctor's time in calculating which item to claim. 
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Pharmacy.

Consumers hoodwinked by supermarket pharmacist ploy: Guild

30 June, 2014 Chris Brooker
Concerns about supermarket encroachment into healthcare have been ignited by pictures of what may be a pharmacist working in a retail outlet, part of an attempt to “hoodwink consumers”, the Pharmacy Guild of Australia believes.
The pictures (one of which is attached) show a person in a white coat standing in a supermarket aisle. They were described by the Guild as a “disturbing development” and as part of a plan to convince consumers they are receiving professional healthcare advice in supermarkets.
The photographs follow recent advertisements on employment website Seek.com by consumer engagement company, XPO Brands, looking for health professionals.
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Woolworths ‘health check’ scheme slammed

1st Jul 2014
DOCTORS and pharmacists are up in arms over Woolworths’ scheme to offer health checks in supermarkets by trainee chemists and nurses.
AMA president Associate Professor Brian Owler said the supermarket giant should drop a scheme to have graduating pharmacists and entry-level nurses conduct blood pressure and cholesterol tests for shoppers.
Professor Owler said the checks would encourage shoppers to think they could skip seeing their doctor.
“This is a dangerous idea that must be stopped before it gets off the ground,” he said.
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The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners call for Woolworths to scrap health checks

  • PerthNow
  • July 02, 2014 4:41PM
Royal Australian College of General Practitioners president Liz Marles.
ONE of the country’s top doctors’ groups has called for the immediate scrapping of a plan to introduce health checks to supermarkets.
Nurses have been performing free blood pressure and cholesterol checks at nine Woolworths supermarkets since October.
Woolworths said yesterday it would review the trial extensively before expanding the service to more stores.
The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners today joined the growing chorus of critics of a plan to introduce health checks to supermarkets, calling for the program to be scrapped.
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Pharmacy groups fight over supermarket plans

3 July, 2014 Chris Brooker
A war of words has erupted between two pharmacy representative groups in the wake of the Woolworths' pharmacists in supermarkets saga.
Following the retail giants belated denial that it was responsible for advertisements calling for pharmacy students and graduates to conduct “health checks”, the Pharmacy Guild of Australia and Professional Pharmacists Australia are now in conflict over the union’s purported support of Woolworths.
In a release on Tuesday, Professional Pharmacists Australia said it “welcomed the introduction of Woolworths’ program” where pharmacists perform basic health checks in supermarkets, saying it “provided an alternative employment pathway for young pharmacists and could improve health outcomes for the community”.
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Guild argues against corporate pharmacy model

3 July, 2014 Chris Brooker
Deregulation of the Australian pharmacy sector would lead to the proliferation of “corporate” models of practice, the Pharmacy Guild of Australia believes. 
In its submission to the Federal Government’s national competition policy review, the Guild says this high volume/low margin approach would focus on profitability and maximising shareholder value at the expense of independent community pharmacies.
“This model is particularly unsuitable to the practice of pharmacy because the need to decrease costs would put pressure on less profitable parts of pharmacy practice, in particular levels of professional care and ensuring that all Australians continue to have equitable and timely access to the full range of scheduled medicines,” said Guild executive director, David Quilty, writing in Guild newsletter, Forefront.
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Pharmacists not entitled to reimbursement: economist

4 July, 2014 Chris Brooker
Australian pharmacists do not have a “special entitlement” to taxpayer funds to ensure their profitability, says a health economist who is calling for a Productivity Commission review of the sector.
In an editorial in Australian Prescriber, Professor Philip Clarke of the Centre for Health Policy Program and Economics at the University of Melbourne, a well-known critic of the current pharmacy model, dismisses Pharmacy Guild calls for price disclosure compensation.
“If the government compensates pharmacists for more rapidly declining generic prices, should it not also compensate firms that sell computers or mobile phones, as they also face declining profit margins from falling prices?” 
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2 July 2014, 8.20pm AEST

Turf war? Woolies' health checks fuss not just about patients

Wendy Lipworth

Senior Research Fellow, Bioethics at University of Sydney
When supermarket chain Woolworths announced plans to offer in-store “health checks” earlier this week, health groups came out in force to criticise the move. But scratch the surface and it’s apparent that the criticisms aren’t just about protecting the public.
The checks, which have been pitched by Woolworths as a service for their customers, will see final year pharmacy students, graduating pharmacists, and nurses measuring blood pressure and cholesterol, among other things.
Professional health groups, the Pharmacy Guild and the Australian Medical Association (AMA) have reacted negatively. AMA president Brian Owler has described the proposal as:
“a dangerous idea that should be stopped before it gets off the ground.”
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Medicare Local Impacts.

