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, August 21, 2014

Review Of The Ongoing Post - Budget Controversy 21st August 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.
It is amazing how the discussion on the GP Co-Payment just runs and runs. Lots more this week.
Here are some of the more interesting articles I have spotted this twelfth  week since it was released.
Parliament has now got up for the Winter Recess we can take a breath and see where we are. This will end on August 26 when parliament returns
The main fun this week has been to watch Mr Hockey make such a huge mess of consultation and selling the now rather apparently dead Budget.

General.

New budget would be a second chance for the PM

Date August 11, 2014 - 12:15AM

Paul Sheehan

We may be about to see history made by the federal government, a change of direction forced on Prime Minister Tony Abbott by a hostile Senate and a hostile public. We may see a do-over budget.
The first Abbott budget has proved to be a debacle. The opinion polls provide the proof. The content, the fairness and the selling of the budget have seen a spectacular adverse turn in the fortunes of Treasurer Joe Hockey. He’s gone from being the best performer in Parliament to the best target in Canberra. His key policy of introducing a $7 service fee for visits to the doctor and putting the bulk of the proceeds into a giant fund for medical research (rather than into reducing the budget deficit, something people could understand) is one of the most maladroit policies I have ever seen.  
-----

Tony Abbott acknowledges disappointment of voters and starts to tighten up government management

  • August 11, 2014 10:20AM
  • MALCOLM FARR, National Political Editornews.com.au
Tony Abbott in Holland. Source: TheAustralian
THE groaning burden of buyer’s remorse has been acknowledged by the Abbott government, and the Prime Minister last week began steps to placate his political customers.
Opinion polls and stark anecdotal evidence has made clear that while voters are not ready to switch to Labor, they are not happy with the Coalition product they bought at the last election. The Tony Abbott era has not been the clean, efficient transition they hoped.
It hasn’t been simply a matter of switching off the turmoil of six years of Labor, and the absence of an untroubled changeover has troubled many voters.
Here are seven issues contributing to that buyer remorse.
-----

Joe Hockey's budget overtures may be too little, too late

Date August 12, 2014

James Massola

Joe Hockey is right to argue the budget needs to be placed on a more sustainable footing over the long term. It is also correct that most of the budget has already passed through the Parliament.
But that's not the point. About $40 billion in structural savings including the $7 GP co-payment, changes to welfare, higher education, other social security measures and the restarting of fuel excise indexation (to say nothing of the mining tax and its associated spending measures) are outstanding.
But even as Hockey engages in belated cross-bench diplomacy, criss-crossing the country for the last fortnight, it's hard to escape the feeling that it may be too little, too late. Public debate on measures that carry the imprimatur of the Treasurer may be lost. If anything, the fallout from the budget has worsened as the weeks have passed.
-----

Budget deadlock: Former RBA official says fresh polls could be the answer

Date August 12, 2014

James Massola

Former Reserve Bank board member Warwick McKibbin has suggested a new election may be needed to resolve the Senate impasse holding up vital budget savings, and has hit out at the political populism of the Greens and Palmer United Party.
And Bank of America Merrill Lynch economist Saul Eslake has suggested a mini-budget is ''one of the options the government needs to think about'' as consumer confidence falls, unemployment rises to 6.4 per cent and if the political uncertainty continues, which could potentially hit business confidence.
Treasurer Joe Hockey is scheduled to meet PUP leader Clive Palmer on Tuesday. Mr Hockey has rejected former Treasurer Peter Costello's call to drop the proposed $7 GP co-payment, declaring that budget critics should not write off important measures.
-----

Tone-deaf Treasurer: Joe Hockey the budget's worst enemy

Date August 14, 2014 - 6:08PM

John Hewson

Treasurer Joe Hockey made a meal of his first budget and is making an even bigger meal of settling and selling it.
He was clearly "best on field" in the run up to the budget but has been near to the worst since, with some now wanting his contract reviewed. They certainly don't see him as "foreman material".
Hockey (and Prime Minister Tony Abbott) seemed genuinely surprised that the budget was criticised and rejected so widely. Yet Hockey waited some 10 weeks before attempting to woo the essential crossbench senators and was AWOL in the media much of that time, except for the serious distraction created by the release of his ill-conceived biography, Hockey: Not Your Average Joe. This only served to further undermine the budget's integrity and to raise questions about his judgment.
-----

Uni deregulation? It’s the budget bottom line, stupid

Peter van Onselen

THE government is putting health and education policy reforms front and centre between now and the next election. Notwithstanding the rise and rise of national security as an issue set to dominate political discourse, the policy debates surrounding higher education reforms and reining in Medicare costs are central to budget discussions. They are what you may describe as core elements of the economic debate.
This creates an interesting ­dichotomy. In the minds of ­voters, Labor tends to register as the preferred party to manage health and education policy, but according to Newspoll the Coalition has long dominated as the best party to manage the economy. Which is why a Galaxy poll two weeks ago showing more voters, since the budget, trust Labor to manage the finances must have been chilling for government MPs. Arguably, managing the economics of health and education into the future is becoming more central to fiscal sustainability, given the financial constraints on government and the ageing of the population.
Last Saturday this column praised the job being done by Education Minister Christopher Pyne when it comes to setting out his agenda and negotiating reforms through the Senate. He indicated his respect for the bicameral process, and he is tackling higher education reforms previously thrown into the too-hard basket, including by the Howard government.
-----

‘Fix budget, quit the argy-bargy’: Tony Shepherd warns of loss of confidence

Annabel Hepworth

NATIONAL Commission of Audit chairman Tony Shepherd has urged the Coalition and crossbench senators to reach a compromise on the budget, warning uncertainty will drain business confidence and distract the government from other important ­reforms.
Amid escalating frustration in the business community about the Senate derailing the ­Coalition’s agenda, the former Business Council of Australia president and respected company director has likened maintaining current government spending levels to a “short-term sugar hit”.
Writing in The Weekend Australian today, Mr Shepherd says that in the “toing and froing” on the budget, people have lost sight of why government spending needs to be cut.
-----

