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
Another quiet week with a lack of news on pretty much anything e-Health from the Government. In the private sector, however, all sorts of things are happening as witnessed by what follows.
If there were 2 themes this week they were security and interoperability / standards. Both are getting a good deal of attention all over and right now this seems more that warranted.
It
is also good to see e-Mental Health getting more coverage and interest -
as from trials it is clear that some of these interventions work very
well indeed.
Enjoy the read.
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In the summer of 2012, psychiatrist-turned novelist Benjamin Hurst was dreading the prospect of going home to Australia after living in the Big Apple for two years. He was finishing off his first novel while attending classes in creative writing.
He was looking for a way to stay in the US and turned to his friends for advice. One of those friends told Hurst to apply for a job at ZocDoc, an online medical appointment booking service.
He checked out the site and was immediately drawn to the business model, which allows patients to book medical appointments using a simple app on their smartphone. It also got his creative juices flowing. “This was a good idea that I could implement,” he told Technology Spectator. “It allows me to combine my creativity with my knowledge of the medical system.”
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Date September 30, 2014 - 9:48AM
Reporter, WA Today
An increasing number of Australians are trying to illegally sell prescription drugs online according to the Australian Medical Association WA.
AMA WA president Michael Gannon told Fairfax Media there "seems to be evidence of this increasing".
Last week a 48-year-old Perth mother was fined in Fremantle Magistrates Court after being found guilty of offering to sell her son's ADHD medication online.
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eHealth Interoperability Conference
Achieving Seamless Communications as part of an Interoperable eHealth system to enhance healthcare safety, quality and efficiency
Our 2nd Annual eHealth Interoperability conference will offer the chance to hear the latest advancements in eHealth interoperability within Australia, combining presentations covering standardisation updates, achieving successful governance and security, updates on state-wide interoperability initiatives and case studies from in-hospital ehealth projects that have been deemed successful.
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- Kate Linebaugh
- The Wall Street Journal
- September 29, 2014 8:25AM
JASON Adams, a business-development executive by day and a molecular biologist by training, had never considered himself a hacker. That changed when he discovered an off-label way to monitor his 8-year-old daughter’s blood-sugar levels from afar.
His daughter Ella has Type 1 diabetes and wears a glucose monitor made by Dexcom. The device measures her blood sugar every five minutes and displays it on a nearby receiver the size of a pager, a huge advantage in helping monitor her blood sugar for spikes and potentially fatal drops. But it can’t transmit the data to the internet, which meant Mr Adams never sent Ella to sleepovers for fear she could slip into a coma during the night.
Then Mr Adams found NightScout, a system cobbled together by a constellation of software engineers, many with diabetic children, who were frustrated by the limitations of current technology. The open-source system they developed essentially hacks the Dexcom device and uploads its data to the internet, which lets Mr Adams see Ella’s blood-sugar levels on his Pebble smartwatch wherever she is. It isn’t perfect. It drains cellphone batteries, can cut out at times and hasn’t been approved by the Food and Drug Administration. But for many, it has filled a gap.
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Government agencies, enterprises urged to protect IT systems against Bourne Again Shell (Bash) vulnerability
Australian Privacy Commissioner Timothy Pilgrim is urging government agencies and businesses to protect their IT systems against the Bourne Again Shell (Bash) vulnerability.
Bash runs on many Unix-like operating systems, including Linux, that host websites.
“All entities covered by the
Privacy Act must take reasonable steps to protect the personal information they hold. These obligations include regularly monitoring the operation and effectiveness of ICT security measures to ensure they remain responsive to changing threats, vulnerabilities and other issues that may impact the security of personal information,” he said in a statement.
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Date October 2, 2014 - 12:01AM
Hannah Francis
An Australian life-saving smartphone app is helping heart attack survivors stick to their rehabilitation program and avoid a fatal second bout.
The Cloud-based MoTER app, developed by the CSIRO's Australian e-Health Research Centre, takes the hassle out of staying healthy by allowing patients to follow tailored rehabilitation programs from home – or wherever they may be – rather than having to travel to an outpatient centre.
Cardiovascular disease is Australia's No.1 killer, with one person nearly every 12 minutes dying from a heart attack.
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Today, HL7 released an updated version of the FHIR™ Draft Standard, which is now covered under a Creative Commons License: No Rights Reserved. This marks the formal adoption of a recognized open license for the FHIR specification, and one that is truly open: this is an unencumbered license. Under the terms of the Creative Commons license, HL7:
… has dedicated the work to the public domain by waiving all of it’s rights to the work worldwide under copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights, to the extent allowed by law. You can copy, modify, distribute and perform the work, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission.