Health leadership concern

By GABRIEL WINGATE-PEARSE
June 30, 2014, 10:53 p.m.
THE Hunter has a battle on its hands to keep local control over vital health services.
And health professionals fear that without the right mix of experience and expertise, Hunter Medicare Local will lose its bid to become a player in the federal government's soon-to-be unleashed "primary health network".
That would open the door to private health insurers such as Medibank Private or BUPA to take over primary healthcare services in the region.
It is widely agreed that would be the death knell for the highly prized GP Access After Hours service, and other valued services run by Hunter Medicare Local, which has a reach of 750,000 people and employs 300 staff.
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Medicare local seeks advice

By HANNAH KNIGHT
June 29, 2014, 2:52 p.m.
LODDON Mallee Murray Medicare Local has appointed Dr Ewa Piejko as a medical adviser to the organisation. 
Dr Piejko is a general practitioner in Strathfieldsaye and holds an Adjunct Associate Professor position with the Monash University School of Rural Health.
"My role as a medical adviser is really about providing some information and some practical application of how some of the projects and programs the medicare local wants to deliver for patients and how that translates into general practice," Dr Piejko said.
"So it's addressing things like how we can make some of the programs the government is rolling out more accessible to patients through general practice.
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Last day for Medicare Locals body

30th Jun 2014
THE dismantling of Labor’s regional primary care experiment has begun, with the peak body for the nation’s 61 Medicare Locals closing down after a bare two years of operation.
The Australian Medicare Local Alliance was given only about seven weeks to pack up by today’s deadline, after it was scrapped in the May budget with the loss of some 60 jobs.  
In his parting message, AML Alliance chair Dr Arn Sprogis said the existing network of Medicare Locals would be “essential and central”  to realise the government’s vision for primary healthcare through a new system of Primary Health Networks (PHNs).
“The organisational and human capital, skills and innovation embedded in existing Medicare Locals is a critical component for a successful PHN rollout, and AML Alliance has played a key role in making this possible,” he said.
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King calls on Capricornia MP to make stand on Medicare Local

2nd Jul 2014 2:39 PM
SHADOW Health minister Catherine King today called on the Member for Capricornia to stand up for the region's Medicare Local service.
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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.
The crucial New Senate is sitting for the next 2 weeks so anything may happen!
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.

Wednesday, July 09, 2014

If Managed Well It Looks Like The Opt-Out Approach For Shared Electronic Record Can Work.

This appeared a little while ago.

SCR reaches 40m patients

2 July 2014   Sam Sachdeva
The NHS Summary Care Record has hit the 40m patient mark, just over a year after low usage rates led to calls for it to be scrapped.
NHS England says it is “delighted” by the milestone, and is now focussing on rolling out the SCR in A&E, NHS 111, and GP out-of-hours services.
The SCR was one of the key projects of the National Programme for IT in the NHS.
It was intended to create the 'national' element of an integrated care records service that was otherwise to be delivered by the roll-out of detailed care record systems at trusts.
…..
The SCR was eventually given the go-head by the present government on an opt-out basis.
The record provides a core set of required clinical data, including allergies, medications and adverse reactions, pulled from GP systems, which can be viewed by health professionals involved in a patient’s care.
…..
While the 40m mark is a significant milestone, usage rates for the SCR have been a concern throughout its history.
Figures released in February last year revealed that while there were more than 22m records in existence at the time, they had been viewed just 240,000 times.
This led to some calls for the programme to be scrapped. However, by the end of the year, NHS England was reporting that SCR usage rates among clinicians had risen to an all-time high of 12,000 views a week.
The HSCIC told EHI that the SCR now gets 19,000 views a week and that the number continues to grow.
GP practices will be required to provide an automated upload of their summary information to the SCR, or have published plans in place to achieve this, by 31 March 2015.
…..
Full article is here:
What we have had here is a gradual approach with proven infrastructure and a decision to keep the shared record as simple as possible - so it met the desired purpose of providing basic key information when it was needed in emergency rooms etc.
It has eventually worked, I believe, because it has not fallen into the trap of excess complexity and detail which added very little value and which made the system unwieldy. Pity those driving the PCEHR did not follow a similar approach. What was happening in the UK was well known well before the PCEHR was designed. Technical overreach is how I would describe what DoH and NEHTA were guilty of!
David.