Tony Abbott to step up budget sales job

David Crowe

CABINET ministers will move within days to reboot the government’s budget strategy after Joe Hockey sought to end a damaging row over fuel excise by apologising for the hurt caused by his ­remarks about the poor.
Tony Abbott will redouble the government’s effort to win the economic debate in a political ­offensive across cities, including a cabinet meeting in Melbourne to assess the harm to the government’s economic message.
Labor dismissed the Treasurer’s apology as coming too late and used it to heighten pressure on the government to abandon unpopular budget changes such as the $7 fee on bulk-billed visits to GPs.
-----

Joe Hockey makes things worse, say political advisers

Date August 17, 2014

Matthew Knott

Communications and education correspondent

Veteran Liberal Party campaign strategist Toby Ralph says the Germans have a perfect word for Joe Hockey's car crash of a week: schlimmbesserung.
It means an attempt to make things better that ends up making them a lot worse.
Mr Ralph, who worked on all of John Howard's election campaigns, says the Treasurer's biggest mistake was not the original defence of a rise in fuel excise by saying the ''poorest people either don't have cars or actually don't drive very far in many cases'' in a radio interview.
It was the fact Mr Hockey then attempted to defend his comments as statistically accurate - citing the total amount wealthy households spend on petrol. It was only after two full days, and a slap down from Tony Abbott, that Mr Hockey finally gave a full apology.
-----

Federal Budget to get family-friendly reboot with with mining tax concessions, university reforms, $7 GP fee and revamped $810 school kids bonus

  • Samantha Maiden
  • The Sunday Telegraph
  • August 17, 2014 12:26AM
THE Budget will get a family-friendly reboot, with concessions on the mining tax, university reforms, the $7 GP fee and a revamped $810 school kids bonus.
Determined to ensure key budget measures pass the Senate, Treasurer Joe Hockey is under intense pressure to split the mining tax legislation, which would allow the government to secure support for dumping Labor’s failed tax.
By splitting the bills, the government could axe the tax while accepting Clive Palmer’s demands to retain some of the $10 billion in popular spending linked to it.
These include the school kids bonus, the low income superannuation contribution scheme and the low income support bonus.
-----

Specialist Fees.

Doctors have a fat co-payment scheme of their own

Terry Barnes
While relentlessly attacking the federal budget’s $7 co-payment on bulk-billed GP services measure as unfair, neurosurgeon and Australian Medical Association president Brian Owler asserts doctors’ rights to charge co-payments generally. His specialist members certainly do with gusto, and presumably he does too.
If he but realises it, Health Minister Peter Dutton is ideally placed to drive a hard bargain with the AMA on containing excessive out-of-pockets, especially given the doctors’ trade union is pressuring the government to dump the $5 cut to Medicare rebates intended to drive GPs to charge the co-payment.
The ace up Dutton’s sleeve is that doctors, particularly surgeons and specialists, depend on Medicare income like a smoker depends on his nicotine fix. Even if Medicare rebates don’t cover the full cost of medical services plus a reasonable margin, their subsidies make costly specialist services accessible and affordable to most Australians on low to middle incomes, especially the pensioners and fixed-income retirees who dominate the demand for medical services.
-----

GP Co-Payment.

Government considers $7 GP fee compromise to exempt pensioners, disadvantaged

Date August 12, 2014 - 1:37PM

Latika Bourke

The government says it is looking “seriously” at a plan that would exempt pensioners and other disadvantaged Australians from paying the proposed $7 GP fee.
Health Minister Minister Peter Dutton says he has sought costs for an alternative plan being put forward by the doctors' union, the Australian Medical Association.
The AMA's counter policy would void the fee for the elderly and disadvantaged as well as indigenous Australians who visit their doctor through Aboriginal Medical Services.
Mr Dutton says he has asked his department to cost the policy.
-----

Govt costing AMA co-payment plan

  • AAP
  • August 12, 2014 4:59PM
Peter Dutton says GP co-payment models suggested by AMA and crossbenchers are being taken seriously. Source: AAP
THE Abbott government is crunching the numbers on potential changes to its unpopular GP co-payment that would exempt pensioners and other vulnerable patients.
HEALTH Minister Peter Dutton says the coalition is "seriously" considering the proposal from the Australian Medical Association as it attempts to get the $7 co-payment through the Senate.
The doctors group opposes the original model for the impost, which charges all patients $7 to visit the GP.
Key Senate crossbenchers David Leyonhjelm and Bob Day have also called for a rethink on the co-payment, while it has been rejected outright by the Palmer United Party.
-----

Clive Palmer goes quiet as Coalition seeks deals on health and education

Health minister confirms he is ‘seriously considering’ medical association’s compromise proposal on GP co-payment
Daniel Hurst, political correspondent
Clive Palmer has declined to comment on possible compromises on health and education policy, despite previously insisting his three senators would oppose any Medicare co-payment or deregulation of university fees.
The Palmer United party (PUP) leader was reluctant to express a firm position on such options before a meeting with the treasurer, Joe Hockey, on Tuesday night, which was part of the government’s attempts to avoid defeat on contentious budget measures.
Ministers signalled last week they were open to the need to negotiate changes to the health and education proposals in order to secure Senate approval, and Hockey has been using the winter parliamentary recess to travel around the nation talking to crossbench senators.
-----

Doctors chief sounds alarm on $7 co-payment

Date August 13, 2014

Dan Harrison

Health and Indigenous Affairs Correspondent

Australian Medical Association president Brian Owler has warned the Coalition's proposed $7 Medicare co-payment could destroy recent gains made in indigenous health by deterring people from seeking care.
The annual closing the gap report delivered by Prime Minister Tony Abbott in February showed the nation was on track to halve the gap between indigenous and non-indigenous infant mortality within the decade.
It also showed some improvement in indigenous life expectancy, but warned progress would need to accelerate considerably in order to meet the target of closing the life expectancy gap between indigenous and non-indigenous Australians by 2031.
Speaking to Fairfax Media in Alice Springs where he was touring health facilities, Associate Professor Owler said there was a risk that the proposed $7 fee and $160 million in other cuts to indigenous health programs would cause progress ''not only to stall but go backwards''.
-----

Co-payment faces battle in Senate

Phillip Coorey Chief political correspondent
The government is likely to increase exemptions from its proposed Medicare co-payment rather than reduce the $7 charge, Health Minister Peter Dutton has indicated.
Regardless of changes made,Mr Dutton’s task of securing its passage through the Senate remains tough.
Clive Palmer reiterated that his three senators, who have a balance of power role in the Senate, will not approve any form of co-payment, which is designed to discourage people going to the doctor a lot.
-----

