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."

Friday, December 19, 2014

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links - 20th December, 2014.



Note: Each link is followed by a title and few paragraphs. For the full article click on the link above title of the article. Note also that full access to some links may require site registration or subscription payment.
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Argonaut Project is a Sprint Toward EHR Interoperability

Scott Mace, for HealthLeaders Media , December 9, 2014

The Argonaut Project that launched last week offers a real chance at much-needed workable EHR standards. But by itself, Argonaut won't lead to interoperability nirvana.

In Greek mythology, the Argonauts, accompanied by heroic Jason, had to snatch a golden fleece from a dragon who never slept. In 2015, the Argonaut Project aims to snatch a true interoperability demonstration between EHR competitors and help healthcare providers who've spent many a sleepless night trying to figure out how they can survive in this new age of sharing EHR data.
Announced at last week's HL7 Policy Conference in Washington, the Argonaut Project has the backing of heavyweight EHR competitors Epic, Cerner, McKesson, Meditech, and athenahealth, as well as heavy-hitting providers Partners HealthCare in Boston, Intermountain Healthcare in Salt Lake City, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, and Mayo Clinic in Rochester, MN.
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Low Stage 2 Attestation Numbers Continue to Alarm

DEC 10, 2014 7:36am ET
Data from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services shows that as of Dec. 1, 2014, 1,681 hospitals and 16,455 eligible professionals have attested to Stage 2 meaningful use.
That means less than 35 percent of hospitals currently meet Stage 2 requirements and while eligible professionals have until the end of February to report their progress, only 4 percent of EPs have met Stage 2 requirements to date. The low attestation numbers, presented during a Dec. 9 Health IT Policy Committee meeting, got the attention of the College of Healthcare Information Management Executives which renewed its call for CMS to immediately shorten the reporting period for 2015.
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FDA Presses Forward with Unique Device Identifier System

DEC 11, 2014 7:52am ET
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is moving ahead with the Unique Device Identifier (UDI) system to identify medical devices. Yet, the question remains: If FDA builds the system, will the healthcare industry adopt it?
The agency is working with manufacturers to launch the UDI system, which will be phased in over several years. When fully implemented, the label of most medical devices will include a unique device identifier in human- and machine-readable form. As part of the implementation, device labelers will also submit certain information about each device to FDA’s Global Unique Device Identification Database, which the public will be able to search and download information.
Jeffrey Shuren, M.D., director of the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, says that UDIs are “intended to streamline the monitoring of devices, improve safety tracking and recall efficiency, and even make it easier to evaluate device performance over time.” However, writing in a recent blog, Shuren acknowledges that these benefits “will only become a reality when the UDI system is adopted and integrated into the healthcare systemwhen hospitals, doctors’ offices, patient registries, heathcare insurance companies, and others incorporate UDI as part of their standard electronic health information systems.”
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Healthcare Security In 2015: 9 Hotspots

12/10/2014 08:36 AM
With data breaches growing, 2015 promises to be the healthcare industry's most challenging security year yet. These nine areas demand attention in 2015.
Healthcare organizations must tighten security or risk getting breached, penalized, and potentially ostracized by a public fed up with seeming carelessness with their personal information. Unfortunately, the task of securing protected health information (PHI) is only becoming more challenging for even the best-prepared organizations. Fitness bands, hospital portals, electronic health records, health information exchanges, insurance networks -- the list of Internet-connected devices, tools, and sites containing personal and medical data keeps growing.
The healthcare sector has been under attack for some time. In 2014, despite headlines dominated by JPMorgan Chase, Home Depot, and other retail or financial entities, the healthcare industry accounted for 43% of all major breaches, according to the Ponemon Institute.
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Patients want more from their EHRs

Posted on Dec 11, 2014
By Mike Miliard, Editor
Having established a level of trust and familiarity with electronic health records over the past few years, increasing numbers of U.S. patients are looking for more advanced features from their EHRs, according to a new survey from the National Partnership for Women & Families.
The study, "Engaging Patients and Families: How Consumers Value and Use Health IT," follows up on a similar 2011 report that assessed consumer views toward EHRs. A lot has changed since then, with more and more patients comfortable with the idea of digitized records, and easier online access to health information spurring more patient engagement in their care.
In the past year, more than four in five patients with online access to their health records (86 percent) used their online records at least once, according to NPWF; more than half (55 percent) used them three or more times a year.
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Patients increasingly trust, value EHRs, survey finds

