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."

Saturday, January 17, 2015

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links - 17th January, 2015.

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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How data on patient outcomes can help clinicians improve care quality

January 9, 2015 | By Katie Dvorak
Using and comparing data about patient outcomes can help clinicians work to improve care, as well as start conversations about quality improvement, according to a case study published in eGEMs (Generating Evidence & Methods to increase patient outcomes.)
For the study, the researchers at Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute in Palo Alto, California, wanted to create a way to systematically detect or evaluate patient-level outcomes of care. They came up with ExPLORE Clinical Practice--an Internet-based tool on comparative outcomes.
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Healthcare IT in 2015: What to expect

January 9, 2015 | By Dan Bowman
In considering the twists and turns facing the health IT industry in 2015, it's interesting to read through others' forecasts for the coming year.
For instance, InformationWeek Healthcare runs down five trends it foresees for 2015. Among those outlined are increased integration efforts due to consolidation; updated treatment guidelines in the face of new technology; increased patient engagement thanks to better tools and improved pricing transparency; IT being used to monitor training more closely; and analytics being used more to help organizations financially.
Politico, meanwhile, examines the legislative agenda for health IT in 2015, breaking down its preview into six silos: FDA corrections, telemedicine, interoperability, Meaningful Use, privacy and data policies and the future of the 21st Century Cares initiative.
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ePrescribing Expected and Preferred in 82% of Older Patients

Author Jennifer Bresnick | Date January 8, 2015

ePrescribing meets with approval from more than 80% of adults over 50 in a new study from AHIMA.

Electronic prescribing is both an expected and preferred technology for older patients, most of whom have to juggle multiple medications on a daily basis, finds a study published in AHIMA’s Perspectives in Health Information Management.  ePrescribing is generally perceived by patients as safer, more convenient, and more efficient than paper-based prescriptions, and foster improved communication with healthcare providers that may also contribute to improved medication safety.
The survey of seventy-five older adults in the Pittsburg, Pennsylvania area found that 80% of patients had seen more than one physician in the prior year, with 75% of those patients visiting physicians who used ePrescribing technology.  Patients generally took between one and three medications at a time, though 20% took more than six prescriptions, and 53% added between one and three over-the-counter medications to their regimen.  Just over half of the participants were familiar with the concept of ePrescribing, though those patients tended to be closer to the younger end of the survey spectrum.
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CommonWell: Healthcare Interoperability Or Bust

1/8/2015 09:06 AM
Peter Bernhardt of CommonWell Health Alliance, a group of clinical and health IT organizations, talks about its goal of better data exchange and application integration.
The surprise announcement at HIMSS 2013 was the CommonWell Health Alliance, a group of healthcare organizations seeking to define and promote a national infrastructure with common standards and policies. The coalition's aim is to build interoperability into its software so that providers can work seamlessly within their existing workflow.
CommonWell consists of 14 members, including the 7 founding members. Membership represents acute and ambulatory care EHR suppliers, as well as laboratory, retail pharmacy, perinatal care, and long-term-care health IT systems. The service initially was launched at more than 12 provider sites in four locations: Chicago, Ill.; Elkin and Henderson, N.C.; and Columbia, S.C.
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After 'wasting' $4.3 million, Connecticut shutters state HIE

January 6, 2015 | By Marla Durben Hirsch
Connecticut's health information exchange, known as Health IT Exchange (HITE-CT), has failed, in large part due to internal mismanagement and bad privacy policies that undermined the public trust, according to Ellen Andrews, executive director of the Connecticut Health Policy Project.
In a December blog post, Andrews said that the HIE wasted $4.3 million in federal grants and accomplished nothing in its four years. She noted that many decisions were made in small committees behind closed doors and presented to the board as done deals. The HIE also refused to adopt a consumer opt-in policy, as used in neighboring states, which would have provided more privacy and security of patient health records.
Connecticut's General Assembly recently repealed the laws establishing the HIE and transferred some of its responsibilities to the Department of Social Services (DSS).
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Pediatrician use of EHRs up, but systems still inadequate

January 5, 2015 | By Marla Durben Hirsch
More pediatricians are adopting electronic health records, but many of the systems lack basic functionalities and/or functionalities geared to their specialty, according to a new study in Pediatrics, the official journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
The researchers, from Vanderbilt University and elsewhere, sent questionnaires to more than 1,600 pediatricians. They found that the percent of pediatricians using EHRs increased from 58 percent in 2009 to 79 percent in 2012. However, only 31 percent used one with basic functionality, and only 14 percent used one that was fully functional. Many of the systems lacked pediatric functionality, such as weight-based dosing and anthropometric analysis. However, there was an increase in some functionality from 2009 to 2012, mainly in race/ethnicity, electronic prescribing, electronic transmissions, medical history and follow up notes, according to the study.
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OpenNotes: 'This is not a software package, this is a movement'