Tuesday, July 08, 2014

Sometimes The Headline Does Not Quite Reflect What The Article Actually Says!

This appeared last week:

Hambleton gains industry’s approval

THE appointment of Steve Hambleton as chairman of the ­National E-Health Transition Authority has been welcomed by the industry, which hopes for an overhaul of the agency that delivered the troubled $1 billion personally controlled e-health records system.
Dr Hambleton, immediate past president of the Australian Medical Association, replaces David Gonski, who completed the maximum two terms, or six years, as NEHTA chair.
Dr Hambleton was a panel member on the government review into the PCEHR.
The Consumers e-Health Alliance said it was interesting to contemplate the role Dr Hambleton needed to play as incoming chair of NEHTA.
CeHA is an unincorporated, not-for-profit organisation that counts chronic illnesses, disabilities and carer organisations as partners. They include Alzheimer’s Australia, Aged Care Association of NSW, Arthritis Australia, Leukaemia Foundation of Australia, Heart Foundation and Stroke Foundation.
“Dr Hambleton participated in the Gang of Three which reviewed the PCEHR and produced 38 recommendations,” CeHA convener Peter Brown said.
“The government has not yet decided what to do about them, but Dr Hambleton’s appointment, and his acceptance … it would be odd if these recommendations were not to be adopted in some agreed way.”
Mr Brown said comments by NEHTA that Mr Gonski was “responsible for revitalising its board, and galvanising co-operation between the governments of Australia to deliver urgently needed infrastructure and standards for health information” were inaccurate. “Neither of these claims are supported by evidence. I’d suggest they are based on misinformation,” he said.
“I don’t believe Mr Gonski would support such claims. I have no doubt he tried hard, but it would not have been possible to revitalise the NEHTA board as by its very nature it was inadequately equipped to do its allotted job.”
Mr Brown said the NEHTA chair had no control over the composition of its board, whose members are mandated to comprise representatives of federal, state and territory governments who provide its equity funding with each appointing a board member.
“The appointees, in the event, were the chief executives of each government’s health entity, none of whom were likely to possess the required experience, and in any case were likely to be ­replaced with each cabinet ­reshuffle, entity restructure or change of government,” he said.
Lots more here:
What I found very interesting here was the view that essentially the previous Chairman had essentially failed and that there was little chance of change into the future - without the dissolution of NEHTA which puts Dr Hambleton out of a job. Does that mean he will have a role in the new structure?
It is also of interest that it is not NEHTA but rather the Department of Health that owns - with Human Services operating - the PCEHR. Just what influence NEHTA has had in recent times on the PCEHR seems to have been rather constrained.
I just get the feeling there is a bit of woolly thinking about how e-Health governance is now operating - and with the lack of clarity as to what the future looks like until we see the much delayed response to the PCEHR Review.
David.

Anyone Have Any Idea What Is Going On Here? It Seems Really, Really Odd To Me.

This appeared overnight:
July 07, 2014 08:15 ET

MMRGlobal CEO Bob Lorsch Meets With Prime Minister Tony Abbott, and Signs Patent License Agreement With Leading EMR Systems Provider in Australia