AMA’s co-payment model in the spotlight

13 August, 2014 AAP
The Abbott government is crunching the numbers on proposed changes to its GP co-payment that would exempt pensioners and other vulnerable patients.
Health Minister Peter Dutton says the coalition is seriously considering the proposal from the AMA as it attempts to get the $7 co-payment through the Senate.
The AMA opposes the original model for the impost, which charges all patients $7 to visit the GP.
Key Senate crossbenchers David Leyonhjelm and Bob Day have also called for a rethink on the co-payment, while it has been rejected outright by the Palmer United Party.
-----

Clive Palmer signals he’s willing to compromise on GP co-payment

Jared Owens

PALMER United Party senators would consider supporting the government’s controversial Medicare co-payment if pensioners and low-income Australians were exempt, Clive Palmer says.
The PUP leader, following budget talks with Joe Hockey in Brisbane last night, said the pair agreed the government should “get revenue aligned with expenditure”.
Mr Palmer, who claimed in May that the purported debt crisis was “just more bullshit being fed to the Australian public”, also admitted that Australia faced a “critical economic crisis”.
-----
August 13, 2014, 12:23 am

Federal Health Minister Peter Dutton has revealed the Government is considering exempting the elderly from the Medicare co-payment proposal.

The Government does not have enough support to get its proposed $7 GP fee through the Senate.
The Australian Medical Association (AMA) has given the Government an alternative co-payment model, which the ABC understands would exempt some groups, including pensioners.
AMA president Brian Owler says the alternative model would support vulnerable people and meet the Government's need to send a price signal.
-----

Dutton hopeful on GP co-payment

  • August 14, 2014 10:11AM
  • AAP
HEALTH Minister Peter Dutton says he's still hopeful of persuading Senate crossbenchers to back his contentious GP co-payment, ahead of a dinner with Clive Palmer.
MR Dutton will meet the billionaire MP on Thursday night to discuss the Palmer United Party's concerns about the $7 charge to visit the doctor.
The government has so far struggled to sell the co-payment to the crossbenchers, but the health minister on Wednesday described negotiations as "fruitful".
"I think we can be hopeful but there is a lot of work to do and these are long-running negotiations," he told ABC radio.
-----

Pensioners miss GP safety net

Sean Parnell

Jared Owens

A MAJORITY of pensioners and other concession card holders would not benefit from the safety net built into the $7 medical ­­co-payment.
As the federal government ­negotiates with Senate crossbenchers and stakeholders to push through key budget measures, new figures from the Department of Health cast doubts over the protections built into a co-payment.
Health Minister Peter Dutton, who has agreed to consider alternatives from the Australian Medical Association, has long argued that the budget proposal includes an “appropriate safety net” for concession card holders and children, capping the number of annual co-payments to 10.
-----

Palmer and Dutton talk co-payment

14 August, 2014 AAP
Pensioners and other concession card holders may not benefit from a capped number of GP co-payments spruiked by the federal government on its proposed budget measure.
The government has argued it would cap the number of $7 co-payments for concession card holders and children to 10.
But figures from The Department of Health reveal the average number of visits for GP, imaging and pathology services by concession card holders was eight, falling short of the safety net, The Australian reports.

Few will pay the $7 GP fee under AMA plan

  • Sue Dunlevy National Health Reporter
  • News Corp Australia Network
  • August 15, 2014 12:00AM

Dutton, Palmer talk GP payment

VERY few patients will pay the $7 GP fee and the government will make almost no savings under the Australian Medical Association proposal being considered “seriously” by the government.
The AMA wants Federal Government to exempt large groups of people including pensioners, nursing home patients, indigenous Australians and the chronically ill.
The government would also have to back track on plans to cut the Medicare rebate by $5 under the plan, wiping out most of the $3.5 billion in savings.
-----

Medicare fee jeopardises Aborigines

Date August 15, 2014

Dan Harrison

Health and Indigenous Affairs Correspondent

Health leaders have warned the Abbott government's proposed $7 Medicare fee could widen the gap in life expectancy between indigenous and non-indigenous Australians.
John Paterson, the chief executive of the Aboriginal Medical Services Alliance Northern Territory, said its 26 member health services would waive the fee, incurring an annual reduction in their income of between $250,000 and $750,000 for each service.
"It's going to obviously widen the life expectancy gap. If there are any cuts, it will delay closing the gap by another 10 or 20 years," he said.
Olga Havnen, the chief executive of Danila Dilba health service, which serves about half of the indigenous population of the Darwin region, said there was "no way" it could charge the proposed $7 fee to its patients.
-----

GP co-payment and a healthier economy are polar opposites

Date August 15, 2014 - 12:15AM

Toby Hall

"While a $7 fee sounds easy, the policy flies in the face of good evidence that encourages a different approach."
Occasionally during a particularly divisive and protracted debate, someone just hits the nail on the head, an enabler who helps us to see the woods for the trees in what previously seemed intractable foggy territory. In relation to the shortfalls of the government’s proposed GP co-payment, this enabler has come in the form of AMA President Brian Owler.
At the National Press Club last month Professor Owler outlined the AMA’s concerns about the co-payment, saying it threatens “the universality and affordability for healthcare for the neediest and sickest in the community”. While touring indigenous health clinics in Alice Springs this week he foretold of the “devastating effect on people attending the clinics” the co-payment would have.
------

GP co-pay: Palmer takes on Dutton with Oz Doc stats

14 August, 2014 Paul Smith
Health Minister Peter Dutton will be attempting to save his $7 GP co-payment plan on Thursday night in a one-on-one meeting with mining mogul billionaire Clive Palmer.
"I'm going to break bread with Mr Palmer tonight and I think like all of us Mr Palmer wants to see a Medicare system which is sustainable," Mr Dutton said.
But it is likely he will get short shrift from Mr Palmer whose opposition is apparently rooted in Australian Doctor's Stop the Co-Pay Cuts: GPs make the difference campaign.
-----

'Exemptions' could kill off $7 co-pay for good

13 August, 2014 Paul Smith
Health Minister Peter Dutton seems to have put the tank in reverse gear over the GP co-payment even if he's not quite hit the accelerator.
On Tuesday, he was on the radio saying that he wants to crunch the numbers on providing 'exemptions' to his $7 co-pay for pensioners and the vulnerable.
The "exemptions" have apparently been pitched by the AMA during recent meetings and it would be good to provide the general practice community with the specifics.
But the AMA says it's all secret — so no one outside the chosen few have any idea what it's been whispering in the minister's ear.
-----