Posted on Jan 08, 2015
By Mike Miliard, Editor
Tom Delbanco, MD, professor of general medicine and primary care at Harvard Medical School and former chief of general medicine at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, is also co-director of the OpenNotes project, which gives patients access to the clinical notes written by their doctors and nurses.
OpenNotes initially launched in 2010 as a pilot program in three select locations: BIDMC, Geisinger Health System and Harborview Medical Center in Seattle. It soon became apparent that what may have seemed, at first, to be a revolutionary concept had struck a nerve.
Over the past five years, the initiative -- which Delbanco first developed alongside BIDMC researcher Jan Walker, RN -- has grown almost exponentially, finding footholds at some of the largest and most prestigious providers in the country, including the VA, Kaiser Permanente Northwest, Oregon Health & Science University and University of Colorado Health.
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Mental Health Notes-Sharing Pilot Seen as Success

JAN 8, 2015 7:32am ET
Clinicians and patients participating in a pilot implementation of the OpenNotes note-sharing program for mental health treatment at Boston's Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center say the program has yielded tangible benefits.
As of Dec. 1, 2014, hospital executives said approximately 85,000 BIDMC patients use the hospital's PatientSite portal to manage their care, and about 1,000 of those had access to their mental health notes since the pilot began in March.
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Patients to Take Control of Data in ‘Democratization’ of Medicine

JAN 8, 2015 7:48am ET
Eric Topol, M.D., chief academic officer of Scripps Health in San Diego, is many things. He is a practicing cardiologist, a geneticist, a researcher, and a bestselling author.
In his 2012 book The Creative Destruction of Medicine: How the Digital Revolution Will Create Better Healthcare, Topol argues that the healthcare industry is in the beginning phases of its “creative destruction”—a term coined by economist Joseph Schumpeter to describe the revolutionary process by which innovation replaces old industries with new ones. At the heart of this digital-medical revolution, he asserts, is a fundamental shift in who accesses and “owns” medical data and health information—a transfer of power from doctors to consumers.
Now, Topol has come out with a new book, The Patient Will See You Now: The Future of Medicine is in Your Hands, continuing his theme of consumer empowerment. Just as Gutenberg’s printing press spread literature to the masses for the first time in history, he makes the case that smartphones and other mobile devices in the hands of patients will serve to “democratize medicine” giving them control of their data—which has historically been the domain of physicians.
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Stevens calls for digital NHS front door

7 January 2015   Lyn Whitfield
NHS England chief executive Simon Stevens has called for the creation of a digital urgent care ‘front door’ for the health service, as the performance of A&E has become an early general election issue.
NHS England yesterday released information about where £700 million of ‘winter pressures’ funding has been spent, with Stevens arguing that “the NHS, the Department of Health and local clinicians have done everything that could be reasonably expected to plan carefully and expand services over the winter.”
However, in a statement accompanying the data he added: “For the future it is clear that we also need a fundamental redesign of the NHS urgent care ‘front door’ – A&E, GPs, 999, 111, out of hours, community care and social services.”
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Many Say Meaningful Use Stage 2 Is Disastrous, but the Data Say Otherwise

by Anantachai (Tony) Panjamapirom Thursday, January 8, 2015
The industry news is full of disparaging talk about the health of the EHR Incentive Programs (i.e., meaningful use), particularly the low number of Stage 2 attestations. While some statistics show that only 35% of the nation's hospitals have met Stage 2 meaningful use requirements, further analysis reveals a different story.
Each month since July 2014, CMS and the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT update the Health IT Policy Committee on the number of successful Stage 2 attestations. The following day, the same headlines appear with multiple industry analyses and strong reactions that take the low attestation volume as a sign of failing long-term meaningful use viability. These critics say that in November 2014, only 17% of the nation's hospitals successfully demonstrated Stage 2, and most recently that in December 2014 that figure was 35%.
These numbers are being used to demonstrate how difficult it is for the majority of the hospitals to meet Stage 2 requirements and even to make the case that most will not be capable of attesting due to overly stringent requirements. While these numbers are not technically wrong, a closer look reveals a different picture. This is not an attempt to be provocative, but rather we want to provide additional detail to those figures because they do not tell the whole truth about how well hospitals have fared in Stage 2. 
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BYOD and BYOT Security Implications

Scott Mace, for HealthLeaders Media , January 7, 2015

Healthcare leaders are developing policies to address the continued growth of "bring your own device" and "bring your own technology" use.

This article appears in the December 2014 issue of HealthLeaders magazine.
Even as data breaches proliferate, healthcare workers are carrying ever more digital devices and tapping into consumer-oriented cloud services, causing no end of challenges for healthcare leadership.
The lure of the latest smartphone or tablet, or wearable devices such as Google Glass, is irresistible to healthcare staff. A major strategy of healthcare leaders is to get out in front of the parade and offer technology and impose policies that accommodate the new devices and technology services, but with appropriate oversight.
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2014 Clinical Informatics Diplomates

AMIA congratulates the following 331 physicians in the 2014 class of board-certified clinical informatics subspecialists. The candidates sat for a board exam in October 2014 administered by either the American Board of Preventive Medicine (ABPM) or the American Board of Pathologists (ABP).
The total number of currently board-certified clinical informatics diplomats is 785. The subspecialty is open to board certified physicians in all 24 specialties.
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EHRs Threaten Confidentiality of Adolescent Healthcare