Written by Akanksha Jayanthi (Twitter | Google+)  | December 11, 2014
In the era of patient engagement, patients are utilizing health IT tools to become more active in their care.
Last year, 86 percent of patients used their EHR at least once, and 55 percent used them at least three times a year, according to a study by National Partnership for Women & Families.
The survey was a follow-up to the organization's 2011 survey that aimed to assess consumer views toward EHRs and health IT. The most recent survey repeated questions from the 2011 survey to identify and assess trends in consumer attitudes following federal and state IT incentive programs, such as meaningful use.
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Health informatics job market in trouble

Posted on Dec 12, 2014
By Bernie Monegain, Editor-at-Large
"The demand for health informatics workers is projected to grow at twice the rate of employment overall, but there is strong evidence that the nation already faces a shortage of qualified workers in this field," according to a new report from research firm Burning Glass.
Moreover, the study shows, job postings for health informatics personnel stay open long than others.
Employers are struggling to fill many of these jobs, according to the Burning Glass. On average, health informatics positions stay open for 35 days – two days longer than the national average posting duration of 33 days.
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ONC Budget Remains Flat in FY15, $4B for VA

DEC 12, 2014 7:32am ET
The fiscal 2015 federal appropriations budget being finalized by Congress contains funds for numerous health information technology initiatives under the Department Veterans Affairs, Office of the National Coordinator for HIT and for rural health, among other entities.
The Christmas time bill is not particularly kind to ONC, granting a budget of $60, 367,000, the same as in FY 2014. ONC had asked for $75 million in FY 2015, but the agency, like others, generally requests more than it knows it will get.
In FY 2015, the Small Rural Hospital Improvement Grant program is slated to get $14,942,000 for quality improvement projects, adoption of telehealth services and coordinating care between rural providers and VA’s VistA EHR, among other projects.
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True Interoperability: Public APIs provide the open platform health IT requires

Posted on Dec 09, 2014
By Edmund Billings, MD, Medsphere Systems Corporation
Do we finally have the spark?
Interoperability is the current health IT buzzword because it’s the essential ingredient in creating a system that benefits patients, doctors and hospitals. Almost everyone in healthcare is pressing for it and is frustrated, though probably not surprised, that meaningful use did not get us there.
The ONC says within three years we’ll have a roadmap for providing interoperability “across vendor platforms,” which should probably elicit a collective groan.
Look, a map is a fine tool but of limited use if I don’t speak the language. Change in this industry requires market drivers instituted now, if not sooner. We must move from MU to a health care payment model driving True Interoperability, not the garden-variety stuff.
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Interoperability Top Priority of Federal HIT Strategic Plan

DEC 10, 2014 7:45am ET
The 2015-2020 Federal Health IT Strategic Plan just released by the Office of the National Coordinator for HIT is about “collecting, sharing, and using electronic health information,” according to Seth Pazinski, director of ONC’s Office of Planning, Evaluation, and Analysis.
Pazinski told a Dec. 9 meeting of the Health IT Policy Committee that the draft five-year plan outlines the federal government’s many HIT priorities established by 35 participating agencies “but there was a coming together around interoperability as a top focus and priority.”
Adopting the IEEE definition of interoperability—the ability of two or more systems or components to exchange information and to use the information that has been exchanged—the plan argues that “interoperable health information and health IT solutions will lead to more efficient and effective health systems, better clinical decision support, scientific advancement, and a continuously learning health system.”
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ONC strategic plan raises questions about the future of Meaningful Use

December 10, 2014 | By Marla Durben Hirsch
The Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT's updated health IT strategic plan, released Dec. 8, is a high-level, ambitious framework for the federal government. It addresses some of the questions the industry has had about the direction of health IT and ONC. It's also an interesting read.
The plans updated goals include:
  • Expand the adoption of health IT
  • Advance secure and interoperable health
  • Strengthen healthcare delivery
  • Advance the health and wellbeing of individuals and communities
  • Advance research, scientific knowledge and innovation
Clearly, the strategic plan is a starting point, and the details still need to be hashed out. But it raises a lot of questions in my mind.
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Phishing, ransomware attacks on health industry to rise

December 10, 2014 | By Susan D. Hall
While security experts predict increased cyberattacks on healthcare organizations in 2015, they foresee phishing and ransomware posing particular challenges.
Phishing emails try to lure recipients into giving out information such as usernames, passwords or credit card numbers. They also can give attackers ways to infiltrate the enterprise network, according to an article in iHealthBeat by John Moore of Chilmark.
"Phishing emails often provide the entry point," Scott Koller, a lawyer at BakerHostetler, says in the article.
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Medical Scribes May Ease EHR, ICD-10 Aches

Ryan Chiavetta, for HealthLeaders Media , December 10, 2014

Medical scribes offer hospitals and health systems a low-cost method to bolster productivity and boost physician efficiency and morale, particularly after an EHR implementation.