This is a truly open license – even more open than most open source projects, which usually require some form of attribution. However since FHIR is a standard, and many implementations will be required to implement it, it would be inappropriate to require acknowledgement of the specification. Note, though, that the reference implementations may require attribution – and most of them use a mix of BSD or Apache licenses that do.
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Here’s a FHIR progress report from the HL7 working meeting in Chicago held the week before last.
General Progress
Overall, the hype about FHIR is astonishing, and I don’t see any evidence that it’s starting to slow. While we were in Chicago, Wes Rischel made some interesting comments about where FHIR is (though following his logic, our current task is to bring on the trough of disillusionment as soon as possible) . The FHIR project team is aware that there is a duality here: expectations and excitement about FHIR are high, but what we have published is still an early beta, and FHIR is not yet ready to meet the expectations that people have about it. We intend and expect to get there, but it is important that stakeholders and implementers understand that there’s still a lot of work to be done.
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There is a growing recognition that we need an open platform concept to solve e-health interoperability and reuse problems. Some evidence of this I noted in my recent post ‘What is an open platform’, including various US-based cross vendor platform alliances. The great value of a well-designed open platform is that it enables two things:
- a growing platform-based economy of producers to collaborate technically while operating commercially and/or in an open source mode
- adaptation to the constant stream of new requirements.
This is in contrast to the typical de jure standard based on a particular use case: it solves a locked down definition of the problem in a locked down way.
Within a platform, there are many interoperability points, and therefore many places where ‘standards’ might apply. However, the implication isn’t that you can just go and obtain a shopping basket of existing, separately developed, and possibly highly evolved standards and glue them together to get a platform.
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30th Sep 2014
GENERAL practice runs the risk of getting left behind if it does not keep up with the technology available to its patients.
Dr Jan Orman
GP Services Consultant, Black Dog Institute
E-mental health resources, especially online therapy, is an area GPs seem to know little about but will increasingly be expected to know about in the future. There’s a degree of scepticism but overall the problem is simply lack of knowledge of these resources and how to use them.
There’s no argument about the efficacy of online CBT for a variety of diagnoses in the mild to moderate stress, anxiety and depression categories. My experience is GPs acquainted with the evidence are generally convinced.
That hurdle overcome, the next is imagining where online therapy might fit.
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About 85% of patients with depression have significant anxiety
Intervention
Internet-based or computerised cognitive behavioural therapy programs.
Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) is the main psychological treatment approach available as computer- or internet-based programs.
Indication
Depression and anxiety.
Treatment programs have been studied in patients with mild-to-moderate, moderate-to-severe and severe depression.
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30th Sep 2014
PSYCHIATRISTS are waiting on a decision from the Medicare Services Advisory Committee (MSAC) which may open up a whole new era in the treatment of depression in Australia.
Sydney psychiatrist Professor Colleen Loo says transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) has been in developmental use in Australia for 17 years and has been proven a safe and efficacious treatment for depression.
To date, outside of medical research institutes, it is available in Australia only at private hospitals.
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Created on Monday, 29 September 2014
The AMT v3 Model Technical Implementation Guide is now available for download from the NEHTA website.
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by Fiona Rotherham
Oct. 3 (BusinessDesk) - Investor demand is expected to be strong locally and offshore, should health sector software company Orion Health proceed with its long-anticipated initial public offering before Christmas. It's expected to be one of the larger and classier floats this year.
Its prospectus has been designed, a top shelf chairman has been installed in the form of Fonterra boss Andrew Ferrier, and one of the busiest PR firms in the IPO area, Senescall Akers, is representing Orion.
It has talked about a float on the NZ stock exchange for the past two years and the window for doing so this year is within the next few weeks.
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Date October 3, 2014 - 6:26PM
Christina Farr and Alexei Oreskovic
Facebook already knows who your friends are and the kind of things that grab your attention. Soon, it could also know the state of your health.
On the heels of fellow Silicon Valley technology companies Apple and Google, Facebook is plotting its first steps into the fertile field of healthcare, said three people familiar with the matter. The people requested anonymity as the plans are still in development.
The company is exploring creating online "support communities" that would connect Facebook users suffering from various ailments. A small team is also considering new "preventative care" applications that would help people improve their lifestyles.
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Summary: The Healthkit initiative in iOS hasn't gone anywhere yet but your new iPhone is already tracking you.
Apple made a big deal about the Healthkit initiative kicked off in iOS 8. The goal is to have Healthkit work with third-party apps and accessories to track iPhone owners' health and fitness activities. Healthkit wasn't ready when iOS 8 was released but made it into the failed iOS 8.0.1 update. It's enabled in the current version of iOS (8.0.2).
The Health app in iOS is the hub for Healthkit. It gathers health and fitness data collected by third-party apps and accessories and displays it in one place. Apple says this data is encrypted on the iPhone to protect privacy.