JAN 7, 2015 7:27am ET
Although much attention has been given to the benefits of electronic health records, EHRs pose serious challenges regarding the privacy of sensitive health information for minor adolescents and parents.
That is the opinion of researchers at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health, published in a Jan. 6 viewpoint article in JAMA, the journal of the American Medical Association.
In the piece, Ronald Bayer, Robert Klitzman, M.D., and John Santelli, M.D., discuss two threats to confidentiality created by EHRs—the possibility of disclosure to parents of health information that the adolescent may wish to keep private, and disclosure to the adolescent of information that parents may wish to keep private.
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Fertility sensor scores best startup award

Posted on Jan 07, 2015
By Erin McCann, Managing Editor
For the millions of women trying to conceive at any given time, a new, novel technology that detects fertility levels via a wireless sensor may just be the big game changer.   
The personal, self-inserted sensor ring, which was just named winner of the mHealth Summit 2014 Venture+ Forum pitch competition, detects subtle changes that occur in the body prior to ovulation, changes that traditional methods have been often unable to detect. Sensor data from the ring is then sent as an alert to a woman's smartphone notifying her when she is most fertile. 
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FTC's Edith Ramirez: Connected health devices create bevy of privacy risks

January 7, 2015 | By Dan Bowman
For much of 2014, the Federal Trade Commission made it a point to be a prominent voice regarding the protection of consumer health information. Last May, for instance, it published a report recommending that Congress force data brokers to be more transparent about how they use the personal information of consumers, including health information.
And in July, FTC Commissioner Julie Brill spoke about how consumers should be given more choices from developers when it comes to data sharing by smartphone apps gathering health information.
That trend continued Tuesday at the International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, where FTC Chairwoman Edith Ramirez spoke about privacy protection, including for health data. Ramirez noted, for instance, that while the Internet of Things has the potential to improve global health, the risks are massive.
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Lots of docs will be skipping Stage 2 meaningful use

Posted on Jan 06, 2015
By Mike Miliard, Editor
A new survey of physicians by Healthcare IT News' sister site finds that 55 percent of them won't attest to Stage 2 meaningful use this year. It's "almost impossible" says one specialist polled by Medical Practice Insider.
"The following sentence is false 100 percent of the time: 'We completed meaningful use stages 1 and 2 and as a consequence the care we provide for our patients has improved,'" said another skeptical doc – one of nearly 2,000 polled by MPI in partnership with SERMO.
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Patient Monitoring Market to Reach $5B by 2020

JAN 6, 2015 7:45am ET
The U.S. patient monitoring market is projected to grow to more than $5 billion by 2020, thanks to double-digit growth over the next five years in the telehealth market, according to iData Research.
By 2020, the firm predicts that telehealth for disease conditions management will account for more than half of the total telehealth market, fueled by the demand for customized healthcare solutions, increased chronic illness among an aging population, and strained healthcare budgets.
In addition, market growth is anticipated to be “further bolstered as awareness and implementation of standards for reimbursement and adoption of this type of care management increase,” while both public and private organizations are expected to continue to budget more funds for telehealth expenditures during that timeframe.
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FHIR and the future of interoperability

By Brian Ahier, Director of standards and government affairs, Medicity and Jean Doeringsfeld, COO of Wisconsin Statewide Health Information Network (WISHIN)
There is growing interest in the health care information technology community in an emerging data exchange technology known as FHIR (pronounced “fire”).
FHIR, or Fast Health Interoperability Resources, is a proposed interoperability standard developed by the health care IT standards body known as HL7. Health Level Seven International (HL7) is a not-for-profit, ANSI-accredited standards developing organization dedicated to providing a comprehensive framework and related standards for the exchange, integration, sharing and retrieval of electronic health information.
Stakeholders from across the HIT ecosystem are actively exploring, experimenting and testing FHIR. Part of the enthusiasm surrounding FHIR is due to the elegant simplicity of the technology.
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15 predictions for 2015

What does 2015 hold? EHI asked 15 experts for their predictions.
2 January 2015
There is a financial challenge; there will be a general election. Once the election is over, debate will start in earnest about the future shape of the NHS; and how IT can support the changes needed to improve efficiency and reduce demand by improving health. 
That will throw up other controversies; such as where open source fits and whether confidentiality can be maintained. Great leaders will be needed; including new clinical leaders. Sam Sachdeva asks fifteen IT directors, suppliers, analysts and other observers of the healthcare IT scene for their predictions for 2015; and finds they are expecting another busy year.
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Study: Time to re-evaluate policies on patient access to PHI

January 6, 2015 | By Susan D. Hall
Even as healthcare providers embrace electronic health records, it's time they re-evaluated their policies for providing patients with access to their medical records, according to research published at Perspectives on Health Information Management.
The research is based on survey responses of 313 members of the American Health Information Management Association.
Despite the adoption of EHRs and portals through which patients can view their records, many organizations still charge patients for that access. In fact, 52.6 percent of respondents said they charge patients for electronic copies of their medical records--such as via a flash drive or DVD--and 64.7 percent charge patients for paper copies. Charges for paper copies generally were by page, with 65 percent reporting that they charge less than $1 per page.
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Electronic prescribing of controlled substances on the rise