LOS ANGELES, CA and SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA--(Marketwired - Jul 7, 2014) - MMRGlobal, Inc. (OTCQB: MMRF), through its wholly owned subsidiary, MyMedicalRecords, Inc. (collectively, "MMR"), and Claydata® today jointly announced the signing of a patent license agreement. Claydata, headed by CEO Joseph Gracé, M.D., is a leading Australian health information technology provider based in Sydney and provides its eHealth products and services to a number of healthcare organizations from over 800 referring doctors, many of which utilize Personal Health Record (PHR) services from Claydata that will fall under the license agreement. The agreement was signed following a week of meetings with the private sector and Australian officials, including Prime Minister Tony Abbott, in connection with a program designed to generate revenue in Australia through a private sector business cooperation initiative between the United States and Australia. The program focuses on economics, sustainability, tourism, music & entertainment, food & wine, arts & culture, defense, political partnerships, healthcare, technology and other commercial opportunities. The meetings also focused on opportunities in the Trans-Pacific Partnership which includes 12 member countries, of which MMR owns relevant health IT patents and other intellectual property in seven of them, specifically, the United States, Australia, Canada, Japan, Mexico, New Zealand, and Singapore.
The Claydata agreement calls for MMR to receive license fees based on a percentage of the gross sales of Claydata's products and services revenue. In exchange, Claydata benefits by being the first end user to license to MMR's portfolio of Personal Health Record and eHealth patents in Australia and New Zealand, which include but are not limited to Australian Patent Nos. 2006202057 and 2008202401, New Zealand Patent No. 566650, and U.S. Patent Nos. 8,117,045; 8,117,646; 8,121,855; 8,301,466; 8,321,240; 8,352,287; 8,352,288; 8,498,883; 8,626,532; 8,645,161 and 8,725,537. This allows Claydata to offer its services to customers with complete assurance that end users would not be infringing on MMR's patents.
The agreement also gives Claydata the right to offer selected MMR proprietary features and benefits from the MyMedicalRecords Personal Health Record on a revenue sharing basis in addition to the payment of license fees. Dr. Gracé is also currently the Medical Director of the North Shore Medical Group, North Shore Heart Clinic®, North Shore Vein Clinic® and North Shore Homecare Services.
Dr. Joseph Gracé said, "There are tremendous changes in healthcare going on in Australia and throughout the Asia Pacific region. This agreement gives Claydata the opportunity to sell our interoperable systems to customers with a license to MMR's IP. The agreement also gives Claydata the right to resell MMR's MyMedicalRecords product to the clients we serve."
Using MMR's patented IP and Claydata technologies, healthcare professionals can provide patients and any number of treating doctors, (including emergency room physicians and staff) access to complete, secure and private medical information whenever and wherever it's needed from anywhere in the world regardless of the number of treating physicians and the technology on the other end of the PHR. The Claydata patient portal also reduces healthcare costs, eliminates unnecessary duplicate testing and delays in obtaining treatment, as well as other wasteful and potentially dangerous practices facing patients.
Dr. Gracé is a highly respected physician who has been practicing medicine in Sydney for more than 26 years. The inspiration for Claydata and its suite of medical software came from Dr. Gracé's frustration with existing practice management systems. As a result, he designed and built the Claydata hospital and ambulatory care solutions. Dr. Gracé will assist MMR in introducing both the MMR platform of patented Personal Health Record products and services and related intellectual property along with strategic partner 4medica's integrated EHR (iEHR®) platform to physicians, providers, information providers and government agencies in Australia.
Dr. Gracé's extensive medical experience has accorded him Fellowships with the Australasian College of Phlebology, the Royal Australasian College of General Practitioners, and the Australian College of Nutritional and Environmental Medicine. Among other achievements, Dr. Gracé has taken Claydata's innovative eHealth technologies to the NSW Trade & Investment's INNOVATE NSW Collaborative Solutions conference and developed a consortium partnership with the University of New South Wales' Asia-Pacific Ubiquitous Health Care Research Centre.
More here:
There is some press coverage here:

Claydata seals deal with MMR

Fran Foo

Technology Reporter
Sydney
E-HEALTH provider MyMedicalRecords has inked a patent licensing agreement with Sydney-based health IT solutions provider Claydata.
MyMedicalRecords, a subsidiary of MMRGlobal, said the deal allows Claydata to offer its services to customers with the assurance that end users would not be infringing MMR’s patents.
Last year MMR alleged that the National E-Health Transition Authority, developer of the personally controlled e-health records system, had infringed its patents.
Claydata will be first end user to license MMR’s portfolio of personal health record and e-health patents in Australia and New Zealand, MMR said.
More here:
You can read the long but also pretty odd history of Claydata here:
Questions include:

1. How does this all involve the Prime Minister?

2. What does this mean for other PHR providers - including NEHTA?

3. Who is actually using Claydata software and in what role. Has anyone actually heard of them and what market segment do they lead?