FOI reveals GP co-pay modelling

12th Aug 2014
INTERNAL emails released this week as part of a Freedom of Information request complicate an embarrassing error about general practice made in the aftermath of the May budget.
An email exchange between two bureaucrats suggests Treasurer Joe Hockey was briefed on the average number of times Australians visit the doctor, despite going on to incorrectly claim they visit their doctor 11 times a year while justifying the $7 co-payment.
A treasury official emailed a health department bureaucrat on 9 May — four days before the budget was handed down — asking for numbers on access to pathology and diagnostic imaging for concessional and non-concessional patients. The email quoted statistics on the average GP visits, which showed concession card holders accessing services at a far greater rate than their non-concessional counterparts.
-----

'Disastrous' GP co-payment under fire

15 August, 2014 Neda Vanovac
Implementing the federal government's $7 GP co-payment proposal would be disastrous for indigenous healthcare, the AMA  president says.
Associate Professor Brian Owler has been touring the Northern Territory since Monday, including visits to Alice Springs, the Tiwi Islands and Darwin, and says the GP co-payments have been the key issue raised with him.
"Everyone who knows anything about indigenous healthcare and anyone who's been to the NT will realise it's just impractical to suggest you're going to be charging $7 for each GP and clinic visit and each pathology or X-ray test you order," he told AAP on Thursday.
In its current form, the co-payment would cost remote healthcare providers up to $14 per patient, or about one-third of the cost of the consultation.
-----

Modernising Medicare: Don’t reinvent the wheel, just use the co-payments we already have.

Michelle Hughes | Aug 15, 2014 7:51AM | EMAIL | PRINT
 Margaret Faux writes:
It seems that despite overwhelming opposition to the co-payment plan, the Abbott government is determined to press ahead, though success in the Senate may be challenging.
Most Australians by now would agree that a considered and coordinated multipronged reform approach is more likely to produce sustainable outcomes and ensure the long term viability of Medicare than blunt quick fixes such as GP co-payments. But if we must make a sudden cut to costs, a much better place to start than primary care might be our current aftercare arrangements. It’s an outdated concept where savings in the vicinity of $400 million per annum could be achieved without too much fuss and with no loss of income for doctors, pensioners or the poor.
-----

Medicare Locals.

Hunter Medicare Local's finances to be examined

By GABRIEL WINGATE-PEARSE

Aug. 15, 2014, 9:30 p.m.
THE embattled Hunter Medicare Local has come to the notice of the Federal Department of Health which will be putting the $35 million company’s finances under the microscope.
The department issued a statement on Friday saying it is undertaking a performance audit of the organisation, which runs the ‘‘jewel in the crown’’ of the Hunter primary health system, the highly acclaimed GP Access After-Hours Service.
The future of Hunter Medicare Local is hanging in the balance with no funding guaranteed past June when the 61 Medicare Locals around Australia will be replaced with a smaller number of Primary Health Networks.
-----

Model GP clinic raided by Medicare

Sean Parnell

AN indigenous health service promoted by the Abbott government as a model for the primary care sector is under investigation for ­alleged misuse of Medicare funds.
The Weekend Australian has learned the Murri Health Group, which runs GP and dental clinics and an outreach service north of Brisbane, has been raided by Medicare investigators after allegations were raised about its operations.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott’s parliamentary secretary for indigenous affairs, Alan Tudge, earlier had visited the service and declared its “model of success” could be replicated across Australia.
“They haven’t had government funding and are delivering terrific results,’’ Mr Tudge said after a tour of the Murri Medical clinic at Caboolture with local Liberal Party colleague Wyatt Roy in January.
-----

Pharmacy, PBS and Medicine Issues.

News Review: Which aisle has the blood tests?

11 August, 2014 Chris Brooker
The threat posed by retailers to community pharmacist ownership of pharmacies is a recurring theme in Australian pharmacy history.
It is also once again topical, after what seems to be an abortive attempt, since denied, by supermarket giant Woolworths to have young pharmacists running in-store 'health checks'.
The situation first came to light when advertisements recently appeared on employment website Seek.com, placed by consumer engagement company, XPO Brands, looking for health professionals.
-----

Services and technology keys to the future: Tambassis

14 August, 2014 Christie Moffat
Pharmacy must overcome resistance to increasing its service offering if it is to survive, a senior Pharmacy Guild figure believes.
Speaking at an event in Melbourne today, Guild national president George Tambassis emphasised the importance of incorporating technology and adopting better services into community pharmacy.
Mr Tambassis spoke at the ‘Pharmacy Freedom’ event this morning, which featured the launch of Transpharmation, a multimedia pharmacy business guide by pharmacist Robert Sztar.
-----

Remuneration for services a 6CPA necessity: Sinclair

15 August, 2014 Chris Brooker
Remuneration for services must be at the centre of the next Community Pharmacy Agreement, one of its key negotiators believes.
Paul Sinclair, president of the NSW branch of the Pharmacy Guild of Australia, says services such as Webster packaging, free home deliveries and providing after-hours and weekend access “must now be remunerated if they are to be maintained”.   
Mr Sinclair, who will head the Guild’s negotiating team for the Sixth CPA negotiations, due to commence this year, said in the NSW Guild Bulletin said “much of what we have done for so long has gone unacknowledged, because it has been effectively cross-subsidised by generic trading terms.”  
-----
Comment:
It seems the fuss is not yet settled - to say the least.
Lots to browse with all sorts of initiatives going rather pear shape - think security, sanctions and so on! I also have to say reading all the articles I have no idea what is actually going to happen with the Budget at the end of the day!
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, August 20, 2014

It’s Really Wonderful To See The Quality Gobbledegook NEHTA Comes Up With!

Spotted this a few days ago.
Here is the full page:

Our Work

eHealth Reference Platform

The eHealth Reference Platform is a clinically validated technical simulator for eHealth, with technical services and sample code supporting demonstration, training and development testing.
There are no articles in this category. If subcategories display on this page, they may contain articles.
 Link is here:
This is really one of the funniest pages I have seen in a good while and just typifies the old and failed NEHTA mindset. User understanding, not technology, is what is needed to e-Health to ever work.
There is a prize available for the first person to explain just how you clinically validate a technical e-Health simulator.
It is this sort of focus and direction of effort by NEHTA that confirms NEHTA has its priorities all wrong.
Just why exactly does a content-less page like this exist?
The sooner they are ‘dissolved’  and transferred to a more useful clinically and consumer orientated entity the better as far as I am concerned.
David.