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Date September 28, 2014 - 11:30PM
Canberra Times reporter
Canberra's only Aboriginal health centre has introduced new services, including a comprehensive child health clinic and triage system, to try and keep up with demand.
Winnunga Nimmityjah Aboriginal Health Service has launched a child health e-clinic and triage system where all patients are assessed by a nurse before seeing a doctor.
Chief executive Julie Tongs said Winnunga was an extremely busy service, with 66 staff and five full-time GPs seeing about 130 patients a day.
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Posted Tue, 30/09/2014 - 11:46 by Josh Gliddon
“It’s been a lot of fun,” reflects Patrick Power, as he looks back over his twenty plus years working in the IT healthcare industry.
Power, founder of PowerHealth Solutions and South Australia’s 2012 Entrepreneur of the Year, moved to Australia from Canada in 1994 on the back of a one-year contract implementing a healthcare IT system in the state.
Power recently won a scholarship via the Industry Leaders Fund that will see him attend leadership courses at Harvard, in the US, for three weeks each year for the next three years. He’s enthusiastic about the opportunities that will provide. “You get to do coursework, come back home and implement it, and then the following year you review, adjust and reenergise for another year - while bouncing-off some really smart people,” he says. “I am really looking forward to it.
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Date October 4, 2014 - 10:40AM
Jane Scott
I've been a paediatrician for 20 years, and I thought I'd seen it all. But not long ago, when a father brought his two-year-old into my clinic, something happened that has me deeply concerned.
Upon entering my examining room, I found father and son sitting together, eyes downcast, each silently scrolling and tapping on smartphones. During my initial exam, the father directed most of my questions to his frowning toddler, who indicated that his ears hurt, and I quickly discovered that both eardrums were red and inflamed.
"Guess what?" I said to my small patient. "Your ears hurt because you have an ear infection. But we can give you medicine and make you better."
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Date September 30, 2014 - 12:15AM
Sylvia Pennington
The Australian Information Industry Association (AIIA), the high tech sector's peak body, has accused the federal government of dragging its feet on the implementation of a raft of digital economy and e-government initiatives.
The government had failed to appoint an ICT advisory board, progress its plans to offer most government services online by 2017, produce a dashboard for government ICT performance and investment, improve the transparency of its technology spend or provide an update on teleworking targets, she said.
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Australia excels on mobile broadband but lags on fixed
Australia has ranked 21st in the world on Internet access, with 83 per cent of its people using the Internet, according to an annual report released by the Broadband Commission for Digital Development.
The commission was set up in May 2010 by the International Telecommunication Union and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). The ITU and OECD has defined broadband as a capacity of at least 256 kbps in the uplink or downlink speed.
Australia is one of 77 countries with more than half of their populations online, up from 70 in 2013, it said. The top ten countries for Internet use are all located in Europe. Iceland is ranked first in the world with 96.5 per cent of people online.
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Oh for a few years without revolution.
The past quarter century has seen the end of the Soviet era in 1989-90, a digital revolution straight after that via the world wide web, revolutions in financial engineering that set markets rocketing up and then crashing down, and a sovereign debt crisis that is, frankly, still revolting.
To top all that off in 2014, religious fundamentalism is exploding in the Middle East and China’s economic miracle is perched atop a time-bomb stamped ‘Made in Hong Kong’.
Where to look for stability? Surely something must stay the same.
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Vertigan panel issues final report
The government has indicated in its initial response to the third Vertigan panel report, which was released last night and includes an assessment of competition settings for the telco market, that it has no short-term plans to break up NBN Co.
“While disaggregation of NBN Co's business units (as the panel recommends) after the network is complete cannot be ruled out, now is not the time,” a statement issued by Communications Minister Malcolm Turnbull said
“Breaking up NBN Co would distract its management and delay the provision of high-speed broadband to all Australians.”
The
third report (PDF) of the panel, which is known as the Vertigan panel after its chair Michael Vertigan and was appointed by the government to conduct a cost-benefit analysis of the National Broadband Network, includes 19 top-line recommendations.
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Date October 1, 2014 - 6:28AM
Bill Rigby
Microsoft has announced its Windows 10 operating system to replace the largely unpopular Windows 8, skipping a number to mark a leap toward a new system aimed at unifying computing and mobile devices.
The next version of Microsoft's flagship product, which still runs the vast majority of personal computers, is aimed at recapturing the lucrative business market, which generally ignored the new-look Windows 8.
Windows 10 will be "our greatest enterprise platform ever," said Terry Myerson, Microsoft's head of operating systems, at an event in San Francisco. Only 20 per cent of organisations migrated to Windows 8, which was released two years ago, according to tech research firm Forrester.
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Enjoy!
David.