4 . What does this mean for the whole medical software sector

Anyone who can add more feel free to comment!

Very, very odd!

David.

Monday, July 07, 2014

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 7th July, 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

Again a pretty quiet week and for another week we have no response from the Government regarding the PCEHR Review. I wonder what the hold up is?
This must soon be moving from slowness to straightforward incompetence.
The second last entry I find fascinating with Australia having been internet connected for 25 years!
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Hambleton takes over as NeHTA chair

High profile corporate and education leader David Gonski has stepped down from his role as the chairman of the National eHealth Transition Authority (NeHTA) and will be replaced by the immediate past president of the Australian Medical Association (AMA), Dr Steve Hambleton.
The changing of the guard comes as the cross-government body tasked with making a national electronic health and medical records scheme a functional reality faces a pivotal year after its funding was extended for just one year in the federal Budget.
The departure of Mr Gonski was widely anticipated as he is ineligible to serve a third term as chairman under NeHTA’s constitution.
Mr Gonski, whose name has since become synonymous with the ambitious education reforms of the former Labor Federal government, became the NeHTA’s chairman in 2008 and is widely credited with keeping the massive and frequently challenged project alive through his quiet but formidable style of diplomacy.
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Hambleton explains his e-health vision

3 July, 2014 Clifford Fram
Former AMA president Steve Hambleton has seen the future.
It’s a seamless computer system that keeps Australian doctors and hospitals up to date about all their patients’ test results and all the medicines they are taking, in real-time with little effort on their part.
“We will get the ability to minimise unwarranted clinical variations. We will be able to securely share information with and about our patients,” says Dr Hambleton, who has accepted an appointment to replace David Gonski as chair of the ­National E-Health Transition Authority.
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Hambleton gains industry’s approval

THE appointment of Steve Hambleton as chairman of the ­National E-Health Transition Authority has been welcomed by the industry, which hopes for an overhaul of the agency that delivered the troubled $1 billion personally controlled e-health records system.
Dr Hambleton, immediate past president of the Australian Medical Association, replaces David Gonski, who completed the maximum two terms, or six years, as NEHTA chair.
Dr Hambleton was a panel member on the government review into the PCEHR.
The Consumers e-Health Alliance said it was interesting to contemplate the role Dr Hambleton needed to play as incoming chair of NEHTA.
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Dr Hambleton appointed Chair of NEHTA

03/07/2014
The National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA) CEO Peter Fleming announced last week that Dr Steve Hambleton, AMA immediate past President has been appointed the new Chair of NEHTA.
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A healthy new record system is born at Mater

Jennifer Foreshew

Technology Reporter
Sydney
MATER Health Services had a web-based platform for managing and co-ordinating student clinical placements but needed to add reporting functionality.
The organisation, based in Brisbane, manages more than 2600 undergraduate students across its own nursing program and through medical, allied health and midwifery placements from partnered universities.
The Catholic organisation runs seven hospitals, a medical research institute, three health centres and pathology and pharmacy businesses.
Mater has more than 7500 staff and volunteers providing care for more than 500,000 ­patients each year.
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Doctors not sharing their iPads

3 July, 2014 Michael Woodhead
Doctors like using iPads when interacting with patients, but only for their own benefit in looking up information and not for sharing with patients, it seems.
When senior doctors at a Sydney teaching hospital were given iPads to use on ward rounds, they found them useful for accessing test results and medication charts — but wouldn't give the patients a look-in.
Despite being given the iPads to enable them to more easily share clinical information with patients, the 10 doctors followed in a Sydney study said they didn't have time on busy ward rounds to be passing an iPad to-and-fro and they still preferred to deliver information verbally.
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Fiona Stanley IAM project has failed: WA audit