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Just Why Would It Be That A Study Funded By The Public To Assess The PCEHR Be Kept Secret By NEHTA?

This appeared late last week.

GPs slam PCEHR in secret report

14th Aug 2014
THE personally controlled e-health record is running chiefly on “goodwill”, and time-poor GPs say they have little reason to embrace it in its current form, according to a confidential report of the National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA) obtained by MO.
The report, dated 5 June, is a clinical impact assessment of the integration of e-health into primary care. It was prepared for a NEHTA program established to address major functionality and usability issues in the PCEHR.
Fifty-seven general practices responded to an expression of interest to take part, but 10 did not respond to emails or phone calls, six withdrew interest and four were ineligible because they weren’t using the PCEHR.
NEHTA ultimately received 35 completed questionnaires and selected 14 practices for face-to-face interviews.
Respondents said the time outlay was “onerous”; patients who had records did not know what they had signed up for; and that practices had to wear the cost of extensive troubleshooting, spending time “explaining and re-explaining their issue to multiple tiers of support personnel”.
The report also said the Practice Incentive Program eHealth Incentive did not incentivise practices to actually use the system, and that the “business case for PCEHR does not fit into the workflow of general practice”.
The report reinforces criticism that NEHTA’s focus has been on the technology rather than education and adoption.
Although the study set out to determine the proportion of primary care organisations likely to be affected by usability issues, it could not do this because “the sample is biased towards e-health experience and thus not representative of general practice in Australia”, the report conceded.
Lots more individual comments reported here:
What can I say other than what we know the NEHTA and DoH have delivered a dud and should be fundamentally re-considered in the light of a properly updated and agreed National E-Health Strategy.
Just consulting on the PCEHR in the absence of a deeper review is a farce.
Just release the report, fix leadership and governance of e-Health, confirm a proper national strategy and then decide what to do. Please not the cart before the horse!
David.

Monday, August 18, 2014

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 18th August, 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

Quite an interesting week with all sorts of amusement on the consultation regarding the PCEHR and the HIC Conference revealing that morale in the e-Health sector is less than ideal with the credibility of the those who are leading the e-Health Program failing to generate much in the way of confidence in their leadership. Will be interesting to see how things play out.
Enjoy the articles.
-----

Implementation of Australia's PCEHR system reviewed

By Michael Morris (view CV) and Phil O'Sullivan
At the end of 2013, the Federal Minister for Health announced a panel review into Australia’s Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record (PCEHR) system to consider implementation and uptake issues. The subsequent report, made public in May 2014, puts forward 38 recommendations to address the issues identified, which includes the recommendation that the PCEHR system should be transitioned to an opt-out model.
An edited version of this article first appeared in eHealth Law & Policy Journal for the July 2014 edition.
-----

PCEHR survey a banana skin for govt

12 August, 2014 Ruby Prosser Scully
The Federal Department of Health has been savaged for "appallingly bad practice" after running an online survey on the PCEHR that asked people to name their favourite fruit.
Alongside questions on "opt-out models" and PCEHR patient privacy was the question, "Which do you like best?", to which respondents could choose from "option apple", "option banana" or "option cherry".
Apparently the question was a default setting on the SurveyMonkey online system that bureaucrats used to run the questionnaire.
The banana question was later changed to: "What clinical measurements need to be included in a shared health record?"
The bugs have now been fixed.
-----

GPs slam PCEHR in secret report

14th Aug 2014
THE personally controlled e-health record is running chiefly on “goodwill”, and time-poor GPs say they have little reason to embrace it in its current form, according to a confidential report of the National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA) obtained by MO.
The report, dated 5 June, is a clinical impact assessment of the integration of e-health into primary care. It was prepared for a NEHTA program established to address major functionality and usability issues in the PCEHR.
Fifty-seven general practices responded to an expression of interest to take part, but 10 did not respond to emails or phone calls, six withdrew interest and four were ineligible because they weren’t using the PCEHR.
-----

Big Data: Exciting – until it’s not big data

| Aug 13, 2014 12:00PM | EMAIL | PRINT
Big data is everywhere at the moment, with many believing it is the next big leap in medicine.  So great is the interest in this area that Health Affairs journal recently dedicated an issue to the progress, possibilities and challenges of using big data in health. Big data obtained from thousands of electronic records combined with predictive analytics is thought to have huge potential not only in identifying patients at risk but in areas such as research and fraud detection.
In America, many companies are jumping in to see where big data can take them in health care.  Not surprising given that, according McKinsey , making sense of big data in health could save in excess of $300 billion a year in the United States.
In an article in the MIT Technology Review “Can technology fix medicine?”  a number of potential uses for big data currently being explored are discussed including understanding drug compliance, receiving alerts for potential adverse drug interactions and determining genetic predisposition.
-----

Analytics, Jamie Oliver and the quantified self

According to Dr Pradeep Philip, Secretary of the Victorian Department of Health, we’re on the cusp of seeing a radical reconceptualisation of the health system. This is coming through the rise of consumer sovereignty – the desire of consumers to have a voice in the services and products that they are accessing, as well as the rise of big data.
“Consumers want to be part of a health system where results are co-produced,” argues Dr Philip. “It’s a simple argument. Across the economy we are seeing a reconceptualization of consumer sovereignty, and now that is occurring in healthcare.”
Speaking exclusively with eHealthspace.org following his presentation at the HIC Conference, held in Melbourne earlier this week, Dr Philip said the best way to understand this reconceptualization is through the way that patients are communicating with each other - and with their clinicians.
-----

Our Work

eHealth Reference Platform

The eHealth Reference Platform is a clinically validated technical simulator for eHealth, with technical services and sample code supporting demonstration, training and development testing.
There are no articles in this category. If subcategories display on this page, they may contain articles.
-----