With the advent of electronic health records in patient care, healthcare organizations have been looking for a way to help physicians combat the deluge of mandates, while still maintaining a high level of efficiency.

One fast-growing position designed to remedy this situation is the medical scribe. A medical scribe's primary duty is to document a physician's encounter with a patient in the electronic health record system. Scribes enter information about a patient's history, the physical exam, the physician's assessment, notes on decision making and discharge and after care instructions.
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Sutter Health Launches Online Tool for Teen Patients

DEC 9, 2014 7:58am ET
Sacramento, Calif.-based Sutter Health has launched My Health Online for Teens, an electronic health service which provides teens secure, online access to their health records and their doctors.
My Health Online for Teens also provides a way for parents to stay connected with the doctor of their teens, as their children learn how to manage their own healthcare. The platform lets kids ages 12 to 17 email their doctors, review test results, renew prescriptions, track immunizations, and schedule appointments from a cellphone or laptop.
California law requires that some aspects of a teen’s medical care, particularly reproductive and substance abuse services, be kept confidential once the child turns 12. Rather than block parental access to the record entirely, in the Sutter platform teens get full access to their personal health records. They can send confidential questions or concerns directly to their doctors and view their health data online.
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For healthcare, Google Glass still has it

Posted on Dec 09, 2014
By Frank Irving, Editor, Medical Practice Insider
There's plenty of potential for Google Glass in healthcare, despite reports that have called into question the technology's value.
"Glass in the enterprise is certainly stronger than it's ever been. Google is investing very heavily," said Kyle Samani, CEO of Pristine, a company that develops software for the device, during a Monday afternoon session at the mHealth Summit outside Washington, D.C.
Samani was part of a panel that included Paul Porter, MD, director of special projects and telemedicine for Brown University Emergency Medicine, and Sean Lunde, mHealth lead for Wipro's healthcare and life sciences consulting group. They noted several use cases where Google Glass is being tested
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EHI Awards 2014: Rising star

Claire Read speaks to Dave Newton, the winner of the first ‘rising star’ category of the EHI Awards, about his work on the myhealthlocker project for South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust.
8 December 2014
“I didn’t originally start out with a big plan of going into healthcare informatics,” admits Dave Newton, the winner of the ‘rising star’ category of the EHI Awards 2014.
In fact, his initial career plan was to become a clinical psychologist. When health IT came calling, he was working as a researcher at South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, exploring the concept of recovery in older adults suffering from mental ill health.
“I was speaking at a conference about recovery,” he remembers. “And one of the professors from the Institute of Psychiatry was talking around something called avatar therapy, which they were just starting to pilot.
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ICD-10 Delay Could Be Data Disaster

by The Coalition for ICD-10 Tuesday, December 9, 2014
Earlier this year, Congress enacted a one-year delay of the implementation of ICD-10-CM/PCS code sets, extending the date from October 2014 to October 2015. This delay was characterized by some as a bump in the road on the way to better health care data.
Now, with some physician groups advocating for an additional delay of up to two more years, it's time for the industry to recognize that such obstruction is more than a bump in the road. If the health care industry continues to delay ICD-10 implementation, we are careening toward a health care data disaster. Given that the current system in use, ICD-9-CM/PCS, is inadequate for present-day uses and that past delays have incurred significant costs, further delays will have catastrophic consequences for the industry, with no measurable benefit. The health care industry simply cannot afford any more delays in ICD-10 implementation.
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Data Breaches to Continue to Plague Healthcare in 2015

DEC 8, 2014 7:23am ET
The healthcare industry will continue to be a vulnerable and attractive target for cybercriminals in 2015, thanks to the expanding number of access points to protected health information and other sensitive data via electronic health records and the growing popularity of wearable technology.
That’s the conclusion of Experian’s second annual Data Breach Industry Forecast, which predicts that healthcare will continue to be plagued with data breaches in 2015. Healthcare organizations accounted for about 42 percent of all major data breaches reported in 2014. “We expect this number will continue to grow until the industry comes up with a stronger solution to improve its cybersecurity strategies,” said Michael Bruemmer, vice president at Experian Data Breach Resolution, in a written statement.
“Healthcare organizations face the challenge of securing a significant amount of sensitive information stored on their network, which combined with the value of a medical identity string makes them an attractive target for cybercriminals,” states the report. “The problem is further exasperated by the fact that many doctors’ offices, clinics and hospitals may not have enough resources to safeguard their patients’ PHI.”
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ONC's Five-Fold Federal Health IT Plan Looks Beyond EHRs