Written by Akanksha Jayanthi (Twitter | Google+)  | January 05, 2015
The number of controlled substances being electronically prescribed is on the rise, according to a study in the American Journal of Managed Care.
Researchers used nationally representative transactional data from Surescripts from July 2012 to December 2013 to examine electronic prescribing of controlled substances trends.
They found the number of EPCS increased from 1,535 to 52,423, growing an average of 3,000 scripts every month during the study period. At the start of the study, 0.05 percent of clinicians on Surescripts network were prescribing controlled substances electronically. By the end, 1 percent prescribed them.
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In Las Vegas: A Tale of Two Devices at CES

Scott Mace, for HealthLeaders Media , January 6, 2015

The FDA's job may need clarification as technology changes. Fitness devices are becoming more intelligent and will soon produce data that approaches medical advice.

Two years ago, at the end of my on-site roundup of the building digital health excitement at the International CES show, I wrote about Scanadu, a company developing a noninvasive vital sign reader called the Scout. At the time, Scanadu's founders showed their prototype at a table at one of the off-floor CES press events. It was to my knowledge one of the only announced products at the show waiting for FDA clearance before going on sale.
Today, two years later, Scanadu still doesn't have FDA clearance, and you can't buy the Scout on the company's website. It's a shame, really. The product is more elegantly designed than many consumer electronics products, appears to be simple to use, and provides a lot of valuable biometric information to someone possessing one.
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A (Global) Cornucopia Of Clues To Optimize Medication Use

Posted By N. Lee Rucker, Michael Holden, Parisa Aslani and Rana Ahmed On January 6, 2015 @ 9:00 am In All Categories,Global Health,Health Care Costs,Health Care Delivery,Pharma,Policy,Public Health | No Comments
The most common patient care intervention, issuing a prescription [1], is fraught with continuing challenges for patients, their caregivers, and practitioners. Patients rely on medications across a continuum of care, with expectations for self-management [2]; some experience unintended problems along the way. For older patients, such problems often result in emergency hospitalizations [3], many of which could be prevented.
Historically, integration to support safe and appropriate medicine use across the U.S. health care ecosystem has been sporadic, including within our siloed Medicare Part D benefit [4]. Other countries, however, are well on their way to better integration.
In the following blog post, we share examples from the United Kingdom and Australia. Fortunately, U.S. practitioners who recognize optimizing medication use as an essential element of population health can look to several recent federal opportunities to support their efforts.
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How Accurate is Google Flu Trends?

JAN 5, 2015 7:44am ET
With the influenza outbreak in the U.S. now officially considered an epidemic by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the jury is still out on whether the performance of Google Flu Trends is up to snuff.
Launched in the U.S. in 2008, Google Flu Trends uses aggregated web search data to estimate flu activity in near real-time. Estimating the start, peak, and duration of each flu season, the company claims that Google search terms are good indicators of flu levels and that their online service is more finely grained geographically and is more immediate—up to 1-2 weeks ahead of traditional methods such as the CDC’s official reports. At the same time, Google Flu Trends emphasizes that it “is not designed to be a replacement for traditional surveillance networks or supplant the need for laboratory-based diagnoses and surveillance."  
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FDA well on its way to full Sentinel system for device safety monitoring

January 5, 2015 | By Katie Dvorak
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration's Mini-Sentinel program, used for medical product safety monitoring, is ready to move to the full-scale system, according to Janet Woodcock, director of the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.
"The Mini-Sentinel pilot program has established secure access to the electronic healthcare data of more than 178 million patients across the country, enabling researchers to evaluate a great deal of valuable safety information," Woodcock writes in a recent blog post.
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Health IT outsourcing poised for growth in 2015, beyond

January 5, 2015 | By Susan D. Hall
The market for IT outsourcing in healthcare and life sciences is expected increase at an 8.6 percent compound annual growth rate through 2019, with the adoption of cloud-based services among the major trends, according to global research firm TechNavio.
Organizations might be outsourcing just a few applications or their whole IT operations, relying on managed services to eliminate the need for an in-house IT staff. IT outsourcing helps healthcare providers to deploy business applications rapidly and focus on their core business.
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IBM applies cognitive computing to skin cancer diagnosis

31st December 2014
IBM is researching the application of cognitive computing to analyse dermatological images of skin lesions with the goal of assisting clinicians in the identification of various cancerous disease states.
Cognitive computing technology can be used to learn and identify specific patterns in medical images, has the potential to increase the number of cases detected and help clinicians make earlier diagnoses.
The research, which is part of a collaborative effort with Memorial Sloan Kettering, is investigating the automated analysis of skin imaging.
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MEDITECH embeds sepsis alerts into EHR workflow

Written by Akanksha Jayanthi (Twitter | Google+)  | January 02, 2015
MEDITECH's EHR is equipped with an early warning detection system recognizing patients at risk for sepsis.
The system is embedded into the clinical workflow. When clinicians are inputting information and their assessments into the EHR, the system monitors patient information. The system will then alert clinicians if a patient meets the criteria for potential sepsis.
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Patient Matching Hampered by Poor Data Standardization

Author Jennifer Bresnick | Date January 2, 2015

The healthcare industry must develop a national patient matching strategy based on standardized data elements as HIE expands, AHIMA says.