Question: sending PDFs via HL7 v2

Posted on August 11, 2014 by Grahame Grieve
This question is a follow up to one asked on Stack Overflow
Question:
On stack overflow you asked me to look at MDM message type. My question is that I know some systems can’t handle MDM message types so if this is the case how could sending of a url for a pdf be handle in that case?
What is the best way(appropriate message/event type) to put a url for a pdf in an hl7 message(ie what are the message types and segment, etc.. that are appropriate)?
Also does the HL7 standard allow for the unsolicited pushing of pdf messages whether it be a url to a message or an actual pdf document encoded in hl7? For example if an ADT message came in and was successfully loaded into my system and I wanted to create an hl7 message to send out with the link or embeded pdf that i created. What hl7 message would i use to send?
-----

ONC Hearing on the JASON Report – openEHR perspective

Recently I was asked to provide testimony to the ONC hearings on the JASON report, from an openEHR point of view. I did so on 31 July 2014. The JASON report is entitled “A Robust Health Data Infrastructure”. It surveys the problems of health data interoperability, and proposes the adoption of a unifying ‘software architecture’ as the solution. It also seems to imply a federated health record database. It’s primary assumption appears to be that APIs are the key element of the solution, and that their standardisation will fix the problem.
I made some comments on the report, as well as to specific ONC questions. These are attached below, and is summarised as follows:
  • the problem needs further articulation before a wide-ranging ‘solution’ can be defined.
  • the nature of the problem (as known by many of us working for many years on it) is such that a ‘software architecture’ can only be a small part of any overall approach, and that the solution concept needs to be reframed as an open platform definition.
  • most of the semantics that needs to be standardised are outside software and APIs, and found in artefacts like terminology, DCMs/archetypes, guidelines and ontologies.
  • defining APIs without detailed content and workflow definitions won’t solve the problem.
  • a content-based querying methodology needs to be part of any solution.
-----

Tech giants gambling on health technology

Date August 9, 2014

Mark White

When pharmacist Thuan Vuu plays basketball, he laces his feet into a pair of Nike Hyperdunk+ shoes fitted with a sensor that sends data to his iPhone. He can see how far he’s run and how high he’s jumped, and by setting himself goals – he aims for at least two kilometres per game – he can not only play to win, but also have a benchmark for a successful workout.
The trim and cheerful 29-year-old from Fairfield, Sydney, also has a Fitbit activity tracker, which measures steps taken, calories burnt and movement during sleep. His phone’s SleepBot app records sleeping activity, a Wahoo cadence meter reports how hard he pedals his pushie, and an Adidas miCoach chest strap and foot pod log his heart rate, step pace and G forces while training.
He logs his spending on YouNeedABudget.com and has bought the Meitrack device for his car to track his driving habits. He weighs himself on Aria Wi-Fi smart scales – and lost six kilograms by noting and varying his diet – and is thinking of buying the Cue at-home lab kit, which tests for five factors including vitamin D levels.
-----

Wearable device for seniors keeps tabs on their health

Date August 15, 2014 - 11:56AM
Most fitness trackers monitor the habits of relatively self-aware, healthy individuals — those looking to lose weight or hit a steps goal each day — but a new device intended for seniors keeps tabs on how they're doing and alerts caregivers when something might be wrong.
Tempo, by CarePredict, is a wristband tracker that doubles as a watch and logs the daily activities of its users. The product is currently looking for backers on crowdsourcing website Fundable, where it's listed for $US169.
Tempo looks to identify early warning signs of health issues that usually begin as changes in normal behavior patterns and even factors in activities like cooking, tooth brushing and eating to paint a better picture of the wearer's mental health.
-----

Robots pave way for a better way to see life

John Ross

BLIND people could soon swap canes for a handheld gadget which emerged from research to help robots navigate.
American psychologists have found that the device, which looks like a TV remote control, works as well as canes in helping blindfolded novices get around.
They say it could help relieve the “emotional stigma” that ­afflicts visually impaired people, particularly children, by removing the need to carry a white stick.
-----

Doctors fear turning off a patient's pacemaker risks murder charge

Date August 17, 2014 - 12:15AM

Julia Medew

Health Editor

Doctors are calling for Australians with pacemakers to write clear instructions about the circumstances in which they would like them switched off in case they want doctors to help them die at some point in the future.
While doctors have long been making decisions to withdraw ''life support'' measures for people in circumstances where the care is futile or the patient does not want to live with extreme disability, they say increasing requests for people's pacemakers to be turned off raise difficult ethical questions and may even expose them to criminal charges of murder, manslaughter or assisted suicide.
A leading intensive care specialist from Newcastle, Peter Saul, said one technician at his hospital refused to turn off a dying woman's pacemaker at her daughter's request because he feared being accused of killing the woman in potentially unethical or illegal circumstances.
-----

Medicare and PBS remuneration to be outsourced

11 August, 2014 Christie Moffat
The Australian Government is calling for Expressions of Interest from the private sector to take on claims and payment services for Medicare and the PBS.
A Department of Health advertisement appeared in The Australian Financial Review last Friday, calling for “dynamic and innovative commercial solutions” to improve the current collection and payment system.
Currently, the Department of Health contracts the Department of Human Services to deliver the system, which remunerates doctors and other health professionals.
-----

RBA may lose health payments to private sector

Joanna Heath

Key points

  • The RBA’s transactional banking division looks after Medicare and PBS contracts for the government.
  • Bupa, Medibank and Australia Post among those potentially interested in taking over payments.
The Reserve Bank of Australia could lose one of its historic functions under a plan to outsource government health payments to the private sector.
The central bank’s transactional banking division, which processes ­payments and transfers on behalf of some government departments and deposits money into personal bank accounts, handled $455 billion for the government in 2012-13.
One segment of its responsibilities is processing Medicare and pharmaceutical benefit payments for the ­Department of Human Services, a ­function that would be outsourced under a plan to make government more efficient.
-----

The next big thing in apps: Tech and the health revolution

Wednesday, 13 August 2014 15:20
Dennis Benjamin
Remember the popularity of video shops? I missed investing in them when they were hot. Suntan clinics? Was never interested in those as an investment, and they’re decidedly not hot now. Pizza chains, any of them – damn, another hot investment sector got away!
Want to know the next hot thing? It’s health. Not surprising really. Our average age is increasing, according to the US CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Trends in Aging), the Australian Bureau of Statistics and my good old doctor, Dr Goldberg.
We're getting older and taller but heavier. Put simply, health is on our minds a lot more. It’s not surprising therefore that health will play a larger part in communications and, more particularly, mobiles and apps.
-----