December 8, 2014
Karen DeSalvo, M.D.
The Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC) released a five-fold federal health IT strategic plan, which focuses on widespread health data sharing and looks beyond adoption of electronic health record (EHR) systems. 
The ONC's five-fold plan does include the expansion of health IT adoption, particularly in the long-term care sector, but it also features the advancement of an interoperable infrastructure, the strengthening of the healthcare delivery system, the advancement of well-being of individuals and communities, and the advancement of scientific research. The first two, expansion of health IT adoption and advancement of interoperable infrastructure, are the top priorities, says ONC. All of them require some kind of interoperability push. 
On a call announcing the plan, Karen DeSalvo, M.D., the National Coordinator for Health IT, confirmed that there was a "big push for interoperability" with this latest plan. 
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ONC updates Health IT Strategic Plan

Posted on Dec 08, 2014
By Mike Miliard, Editor
The Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT on Monday announced the release of its Federal Health IT Strategic Plan, 2015-2020, updating the goals of an initiative most recently released in 2011.
As it maps out ways to better gather, share and put to use interoperable health data, the plan will serve as a broad federal strategy, say ONC officials, helping set the context for the Nationwide Interoperability Roadmap, which is scheduled to be released January 2015.
That roadmap will help to define the implementation of how the federal government can work with the private sector to spur more widespread sharing of health data to improve individual healthcare, drive better community and public health and advance research.
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New goals in national HIT roadmap

By Mike Miliard, Contributing Editor
The Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT has outlined its Federal Health IT Strategic Plan, 2015-2020, updating the goals of an initiative most recently released in 2011.
As it maps out ways to better gather, share and put to use interoperable health data, the plan will serve as a broad federal strategy, say ONC officials, helping set the context for the Nationwide Interoperability Roadmap, which is scheduled to be released January 2015.
That roadmap will help to define the implementation of how the federal government can work with the private sector to spur more widespread sharing of health data to improve individual healthcare, drive better community and public health and advance research.
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ONC updated HIT plan focuses on interoperability

December 8, 2014 | By Katie Dvorak
The Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT's updated Federal Health IT Strategic Plan, released today and spanning from 2015 to 2020, will focus on the collection, use and sharing of interoperable health information.
The plan "serves as the broad federal strategy setting the context and framing the Nationwide Interoperability Roadmap that will be released in early 2015," according to an announcement from ONC.
In addition to interoperability, the plan focuses on patient-generated data.
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At the mHealth Summit: Sensors, watches and glasses, oh my!

December 8, 2014 | By Susan D. Hall
The mHealth Summit kicked off Sunday at Maryland's National Harbor with provider engagement and integration of mobile health technologies into healthcare among the major themes.
"I believe we will see mHealth devices become even more ubiquitous, driven by non-health-related consumer companies--whom we can learn a great deal from in terms of making health and wellness a part of our day-to-day lives," Rich Scarfo, director of the event and vice president of its backer, the Personal Connected Health Alliance, says at mHealth News.
A range of stakeholders will chime in, including consumer electronics giants, pharmacy chains and life sciences companies.
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California hospital’s patient safety protocols now require a wearable

By: Jonah Comstock | Dec 3, 2014
A California hospital has begun requiring certain patients use a wearable remote patient monitoring device in order to comply with internal patient safety protocols. Chino Valley Medical Center is employing the Leaf Patient Monitoring System from Pleasanton-based Leaf Healthcare.
The sensor monitors patient movement in bed, then uses that data to calculate when the patient needs to be turned to prevent the formation of pressure ulcers. That data is uploaded wirelessly to central monitoring stations or mobile devices so clinicians can monitor the readings. The system also alerts nurses or staff when a patient needs to be turned.
A recent clinical trial showed that use of the sensor increased compliance with hospital turn procedures from a baseline 64 percent to 98 percent. Ulcers are a dangerous and painful condition which cost the US healthcare system $11 billion a year according to AHRQ, and because they’re hospital-acquired, treatment is often not reimbursable by insurers.
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Alberta moves on integrated health records system