A dearth of standardized data elements is preventing EHR interoperability and widespread health information exchange (HIE) along the care continuum, states an article published recently in AHIMA’s Perspectives in Health Information Management, and is contributing to the inability to properly match patients across disparate systems.  While better patient matching has been identified by the ONC as a short-term goal for the healthcare industry, the lack of a nation-wide data standardization strategy may limit efforts to improve interoperability, health information exchange, and improved data governance.
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12 Experts Weigh In on Health IT Progress, Disappointment in 2014 & Hopes for 2015

by Kate Ackerman, iHealthBeat Editor in Chief Monday, January 5, 2015
Health IT interest, adoption and use saw big strides in 2014. But debate surrounding federal health IT initiatives, regulation and the future of the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT also grew over the last year.
For the fourth year in a row, iHealthBeat asked a variety of stakeholders to weigh in on health IT progress, disappointments and hopes for the future.
Each health IT expert answered three questions about the most significant health IT development in 2014, the biggest disappointment in the past year and how the remaining barriers to widespread health IT adoption should be addressed in 2015.
Before finding out what the experts think, here's a quick look back at 2014.
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2014: The death of meaningful use?

The policy known as meaningful use was designed to ensure that clinicians and hospitals actually used the computers they bought with the help of government subsidies. In the last few months, though, it has become clear that the policy is failing. Moreover, the federal office that administers it is losing leaders faster than American Idol is losing viewers.
Because I believe that meaningful use is now doing more harm than good, I see these events as positive developments. To understand why, we need to review the history of federal health IT policy, including the historical accident that gave birth to meaningful use.
I date the start of the modern era of health IT to January 20, 2004 when, in his State of the Union address, President George W. Bush made it a national goal to wire the U.S. health care system. A few months later, he created the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC), and gave it a budget of $42 million to get the ball rolling.
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Enjoy!
David.

Friday, January 16, 2015

It Rather Looks Like MMRGlobal’s Hope For Vast Patent Riches Have Taken A Body Blow!

This appeared late last week.

Judge Strikes Down Patent Claims by EHR Vendor

JAN 9, 2015 7:32am ET
A United States District Court has ruled against an EHR vendor which claimed broad patent protection over shared health information.
Judge Otis Wright of the Central District of California invalidated five claims in one of Los Angeles-based MyMedicalRecords’ patents in a case involving Walgreens, Quest Diagnostics, WebMD, and more, according to a blog post from Electronic Frontier Foundation activist Adi Kamdar.
According to Kamdar, Wright's decision is one of many new cases that have implemented the Supreme Court’s recent ruling in Alice v CLS Bank. In the case decided by Wright, Kamdar said MyMedicalRecords asserted a patent that covered a method of providing online personal health records in a private, secure way.
The full article is here:
It rather seems that the US Supreme Court has spiked MMRGlobal’s guns.
One issue taken of the NEHTA agenda I would suggest, as they seem very unlikely to be sued by MMRGlobal regarding the PCEHR now!
David.

Thursday, January 15, 2015

Review Of The Ongoing Post - Budget Controversy 15th January 2015. It’s Getting Much Worse!

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 late last year  - 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.
Last week this appeared - so the ground may be shifting but the new regulations start on January 19th - Next Monday!

Coalition looks to dump optional GP co-payment

Joanna Heath
The Abbott government would keep the majority of planned ­savings in its revamped Medicare package if it dropped its $5 optional GP co-payment.
There is speculation the ­measure, which lacks support among the Senate crossbench at present, could be quietly ­abandoned as the government seeks to close off ­lingering political battles from last year’s May budget.
The co-payment is not due to come into force until July 1 this year. It will be introduced by ­cutting the Medicare rebate by $5, to prompt GPs to charge patients who can afford to pay.
The optional charge is only one of three measures announced by the government in December to replace its original mandatory $7 co-payment proposal, but is proving the most controversial among parliamentarians.
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Otherwise the Budget still 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 (flat to down seems to be consensus).
It 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:

CEOs call for Senate overhaul

Chanticleer
Tony Boyd and Michael Smith
Australia’s chief executives want urgent changes to how the Senate is elected and longer terms for the House of Representatives.
Morale among Australia’s business leaders, which peaked in late 2013 when Prime Minister Tony Abbott was elected after six years of Labor power, has been hit by the inability of the ­Coalition government to get major changes through the Senate that could lift the economy’s performance.
The rising business frustration at the impact of minor parties on policy and the inability of Mr Abbott to fulfil his electoral mandate is revealed in the 2015Chanticleer CEO Outlook survey.