GPs' test result systems confusing patients

13 August, 2014 Michael Woodhead 4 comments
Faced with increasing numbers and complexity of tests, general practices may need to upgrade their systems for communicating results to patients, researchers say.
Many practices are still relying on informal and ad hoc protocols to communicate test results to patients, and run the risk of catastrophic consequences from mistakes, according to a survey carried out by primary care researchers at the University of Birmingham, UK.
Their review found that while informal systems often worked well, they sometimes left doctors, practice staff and patients unsure as to who was responsible for communicating results.
Practice staff also faced an increasing workload in communicating ‘normal’ results to patients, while there was a lack of a fail-safe system for abnormal results, the review in Family Practice found.
-----

Sick asylum seekers treated via video conferencing

Date August 11, 2014 - 12:15AM

Sarah Whyte

Immigration correspondent

Sick asylum seekers on Christmas Island are being offered videoconference appointments with specialists on the Australian mainland after damning evidence showed the deplorable state of medical services in immigration detention.
Fairfax Media understands at least one young woman on Christmas Island, who has been complaining of stomach aches for four months, was told this week that she would be seeing a specialist via videolink and the appointment would happen immediately. 
The woman says she was told by nurses that if she did not accept the video link then ‘‘there mustn’t be anything wrong with her’’, but that medical professionals at both ends would discuss her medical history. 
-----

GP video consults in aged care on trial

A pilot program to test the viability of introducing Medicare-funded GP video consultations with aged care residents is currently underway in nine regions across the country.
The four-year trial funded by the Department of Social Services involves eight Medicare locals and aged care provider Feros Care.
The pilot will evaluate the possible inclusion of new telehealth items on the MBS as well assess the clinical appropriateness and impact of videoconferencing to deliver GP services in aged care.
-----

Australian hospital accidentally declares 200 patients dead

SYDNEY Thu Aug 14, 2014 2:25am EDT
Aug 14 (Reuters) - An Australian hospital apologised on Thursday after mistakenly sending out death notices for 200 of its - very much alive - patients.
Austin Hospital, in Australia's second most populous city of Melbourne, erroneously killed off the patients when it faxed death notices to their family doctors.
The notices were the result of an inadvertent change to the templates the hospital sends to doctors once a patient has been discharged, operator Austin Health said in a statement.
-----

Bianca Phillips: Telemedicine risks

Bianca Phillips
Monday, 11 August, 2014
PATIENTS in Australia can now access online medical prescription services — both overseas and Australian based — without the need to actually see a doctor.
Some services allow patients to select their own medications from a list and nominate their dosage requirements. The patient simply completes a questionnaire to assess their suitability for the medication and is asked to attest that they have read a medicine information sheet. Payment is made online with the option of having the drug or the prescription posted to the patient.
The prescription is written by a doctor who reviews the completed questionnaire but there is no face-to-face consultation.
It is questionable whether these online services can provide a holistic assessment of patient wellbeing, and sufficient counselling about medication risks and correct dosage requirements. On one website information sheets contain a significant amount of medical jargon, while another site requires the patient to navigate through several webpages to access the information.
------

Telstra - up, up and away

It’s happy days at Telstra. All the numbers are up, with a hefty dividend increase, Australia’s biggest telco has announced its financial results for 2013-14. To nobody’s surprise, they are extremely healthy.
CEO David Thodey, five years in the helm, has presided over a vast improvement in Telstra’s fortunes. All key indicators are way up, and there are no dark clouds on its horizon. Those who invested in the three share floats and stayed with the company during the dark days of the unlamented Sol Trujillo have been handsomely rewarded.
…..
He said investing in new businesses and growing in new geographic markets was essential for Telstra’s growth ambitions, and good progress had been made through investments in the areas of eHealth, Global Enterprise and Services (GES) and Global Applications and Platforms (GAP).
“We continued to grow our capabilities in eHealth, acquiring DCA eHealth Solutions and 50% of Fred IT,” said Thodey in his statement announcing the results. “We also signed licensing agreements with Dr Foster, iScheduler and InstantPHR, building on our objective to deliver eHealth solutions via connectivity of health services, electronic health records and electronic prescriptions.
-----

Seven ways DARPA is trying to kill the password

From analyzing the way you walk to your heartbeat, these futuristic authentication systems could be here soon
A seemingly constant stream of data breaches and this week's news that Russian hackers have amassed a database of 1.2 billion Internet credentials has many people asking: Isn't it time we dumped the user name and password?
A lot of the best technology of today exploits biometric factors such as retina patterns, fingerprints and voice analysis, but beyond that a number of researchers are looking to tap into the way we think, walk and breathe to differentiate between us and an intruder.
Helping to lead the research is DARPA, the U.S. military's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. Its active authentication project is funding research at a number of institutions working on desktop and mobile technologies that work not just for the initial login but continuously while the user is accessing a device. The array of sensors already found in mobile phones makes some of the ideas particularly interesting.
-----

New NBN Co report blames company board for delayed rollout

Date August 13, 2014 - 6:02PM

Matthew Knott

The early rollout of the National Broadband Network was stymied by a board which lacked the necessary skills and experience to deliver the nation’s biggest infrastructure project, according to a damning review of NBN Co governance under the Rudd and Gillard governments.
The report, by advisory firm KordaMentha, also suggests the NBN Co board should have been more forthcoming to the government when it received independent advice raising concerns about the lack of directors with telecommunications and government enterprise experience.
The report, one of several commissioned by Communications Minister Malcolm Turnbull into the infrastructure project, was tabled in Parliament late on Wednesday. It follows the release of another review last week by former Telstra executive Bill Scales which found the Rudd government used a ''rushed, chaotic and inadequate'' public policy process to develop the NBN. 
-----

Government says 'no thanks' to NBN committee recommendations

Recommendation to revisit strategic review process rejected by Coalition
The federal government has issued a formal response (PDF) to the set of recommendations contained in in the interim report of the Senate Select Committee on the National Broadband Network.
The interim report was released in March. For the government to accept the recommendations of the Labor and Greens dominated committee would have represented an about-face by the Coalition, which since coming to power last year has moved to replace the Labor and Greens-backed fibre-to-the-premises NBN model with a 'multi-technology mix'.
The formal government response, signed by communications minister Malcolm Turnbull and finance minister Mathias Cormann, rejects three of the committee's recommendations — that NBN Co submit a revised strategic review; that the process of producing a "document with the deficiencies evident in the Strategic Review" be investigated, and that the "Senate amend the Committee's Terms of Reference to enable ongoing and robust Parliamentary oversight of the National Broadband Network".
-----