Published on: December 5, 2014Last Updated: December 5, 2014 9:52 PM MST
Alberta’s Health Minister has struck a task force to investigate the creation of an integrated provincial health information system after the College of Physicians and Surgeons told a legislature committee this week the current system is “woefully inadequate.”
Stephen Mandel has chosen Alberta Health Services administrator Carl Amrhein to lead the task force to look into the business case for a provincial clinical information system and report back early in the new year, Mandel’s spokesman Steve Buick said Friday.
“This is a group to take a first look at it for the minister and get back to him quickly,” he said. “The thinking is we need a single provincial system.”
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http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20141208/NEWS/312089928

New federal health IT plan emphasizes adoption, interoperability

By Joseph Conn  | December 8, 2014
The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology has adopted a new strategic plan that seeks to keep up the momentum of health IT adoption while taking steps to improve the penetration of information technology beyond hospitals and physician practices.
Under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act's electronic health-record incentive payment program, which has paid out nearly $25.8 billion since 2011, 94% of eligible hospitals and 79% of eligible physicians have received payment for either purchasing or meaningfully using a tested and certified EHR.
But the program left gaps by not extending payments to behavioral health, long-term care and other providers, said Dr. Karen DeSalvo, head of the ONC. The ONC and other federal agencies are looking at ways to help these excluded providers cover the cost of buying EHRs.
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Enjoy!
David.

Thursday, December 18, 2014

Review Of The Ongoing Post - Budget Controversy 18th December 2014. It’s Gone Ballistic!

Budget Night was on Tuesday 13th May, 2014 and the fuss has still not settled by a long shot. Indeed more than a few commentators are wondering out loud if the Abbot Government will last for a second term.
The modified co-payment - announced early last week - seems to have annoyed most other than the Government and we now wait till mid February 2015 to see what the Senate thinks of Plan B.
Otherwise the Budget seems to be in chaos with falling iron ore and now oil prices along with slowing growth and lots of commentary regarding the future of interest rates over 2015.
It also seems clear the Business Community is just utterly sick of the parliamentary shenanigans and really wants the Government to start behaving a adults as they promised.
See here:
Here are a few highlights of the vast number of articles I have seen.
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General.

Galaxy poll: Voters just about ready to ditch Tony Abbott

  • Samantha Maiden
  • Herald Sun
  • December 07, 2014 10:01AM
TONY Abbott risks becoming a one-term prime minister unless he lifts the Federal Government’s fortunes, with Labor opening up a 10-point 55-45 lead on a two-party-preferred basis.
After a week of confusion over the fate of the $7 GP fee and Mr Abbott’s confession that the Government had a “ragged” week, support for the Coalition has plunged again.
For the first time, Labor under Bill Shorten has also overtaken the Coalition on the primary vote since the election of the Government.
Support for the Labor Party has hit 41 per cent on primaries.
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Wealthy mothers earning more than $150,000 a year may NOT get maternity pay as Tony Abbott backflips to pay for childcare reform 

·         Working mothers will reportedly be denied access to paid parental leave
·         Women earning over $150,000 could potentially miss the scheme entirely
·         The prime minister believes the combination of PPL and affordable childcare could get more women into the workforce
·         Carers working in the family home would be eligible for 50 per cent rebate
Published: 00:58 AEST, 7 December 2014 | Updated: 09:35 AEST, 7 December 2014
Working mothers who are earning six-figure salaries may be denied access to the Abbott government's much-vaunted paid parental leave (PPL) scheme as it looks to review the policy over the summer.
The revelation comes as a new poll shows the Coalition continues to trail behind the Opposition on a two-party preferred basis.
On Sunday, Mr Abbott fronted media after mounting speculation he would dump the policy that would see women earning up to $150,000 receiving six months' pay - a scheme he touted in the lead up to last year's election. 
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Economy: Not good but not disastrous

Date: December 8, 2014 - 12:15AM

Ross Gittins

The Sydney Morning Herald's Economics Editor

Don't drop your bundle. It's not clear the economy has slowed to the snail's pace a literal reading of the latest national accounts suggests. As for the talk of a "technical income recession", it's just silly.
What is clear is that, at best, the economy continues to grow at the sub-par rate of about 2.5 per cent a year, a rate insufficient to stop unemployment continuing to edge up. This has been true for more than two years.
A literal reading of last week's national accounts from the Bureau of Statistics says the economy – real gross domestic product – grew by a mere 0.3 per cent in the September quarter, down from growth of 0.5 per cent in the previous quarter and 1 per cent in the quarter before that.
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Medicare Co-Payments.