Late Breaking News: The new Health Minister has bowed to the political inevitable and has just (Thursday 15/1 at midday) withdrawn the regulatory changes which were to start next week. She admits she does not presently have a plan and will consult widely over the next period. Watch this space!
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General.

Call to target health insurance rebate at private care

Sean Parnell

A PUSH to strip the health ­insurance rebate from policies covering unproven natural therapies has sparked a call for the ­Abbott government to go further and focus the subsidy on high-end private hospital care.
The Weekend Australian revealed health funds and their members had embraced the so-called alternatives to traditional medicine, with natural therapies responsible for the biggest ­increase in benefits paid to members outside of hospital services — a 345 per cent increase in 10 years.
As the government considers stripping the rebate from policies covering unproven therapies, such as homeopathy — from April 1 when premiums will rise again — market trends have exposed other problems for the industry and potential challenges for the government. The industry regulator, the Private Health Insurance Administration Council, has charted an increase in general insurance policies, which may cover natural therapies but not hospital treatments and still receive the rebate.
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4:39pm January 6, 2015

PM remains 'box office poison', says Labor

Federal Labor wants Queenslanders to send Tony Abbott a big message on January 31, even if it thinks Premier Campbell Newman is desperate to keep the prime minister away from his re-election campaign.
Acting opposition leader Tony Burke says the prime minister remains "box office poison", a term Victorian Liberal strategists used to describe Mr Abbott before their state election loss in late 2014.
"Campbell Newman is doing everything he can to try to time an election in a way that has people thinking about Tony Abbott as little as possible," he told reporters in Canberra.
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Redirect the subsidy to cure insurance headache

FOR an industry that attracts a government subsidy of more than $5 billion a year — more than the wildest aspirations of the carmakers — the private health insurance industry has escaped a serious look for almost 20 years.
The industry we see today is the linear descendant of the industry of the 1950s, with more than 30 funds, over-regulated, over-subsidised and over-protected. Two for-profit funds dominate the industry — BUPA (owned by a British not-for-profit) and newly listed Medibank Private. These dominant funds have about 80 per cent of all issued policies, with Medibank Private losing its position as market leader to BUPA in the past six months, continuing a slow decline that had been evident for years.
The latest tweak to industry regulation is apparently to be the withdrawal of subsidies for unproven natural therapies, a good move that will promote greater use of evidence in healthcare. There has also been a recent call to target subsidies only to those products that offer comprehensive coverage (The Australian, January 1), based on the argument that products which only cover public hospital care by definition don’t reduce demand on public hospitals, one of the arguments for the subsidy in the first place.
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Means testing free hospital care will make medicare sustainable

CONVERTING the private health insurance subsidy into a private hospital subsidy, as Stephen Duckett suggested on this page yesterday, is only half the solution to funding healthcare.
Unless a means test is employed, and so long as Medicare offers ‘‘free and universal’’ public hospital care paid for by taxes, consumers have scant incentive to take out private health cover regardless of the subsidy available for private hospital care. This is the chief lesson of the last half-century of health policy.
Public subsidies for public and private hospital care were a core feature of pre-1980s Australian health system. However, reviving this approach in the limited form of a publicly funded private hospital subsidy is unlikely to promote a more efficient, mixed public-private health system without reintroducing another key policy of that era — a means test for public hospital care.
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The Australian economy is in need of some medicine

By Stephen Koukoulas
December 18, 2014
"The policy prescription to a sick economy should be clear. Needed now in Australia is easier policy in the form of either stimulatory levels of interest rates or a relaxation of fiscal policy, or some mix of the two. "
In terms of some hard numbers, Australia should ideally be recording real economic growth a little above three percent, on average, over the course of the business cycle. This would translate to employment growth sufficiently strong to lock in an unemployment rate that is consistent with the Reserve Bank of Australia’s inflation target of two to three percent.
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Morgan Stanley eyes slow growth, $A slide

Stephen Cauchi
Australia’s economy will grow at the slowest rate since 2009 over the coming year, according to a pessimistic Morgan Stanley overview for 2015.
The Australian dollar will slide to US76¢ and the sharemarket will trade sideways to 5350, with a bear case of 4400, according to the predictions.
Morgan Stanley did not predict any quarters of negative growth over 2015, merely subdued growth leading to a total 2015 GDP figure of 1.5 per cent. But this is notably less than other predictions. A Bloomberg survey of 35 economists in December produced an average GDP prediction of 2.54 per cent for 2015.
Federal Treasury is tipping 2.5 per cent growth in 2015 and the Reserve Bank between 2.5 per cent and 3.5 per cent growth.
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Fair billing, not bulk-billing, a healthier choice

PRIME Minister Tony Abbott’s ministerial reshuffle last month, focused attention on hardhead Scott Morrison moving to Social Services. Yet the hottest social policy seat belongs to his newly-promoted cabinet colleague, Sussan Ley.
As the new Health Minister, Ley succeeds Peter Dutton, now the tough cop on the border protection beat. Dutton shifted after a tumultuous year in health, highlighted by the government’s difficulties selling a $7 co-payment on GP services.
Yet the budget policy had the right intention, imposing a modest and affordable price signal on GP services with a ceiling to protect the elderly, the poor, young families and the chronically ill. But its design was rushed, consultation non-existent, and it focused too much on bottom-line savings over sustaining the creaking Medicare edifice.
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Frydenberg appointment gives Abbott muscle to sell economic message