Over 1,800 exoplanets discovered and confirmed

As of August 11, 2014, the number of extrasolar planets (or exoplanets) that have been discovered and confirmed stands at 1,815. 
Exoplanets are defined as any planet that orbits a star outside of the Earth’s solar system. Therefore, an exoplanet may orbit, for instance, a star other than the Earth's Sun, a stellar remnant, or brown dwarf.
Two organizations (among others) are collecting data on exoplanets. One is The Extrasolar Planets Encyclopaedia at http://exoplanet.eu/. The Extrasolar Planets Encyclopaedia was developed and is maintained by the Exoplanet Team (http://exoplanet.eu/team/). 
-----
Enjoy!
David.

Sunday, August 17, 2014

Draft Submission To PCEHR Review Consultation - August 2014

Here is my draft submission. Comments are very welcome to improve it.
-----

PCEHR Review Consultation Submission - DG More - August 2014

Introduction

The following submission has been prepared to offer some commentary and input to the process now underway, being facilitated by Deloitte, to ascertain stakeholder views on the Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record System (PCEHR) and the recommendations  of the recently undertaken PCEHR Review which was commissioned by the Federal Health Minister in September 2013 and released publically in May 2014.

Author Of Document

This document is authored by Dr David G More MBBS BSc(Med) PhD FANZCA FCICM FACHI.
I have had over 20 years involvement, in one form or another, in the area of Health Information Technology (e-Health) and been a contributor to many projects in the area including the development of the 2008 National E-Health Strategy.
I am reasonably well known in Health IT circles as the author of a blog on Health IT (www.aushealthit.blogspot.com) which has now been in operation continuously since 2006 and I have been widely quoted in the professional clinical press, the national press and in reports published by the Parliamentary Library.
I have no financial interests in any entities involved in Australian Health IT and receive no payments from the work I undertake in the area.
Over the last 4-5 years I have made submissions in the Health IT domain when requests for such submissions have been made by Government and these are available on the DoH website (www.health.gov.au).

Purpose Of This Document

The purpose of this document is to make one simple point, namely, that to be consulting on the future of the PCEHR, in the absence of the context of the overall Australian Health IT environment, capabilities and requirements, and a current and agreed  National E-Health Strategy,  would seem to be very risky and dangerous and very unlikely to lead to success with the PCEHR Project.
There are a range of points that need to be made to support this view.
Firstly there is presently absolutely no evidence that in two years the PCEHR - which commenced operation in July 2012 - has made any difference to the quality or safety of patient care in Australia. Indeed there have been essentially zero efforts to assess the impact of the system despite reported investment of more than $1 Billion in the system over the last few years.
Secondly, for reasons best known to herself,  the former Federal Health Minister (Ms Nicola Roxon) (advised by NEHTA and DoHA) chose to proceed with an architecture and design for the PCEHR which had never been implemented elsewhere and which had simply no evidence base supporting what was designed and then implemented. Similarly there was no business case developed for what was planned.
Thirdly, as delivered the system has proven to be of little interest to both clinicians and consumers with most consumers being registered and then never accessing the system again. In essence the PCEHR is ‘neither fish nor fowl’ and fails to provide attractive usefulness and utility for any class of user.
Fourthly, there has not been any sufficiently deep process to place the PCEHR in the context of the overall national needs to Health IT and to allocate appropriate priorities for investment based on the available evidence of what works and what doesn’t. I defies logic that this consultation is being undertaken in the absence of publication of a full update of the National E-Health Strategy to inform discussion and assist in direction setting.
Fifthly, it is very unlikely, in my view, that anything other than a fundamental re-design of the National E-Health System is likely to succeed. This would seem to be likely to be very expensive and should only be undertaken in the context of widespread stakeholder agreement and enthusiasm for such a re-design.
Lastly, it makes just no sense to have a consultation process on the PCEHR being conducted and reported to the Department of Health who are the owners of and accountable for the PCEHR. Surely the new Governance Model or similar (as recommended in the PCEHR Review) should have been put in place first and  then driven the consultation process?  

Concluding Remarks

This submission makes one simple, and to me incontestable, point. To attempt to adjust, modify or fix the PCEHR in the absence of an updated and agreed National E-Health Strategy is pure folly and doomed to fail. It is true there can be many benefits for patient care, patient safety and health system efficiency with properly designed and implemented Health IT. What is presently happening will not have that happen I believe. Six week reviews and six week  consultation periods are not the way to achieve the optimal deployment and use of Health IT we all seek. Both DoH and NEHTA have proven themselves to have very considerable difficulties with the implementation aspects of Health IT and to not have a clear roadmap for the future just multiplies the already high risks of failure. It surely is critical the present senior management of Health IT need to go!
I am, of course, more than happy to discuss all the points made here in whatever level of depth might assist the consultation process.
David G More - August 18, 2014.
Post Script:
Among readers of my blog there appears to be a great deal of scepticism that the planned and current consultation is ‘fair dinkum’.
AusHealthIT Poll Number 231  – Results – 17th August, 2014.
Here are the results of the poll.

Do You Believe The Consultation Process Being Conducted By DoH On The PCEHR Is 'Fair Dinkum'?

Definitely 4% (2)
Probably 2% (1)
Neutral 2% (1)
Probably Not 13% (6)
Of Course Not 79% (37)
I Have No Idea 0% (0)
Total votes: 47
Very clear cut. 92% do not think the consultation process is ‘fair dinkum’.
Again, many  thanks to all those that voted!
David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 231 – Results – 17th August, 2014.

Here are the results of the poll.

Do You Believe The Consultation Process Being Conducted By DoH On The PCEHR Is 'Fair Dinkum'?

Definitely 4% (2)

Probably 2% (1)

Neutral 2% (1)

Probably Not 13% (6)

Of Course Not 79% (37)

I Have No Idea 0% (0)

Total votes: 47

Very clear cut. 92% do not think the consultation process is ‘fair dinkum’.

Again, many thanks to all those that voted!

David.