Tony Abbott dumps $7 GP co-payment for $5 optional fee

Joanna Mather
Prime Minister Tony Abbott has revised downwards his proposed GP tax from $7 to $5 and announced exemptions for children, pensioners, veterans and aged care residents.
The “co-payment” would only apply to adults for consultations of 10 minutes or more and it would be up to doctors to decide who should be billed, Mr Abbott said.
Opposition from Labor and minor parties meant Mr Abbott could not get the original proposal of a $7 fee through the Senate.
Mr Abbott said it was a “new and improved proposal which indicates that this is a government which is always capable of listening, learning and improving”.
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Tony Abbott dumps Medicare copayment

Jared Owens

TONY Abbott has dumped plans to impose a $7 co-payment on Medicare services, instead using his executive power to cut payments to doctors and encouraging them to raise fees.
The Prime Minister’s new policy includes a price signal on doctors’ visits by cutting the rebate for doctors’ visits by $5, forcing doctors to consider imposing an “optional co-payment” to recover their loss.
The government will also impose a requirement for Medicare-funded doctors’ appointments to tackle 10-minute “sausage machine medicine” where patients are simply “churned through”.
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Medicare co-payment amended by Coalition in favour of 'optional' system

Government backs away from its controversial budget proposal to charge $7 upfront payment for visits to the GP
Tony Abbott has backed away from the budget policy to introduce a $7 co-payment on GP visits, announcing exemptions for children, pensioners and veterans.
The prime minister said after a cabinet meeting in Canberra on Tuesday the government would proceed with a revised policy that would allow GPs to charge an “optional” $5 fee for adults who did not hold concession cards.
The government would reduce the Medicare rebate paid to providers by $5 for non-concession card holders, and it would be up to the provider to decide whether to recoup the money from patients.
Abbott said there would be “no change to bulk billing for children under 16, for pensioners, for veterans, for people in nursing homes and other aged care institutions”.
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Government’s new co-payment model a ‘mixed bag’

09/12/2014
AMA President, A/Prof Brian Owler, said today that the Government’s reworked co-payment model is a mixed bag, with welcome exemptions for vulnerable patients but concerns remain about cuts to the Medicare patient rebate.
A/Prof Owler said the AMA has been calling for protection for the poor, the elderly, the chronically ill, and Indigenous Australians – and this has been delivered with the new co-payment model.
“The AMA has led the debate on the unfairness of the Government’s original co-payment model since Budget night, and the Government has today addressed a number of our concerns,” A/Prof Owler said.
“We are pleased that concession card holders, children under 16, and residents of aged care facilities will not be subject to reduced Medicare rebates for general practitioner services.
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Longer rebate freeze leaves GPs cold

Sean Parnell

Rachel Baxendale

HEALTH groups last night welcomed a belated decision to protect vulnerable patients and crucial tests from a reworked medical co-payment.
But doctors were still concerned they would be left to pay for the Abbott government’s concessions by way of an extension to the freeze on Medicare rebates to July 2018.
Seven months after the budget unveiled a $7 co-payment on all routine medical services, Tony Abbott and Health Minister Peter Dutton yesterday announced a reworked $5 co-payment for all but children, pensioners and veterans.
While the original model was set to free up $3.6 billion in government spending, initially to create a medical research future fund, the latest model will raise $3.5bn, through a $5 cut to standard Medicare rebates, changes to the rebate structure to incentivise longer consultations, and the extended freeze on Medicare rebates, each of which will contribute about $1bn.
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The GP co-payment trick that purports to save $3.5 billion

Date December 10, 2014 - 8:43AM

Peter Martin

EXPLAINER
How can a $5 GP co-payment that excludes the young and those on benefits save just as much as a $7 co-payment that applies to everyone?
That's what we'll be asked to believe when the budget update is published next week. We'll be told Prime Minister Tony Abbott's new health package will save $3.5 billion whereas his old package would have saved $3.6 billion.
Part of the trick is that it isn't the co-payment that saves the government money, it's the cut to the Medicare rebate. That cut was always going to be $5 per consultation. If doctors had had the ability to charge a $7 co-payment they would have got an extra $2 in their pockets. Now they won't.
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GP co-payment: Government prepares to woo Senate crossbenchers as doctors warn patients will pay more