$6 million spent, fate of project to be determined
Adam Bender (Computerworld) on 30 June, 2014 15:36
An identity access management (IAM) project for the Fiona Stanley Hospital in Western Australia has failed due to poor management, according to a government audit.
“Project planning was deficient and governance and oversight including monitoring of progress was inadequate,” according to an Information Systems Audit Report released today by the WA Office of the Auditor General.
The IAM project for the new hospital was meant to provide anywhere, anytime access to IT systems and physical hospital buildings for authorised individuals.
The project commenced in 2011, but the WA Department of Health stopped development in October 2013. At the time of the decision, $6 million of a budgeted $9.2 million had been spent.
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June Update

The For Providers site aims to assist medical practices to navigate their way through the complexities of eHealth; from planning, preparation, registration and set-up through to use.
Below are links to new information and resources available on the For Provider site:
 Education
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Australian Medicines Terminology (AMT) v3 model release

Created on Monday, 30 June 2014
The National Clinical Terminology and Information Service (NCTIS) is pleased to announce that the first release of the Australian Medicines Terminology (AMT) in the v3 model format is now available.
The AMT v3 model has been designed to simplify the AMT v2 model to make it easier to understand and implement, and also to align with the IHTSDO SNOMED CT Release Format 2 specifications. A number of the changes made were informed by stakeholder engagement during the Model Review project.
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There's an app for everything - soon even for health appointments

04 July 2014 , 8:11 AM by Jacquie Mackay
CQ Medicare Local has a  really innovative idea to make health care much much easier for patients in the future.
They are developing an app that provides information about all the health care providers in the region in an easy to access directory and not only provide information about where and when the service is available but also the ability to book yourself in for an appointment.
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Technical issues plague myGov online tax return lodgement

Date July 3, 2014

Ben Grubb

The Tax Office has been hit by a technical issue which prevents people lodging tax returns and accessing other essential government services online.
The issue is related to this year's mandatory requirement for taxpayers to use a myGov login when lodging returns online. The myGov site is a portal the federal government created as a single log-in for all its services.
"We are working with myGov to fix error 5077 in etax," the Tax Office said on its website on Thursday. "We recommend waiting and trying again in a few hours, as too many attempts will lock you out. We appreciate your patience. We will post updates through our Twitter page."
The issues appeared to surface on Wednesday, when both the Tax Office and the Department of Human Service, which runs myGov, acknowledged the matter on their Facebook pages.
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Smart glasses for the blind

John Ross

Higher Education Reporter
Sydney
MOST glasses correct poor vis­ion but are unable to replace what the eye cannot see.
Now an Australian scientist has taken it one step further and developed glasses that do the seeing for you, offering some sight to the legally blind.
Australian neurologist Steph­en Hicks has led a project at Oxford University designing “smart” glasses, which are being trialled in public for the first time in the university town.
“About 90 per cent of people who are registered blind still have some sight, and often quite a bit,” Dr Hicks said.
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Health tech company helps hospital go paperless

Reporter
Saturday 05 Jul 2014 6:20p.m.
A new system is being introduced in an Auckland hospital in an attempt to cut mistakes and give doctors and nurses more time with patients.
The e-health initiative aims to make two wards paperless, and if it's successful Waitemata DHB will spread it to other services.
Born prematurely, Maria Williams depends on the high-tech world of North Shore Hospital's special care baby unit. So it's fitting that the unit will become the hub for a new technological step forward.
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Final NBN inquiry report not due till next election

Date July 3, 2014

Lia Timson

Australians are unlikely to see a full parliamentary assessment of the national broadband network until the eve of the next election, with more Senate committee hearings to come before a final evaluation of the infrastructure project is delivered.
The Senate committee on the NBN was due to table its final report on June 10. The date was subsequently changed to the “last sitting day of the 44th parliament”.
The decision extends the remit of the panel, which is made up of Coalition, Labor and Green senators.
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'Link is up': 25 years since Australia connected permanently to the internet

Date June 25, 2014

Mahesh Sharma

Twenty-five years ago this week, a satellite link connected Australia to the internet for the first time, thanks to the largesse of NASA.
The permanent connection, established at the University of Melbourne, afforded only a transmission speed of 56 kilobits per second, but was enough for NASA's internet expansion program, funded by the US Federal Networking Council, itself linked to the US Department of Defence.
The man at the Australian end of the line was University of Melbourne researcher Robert Elz whose work relationship with University of Hawaii academic Dr Torben Nielsen helped the connection.
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The next generation: How today's technology is closing in on Star Trek