THE fact is Joe Hockey’s future as federal Treasurer is intimately tied to Tony Abbott’s success as Prime Minister. This means these two seasoned political warhorses have a mutual interest in turning around the opinion polls and cementing their jobs.
Importantly, Abbott’s appointment of the up-and-coming, hardworking and intelligent MP for Kooyong, Josh Frydenberg, as the new Assistant Treasurer has afforded Hockey (and also Mathias Cormann) an opportunity to combine their complementary skills to sell the government’s economic message more effectively.
Frydenberg will also join the frontline in question time and more than likely land some body blows on the federal ALP.
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6 questions for the new health minister

5 January, 2015 Paul Smith 25 comments
Australia’s new Federal Health Minister, Sussan Ley, is now tasked with defending the government's $3.5 billion worth of cuts to GP funding following the Christmas departure of her predecessor Peter Dutton.
Mr Dutton during his brief tenure had declared the government was “totally committed to rebuilding general practice”.
That claim looks to many to be simply untrue.
With rebates cuts for millions of consultations lasting less than 10 minutes being introduced in just two weeks’ time — the first of three Medicare cuts coming the way of general practice this year — Australian Doctor lists a few of the many questions Ms Ley (pictured) now needs to answer.
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Medicare Co-Payments.

Medicare Funding Cuts - Support Materials For Practices

2014 was a turbulent year for the future of Medicare.  The Government has pursued an agenda of fiscal policy – not health policy – to strip $3.5 billion out of Medicare and shift these costs on to patients.
The AMA’s strong and sustained advocacy resulted in a number of concessions by the Government. [click here to read more about the original Government proposals and AMA advocacy]
Instead, the Government will:
General practice will be hardest hit, with the first change already set in law that will start on 19 January 2015.  The AMA has developed material to assist general practices to implement the changes to the Medicare Level A and Level B consultation items.
Let the Government and your local MP know that you oppose these changes. [click here to access links to MPs
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New year, same approach: implications of the Fed Govt’s confidence trick on Medicare

Marie McInerney | Jan 05, 2015 12:03PM | EMAIL | PRINT
Much happened on the health front in the closing weeks of 2014, not least with the appointment of a new Health Minister Sussan Ley. See some interim advice to the new Minister and judgements on the contributions of former Minister Peter Dutton from Croakey contributors.
The Federal Government also finally came up with a Plan B to its proposed $7 GP co-payment that also raises significant concerns. Thanks to Tim Woodruff, Vice President of the Doctors Reform Society, for this clear and timely post that explains the implications of the latest changes, including the new requirement that a Level B consultation be a minimum of 10 minutes duration, which took effect on 1 January.
See also this article – GP co-payment 2.0: a triple whammy for patients – from The Conversation by Stephen Duckett and Peter Breadon from the Grattan Institute.
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GPs lobby MPs, patients ahead of looming rebate cut, AMA president Brian Owler says

Wed 7 Jan 2015, 1:00pm
Doctors are taking their fight against the Federal Government's changes to Medicare consultations to the waiting rooms of their practices.
GPs are soon expected to display posters in their surgeries explaining to patients why they will have to pay more under the Government's changes to consultation rebates.
Late last year Prime Minister Tony Abbott announced a revised healthcare policy which includes an optional $5 co-payment.
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Doctors to demonstrate in protest at 'plan B' proposed Medicare changes

AMA president says public rallies in Sydney, Brisbane and possibly Canberra will draw ‘hundreds if not thousands of doctors’
Lenore Taylor, political editor
Doctors are planning public demonstrations over the Abbott government’s proposed Medicare changes as they ramp up a lobbying campaign against a policy they claim is the greatest threat to general practice in a decade.
The Australian Medical Association’s president, Brian Owler, told Guardian Australia doctors were planning public rallies in Sydney, Brisbane and possibly Canberra in early February to demonstrate their “extreme unhappiness” with the government’s health “plan B” unveiled shortly before Christmas.
The “plan B” saves $3.5bn over the next four years – almost as much as the original budget policy to introduce a $7 GP co-payment which was blocked in the Senate. But it achieves the savings by reducing or freezing Medicare rebates paid to doctors, leaving it up to the GPs to decide whether to pass on the costs to patients.
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Federal Govt faces doctors rallying in waiting rooms, streets over Medicare co-payment Plan B