By political correspondent Emma Griffiths
December 10, 2014, 10:18 am
The Federal Government has begun the sales job for its "better" GP co-payment proposal as it prepares for another round of crucial negotiations with the Senate crossbench to pass the measure.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott announced yesterday the original proposal to force patients to pay an extra $7 fee for GP visits had been dumped.
But the new plan cuts the Medicare rebate given to doctors by $5, putting pressure on GPs to charge patients the shortfall.
Mr Abbott denied the change was a backdown.
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Aged care spared government’s GP co-payment

By Darragh O'Keeffe on December 10, 2014 in Government, Industry
While acknowledging the exemptions for aged care residents and children, consumers, doctors and nurses have broadly criticised the government’s latest policy.
Residents of aged care facilities will be among those exempt from the Federal Government’s new $5 GP co-payment plan, to be introduced for all non-concessional patients aged over 16 from 1 July 2015.
The government yesterday announced it was amending its fraught GP co-payment policy, first set out in the Budget in May.
While some media yesterday erroneously reported the government had “dumped” the scheme, Prime Minister Tony Abbott announced that the Medicare rebate paid to doctors would be reduced by $5. Doctors could choose to recoup that rebate reduction by charging patients a co-payment, or continue to bulk bill non-concessional patients – but at their own expense.
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Patients could be paying $10 to see a doctor not $5 under Tony Abbott’s GP fee revamp

  • December 11, 2014 12:01AM
  • Sue Dunlevy National Health Reporter
  • News Corp Australia Network
PATIENTS could end up paying way more than $5 to see a doctor, with the AMA predicting a copayment of up to $10 under Tony Abbott’s revamped policy on GP fees.
Worse still, patients who were once bulk-billed may have to pay $42 upfront and then go to Medicare to claim a $32 rebate as doctors scramble to stop their income from general patients being cut in half.
Patients also could face increased wait times to see a doctor with medicos now required to see patients for a minimum of ten minutes, up from six minutes.
Costs rising...AMA GP spokesman Dr Brian Morton says patients could pay more than $45 to see a GP under Tony Abbott’s reforms. Picture: News Corp. Source: News Limited
“A lot of practices are saying if you are just to maintain the status quo, given the extra red tape and cost of administering the fee, why not make it $10,” Australian Medical Association GP spokesman Dr Brian Morton said.
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Co-payment will hit bulk billing, AMA predicts

Date December 10, 2014 - 10:35PM

Dan Harrison

Many medical practices will shift from bulk-billing to charging patients the full cost of their visit in advance in response to the Abbott Government's proposed GP co-payment, doctors have predicted.
Under proposals announced by Prime Minister Tony Abbott and Health Minister Peter Dutton on Tuesday, the Medicare rebates for standard GP visits will be cut by $5 for non-concessional patients, and doctors will be allowed to charge the patient a fee of up to $5. In addition, the fees paid by Medicare for all other services will be frozen until July 2018.
Australian Medical Association president Brian Owler predicted the changes would lead to a shift away from bulk-billing, where a doctor bills Medicare directly for the service, to private billing, where the doctor charges the patient the full cost of the visit in advance, and the patient claims a rebate for part of this cost from Medicare.
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Regular GP visits, not budget cuts, help keep health costs down

Date December 11, 2014 - 12:00AM

James Best

From an Australian patient's perspective, there are two things that matter in our country's health system: regardless of my financial situation I can see a doctor when I want to, and if something bad happens to me medically I will be looked after.
The first of these is looking shaky after this week. From next July, if the government has its way, many of us will have to look in our wallet and decide whether we can afford, this week, to go to the doctor. Another nail in the coffin of universal health care.
There will be four consequences of this, the first two the government wants. Individuals (i.e. you) will have to pay more to see a GP, and the government will save some money, at least initially. However, it is saving money in a very unintelligent way.  In the long run we will see the third and fourth consequences: health outcomes in the country will worsen, and finally, the health system will actually end up costing more.
How can this be?
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It gets harder to provide quality care each year. The GP co-payment could sink my practice

We have impersonal medicine because GPs have to churn patients to cover costs. The co-payment will make things much harder for smaller practices
My general practice is like the TV show Cheers: a place where everybody knows your name. My reception and nursing staff know the quirks of the majority our patients. We know Mrs Jones will need a taxi to take her to her appointment. It’s easier for our staff to book Mr Verona’s high resolution thoracic CT scan for him, because of his thick accent and poor hearing. I am grateful for having such good staff, pay them above the award and try to provide them with a yearly pay rise. Now I’m unsure if I can afford to keep them.
Each year it has become progressively harder to maintain a level of service at a time when the ageing population presents with complex, chronic conditions. To prevent an expensive hospitalisation, patients require more time and resources than ever. General practice sometimes seems like a death by a thousand cuts.
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Strong medicine for GPs