Date July 3, 2014 - 10:21AM

Vivek Wadhwa

In a distant part of the galaxy, 300 years in the future, Starship Enterprise Captain James T. Kirk talks to his crew via a communicator; has his medical officer assess medical conditions through a handheld device called a tricorder; synthesises food and physical goods using his replicator; and travels short distances via a transporter. Kirk's successors hold meetings in virtual-reality chambers, called holodecks, and operate alien spacecraft using displays mounted on their foreheads. All this takes place in the TV series Star Trek, and is, of course, science fiction.
This science fiction is, however, becoming science reality. Many of the technologies that we saw in Star Trek are beginning to materialise, and ours may be better than Starfleet's. Best of all, we won't have to wait 300 years.
Take Captain Kirk's communicator. It was surely an inspiration for the first generation of flip phones, those clunky mobile devices that we used in the 1990s. These have evolved into smartphones, far more advanced than the science-fiction communicator. Kirk's device didn't receive email, play music, surf the web, provide directions or take photos, after all. It also didn't sweet-talk him as Apple's Siri does when you ask her the right questions.
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Enjoy!
David.

Sunday, July 06, 2014

I Find This A Really Scary Set Of Comments From The New NEHTA Chair. We Need An E-Health ReBoot And Soon.

This appeared a few days ago.

Hambleton explains his e-health vision

3 July, 2014
It’s a seamless computer system that keeps Australian doctors and hospitals up to date about all their patients’ test results and all the medicines they are taking, in real-time with little effort on their part.
“We will get the ability to minimise unwarranted clinical variations. We will be able to securely share information with and about our patients,” says Dr Hambleton, who has accepted an appointment to replace David Gonski as chair of the ­National E-Health Transition Authority.
The concept is little more than expensive science fiction at present, having cost taxpayers $1 billion with little to show for the money.
But the foundation is there - a system to assign a unique patient number to every Australian, common terminology for medicines and an agreed nomenclature for disease description.
Dr Hambleton is up for the challenge, although at the AMA he was a fierce critic of the process and believed there was not enough consultation with the medical profession.
“We have some foundations in place. I think we can leverage off them. I don’t see that we are going to have to start from scratch.
Lots more here:
While knowing that in an interview it is tricky to address future plans in any detail the lack of any commentary around the various issues that are presently bedevilling Australian e-Health and not signalling a realistic grasp of the scale of the task to move from where we are now to the vision enunciated in the first paragraph is pretty worrying.
Additionally there does not seem to any commentary or analysis of what has gone wrong over the last few years that has got us to where we are now.
Also it is concerning that he thinks the current e-Health infrastructure is working well. As far as I know it is barely used and has yet to add much real value.
If anyone were to ask me I would suggest Dr Hambleton’s plan should be to do three things.
First a widely consultative review of just were we are now from all relevant perspectives. The six week review was nowhere detailed enough to gain a sufficient understanding of the big picture at a sufficiently detailed level. It is this view which should then lead to an in-depth strategic plan and direction for the future which is both public and agreed by all relevant stakeholders
Second he should ensure he adds at least three recognised Australian e-Health experts to the NEHTA board and  make sure there is total transparency on the Board deliberations publically.
Third he should be working to make himself redundant by setting up the national e-Health governance and leadership framework as recommended in the PCEHR review. I would hope it would be possible to Sunset the old regime within 12 months.
Note I really don’t think NEHTA should be leading any effort in the e-Health space. This should be done by the new organisation. We need a totally different approach to the centralised government led approach that has afflicted the last few years.
What do others think?
David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 225 – Results – 6th July, 2014.

Here are the results of the poll.

Does It Make Sense To Appoint A New NEHTA Chairman Before The Government Has Responded To The PCEHR Review And The Recommendation To 'Dissolve' NEHTA?

No 50% (31)

Probably Not 10% (6)

Neutral 3% (2)

Probably 2% (1)

Yes 34% (21)

I Have No Idea 2% (1)

Total votes: 62

The majority seem to think whoever was responsible for the appointment should have waited until it was clear what was happening with NEHTA as a result of the PCEHR Review.

A good number of votes but a clear outcome with few fence sitters this time as well.

Again, many thanks to all those that voted!

David.