Marie McInerney | Jan 08, 2015 10:58AM | EMAIL | PRINT
The Federal Government is facing the prospect of doctors marching on the streets against its latest Medicare package – possibly ahead of the Queensland state election on January 31 where health cuts are already on the agenda.
The Australian Medical Association (AMA) yesterday signalled it was launching a campaign to put a stop to the changes.
AMA President Brian Owler tweeted (above left) confirmation of plans for doctors to rally in capital cities, in a bid to lobby new Health Minister Sussan Ley and Senate cross benchers. He told ABC Radio:
We have a new Health Minister, and obviously the new Minister’s getting across her portfolio at the moment, but we would hope that common sense will prevail. Now, these changes are due to come in on 19 January. Parliament can disallow them when they come back in early February, so they will be introduced before Parliament has the chance to make the disallowance, but when they come back, the AMA and the other groups will be campaigning very strongly to make sure that these changes are stopped.
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Changes to Medicare billing to cause rise to GP fees, Australian Medical Association says

Thu 8 Jan 2015, 12:33pm
The Australian Medical Association (AMA) has warned of a rise in medical fees due to new changes to the Medicare benefits schedule coming into effect on January 19.
The Federal Government scrapped its plan for a $7 Medicare co-payment before Christmas, but AMA national president Associate Professor Brian Owler said new changes had outraged general practitioners.
Under the new co-payment schedule, rebates for GP consultations lasting less than 10 minutes would be reduced.
"This has angered GPs more than any of the other proposals, even more than the initial proposal," Dr Owler said in an interview on 666 ABC Canberra Breakfast.
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Petitioning Federal Minister for Health The Hon. Sussan Ley
This petition will be delivered to:
Federal Minister for Health
The Hon. Sussan Ley

Quit targeting general practice and the health of all Australians

Royal Australian College of General Practitioners
From 19 January 2015, patient rebates from Medicare will be CUT by up to $25, meaning patients will pay more. Both patients and GPs have been unfairly targeted under the Government’s revised co-payment model.
GPs are vital to the health and wellbeing of every Australian. Don’t let yours be targeted.
The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP) represents over 28,500 GPs working in or towards a career in general practice. The RACGP has been vocal with Government but it is falling on deaf ears. They haven’t listened to us but perhaps they will listen to you.
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7:13pm January 8, 2015

Patients could foot $20 shortfall for short GP visits

January 08, 2015: Changes have been quietly introduced to the Medicare rebate, placing limits on consultation times and forcing GPs to charge patients more.
Australians could be paying more for a visit to the doctor when changes to the Medicare rebate come into effect later this month.
Doctors have warned they will be forced to pass the difference on to patients when changes to consultation time limits are introduced on January 19.
“Patients would find it harder to get to a consultation to see their GP,” Sydney doctor Brian Morton said.
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Patients already avoiding doctor visits ahead of proposed Medicare cuts, says Broken Hill GP

By Gavin Coote
Posted yesterday at 10:19amThu 8 Jan 2015, 10:19am
A Broken Hill GP is joining the latest national push against the Federal Government's changes to consultation rebates.
Doctors will be putting up posters campaigning against the government's proposed $5 cut to the Medicare rebate, the plan which replaced the $7 GP co-payment proposal.
Local GP Ramu Nachiappan said the proposed funding changes were already putting patients off doctor visits.
He said he saw fewer patients book in over the New Year period compared with last year.
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Primary Health Care hit by ‘material’ funding cuts: analyst

Date January 9, 2015 - 2:46PM

Jessica Gardner

Tony Abbott also revealed a freeze on Medicare rebates to July 2018 and a $5 co-payment on doctor visits.
Cuts to Medicare funding of short visits to GPs, which are being fought by the powerful doctors' lobby, might  cost corporate medical giant Primary Health Care millions in revenue and significantly hit profit, a healthcare analyst has found.
A drop in the scheduled fee paid to doctors for visits that last less than 10 minutes from $37.05 to $16.95 is part of a revised Medicare funding plan put forward by Prime Minister Tony Abbott in December.
Mr Abbott also revealed a freeze on Medicare rebates to July 2018 and a $5 co-payment on doctor visits by adults and non-concessional patients under a plan that would save $3.4 billion over three years.
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Important changes to Medicare from 19 January

From January 19, 2015 important changes will be introduced regarding GP consultations. Additional changes will also come into effect from 1 July 2015.
Effective January 19, 2015 the following new time requirements will be applied to describe consultations.
  • Level A GP consultations (MBS item 3) will cover attendances less than 10 minutes (currently defined as straightforward consultations, without any reference to timing)
  • Level B consultations (MBS item 23) will cover attendances from at least 10 minutes to 20 minutes (currently defined as up to 20 minutes)
There is no change to item numbers used by non-vocationally registered medical practitioners as these are already time based.
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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 when Parliament comes back! Right now there is a lot of planning going on behind the scenes.
One wonders for how much longer this will go on?
Enjoy.
David.

Government Backs Down On Medicare Co-Payment - Back To The Drawing Board!

Amazing back-flip.

All planned Medicare rebate changes 'off the table'.

Consultations now to begin...

A matter to pause and consult on!

I have to say Minister Ley is sounding much more reasonable than her hopeless predecessor.

She has noticed there are unintended consequences - especially on the Rebate Changes for the short consultations.

Minister Ley says at present she does not actually have a plan C - hence the consultation! 

Note: Mr Abbott still keen on Co-payment so will be interesting to see what happens in Senate in February (or later).

David.