Adam Creighton

AMID the outrage this week over the supposed unaffordability of paying $5 to visit the doctor, it is worth noting that more than 60 per cent of GP visits in Melbourne’s up-market electorate of Kooyong are bulk-billed, and more than 67 per cent in the salubrious Wentworth seat of Sydney. That equates to tens of millions of dollars of taxpayer support each year for doctors’ visits for people who probably can afford to chip in.
Since May the Abbott government has been embroiled in a political battle to make all of the electors of Wentworth and Kooyong, along with every other Australian, pay $7 to visit the doctor — part of a set of health reforms to help return the budget to surplus by 2023. These were designed to save a government facing more than $100 billion of deficits over the next four years around $3.5bn across the same period.
Nationally, more than 80 per cent of the 130 million-plus general practitioner services each year are “free” for patients, courtesy of Medicare, up from about 67 per cent a decade ago thanks in part — somewhat ironically — to Tony Abbott’s policies as health minister aimed to boost rates of bulk-billing.
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$100 GP fees in two years?

Date December 14, 2014 - 12:15AM

Julia Medew

The average upfront cost of a 15-minute consultation with a GP could exceed $100 within two years under the federal government's proposed changes to Medicare, the Doctors Reform Society says.
The  society, a lobby group that supports publicly funded universal health care, says the Abbott government's plan to reduce the Medicare rebate for doctors by $5 and freeze it until 2018 is promoting a "return to a failed privatised system of the past" with doctors free to charge what the market will bear.
Society national president and GP Con Costa said extending the current two-year-long freeze on Medicare rebates for another four years would hit GP clinics' budgets hard, driving many doctors away from bulk-billing and  into increasing their fees for patients who do not have concession cards.
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9 reasons why GPs are being screwed by government

The government’s revised co-payment plan is a dog’s breakfast. Here are 9 reasons why the proposal has angered Australian GPs.

#1

Prime-minister Abbott’s reference to sausage machine medicine is insulting. If the government is unhappy about the way some clinics churn through patients, they should do something about it, but not punish all Australian GPs – and patients.
Besides, it looks like the government didn’t do their homework properly: A recent report debunked the myth that GP care is ‘6-minute medicine’. The authors of the report: “If people feel they must ignore the wide range, and refer to the length of GP consultations in one phrase, it would be far more accurate to call it ‘14 minute medicine’.”
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Pharmacy Related Articles.

Uncertain times: the year in review

9 December, 2014 Chris Brooker
How will pharmacy look back on 2014? Will it be remembered as a watershed year where the push for remunerated professional services finally reached a critical mass? Will it be remembered as the year the profession's financial position bottomed out? Will it be remembered as a year of bickering and sniping within the profession and from a range of critics?

If the cap fits

In 2013, proposals were first aired by the Pharmacy Guild of Australia for a cap on Home Medicines Reviews numbers to control what they claimed was exploitation and overuse of the system.
The deferring of this plan turned out to be only temporary, with the profession being jolted by the announcement on the eve of APP 2014 that the HMR program would indeed be capped, at 20 HMRs per accredited service provider per month.
Despite Guild claims that most would not be impacted by the caps, accredited pharmacists were outraged. In March, leading clinical pharmacist Debbie Rigby said she had heard lots of "open hostility and anger" about the decision.
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Editorial -Wednesday, December 10: Woolworths wants it all

Tim Howard | 10th Dec 2014 3:00 AM
NEWSAGENTS are the latest to face losing a key part of their business to the ever expanding reach of the supermarket giants.
Butchers and bakers have succumbed, and if there was a mass market for it, so would candlestick makers.
Already the poor newsagents have lost the attraction of being the sole place to buy newspapers and magazines. Now, the supermarkets are after the best attraction the agents have of luring customers into their shops.
While you might have sympathy for their plight, you should be worried about Woolworths' plans to sell pharmaceuticals from the supermarket shelf.
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Comment:
I also have to say reading all the articles I still have no idea what is actually going to happen with the Budget at the end of the day.
As pointed out on Insiders a few weeks ago the next chance to have progress  in February, 2015 - and after MYEFO last Monday and  the next Budget!
One wonders for how much longer this will go on?
Enjoy.
David.