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."

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

The Opt-Out Trials May Be Much Trickier That Is Presently Believed. There Are Many Challenges I Suspect.



The latest news on the plans for the trials comes from Senate Estimates a week or so ago..
Here are the relevant bits (Skip down a page or so if you have already read it all)
Senator MOORE: What consultation has been had with the medical profession regarding the decision to shift to the opt-out system?
Mr Madden: The recommendations from the review were to increase participation in the system. The health community had said, 'If we had the majority of our patients in the system, we would be more compelled and likely to take this on and use it.' That came through in the form of submissions from the AMA, RACGP, Consumers Health Forum and others—
Senator MOORE: That was prior to 2014.
Mr Madden: That was in 2014, in the report. We did do some consultation directly with health care providers and the community between July and September 2014 just to confirm views about how that would work. The point I need to make is that opt-out, in the current budgetary decision, is to trial opt-out in at least two geographical locations to understand the issues and make sure that we have continued to maintain the consumer's or individual's confidence in the system and to understand the issues that might come with that. So we have not taken a decision to move completely to a national—
Senator MOORE: But you have made a decision to go to the trial of two opt-outs, which is a distinct change from the other process. This committee did an inquiry into the original legislation and the opt-in/opt-out model was a great point of contention at that time. So now, as a result of the review, we have gone with a trialling of opt-out.
Mr Madden: Yes.
Senator MOORE: What form are the trials going to take; has that been determined?
Mr Madden: We are looking at least at two trial sites. We are working with states and territories through the Australian Health Ministers Advisory Committee on the possible selection of sites. We need to find sites which are discernible so that people who are in the sites in the trials know that they are in the trials and people who are outside know that they are clearly not. So we will be doing consultation on the location of the trials. We will be trialling our communication processes and also working through education, communication and training for GPs and other health care providers in the trial sites. While the population and the individuals in those areas might have a registration, we want to make sure that the health care providers are engaged with that system as well. That is why it is important to work with the states, so that we have a connection through the public hospital system.
Senator McLUCAS: Are you proposing to use a PHN boundary for those trial sites?
Mr Madden: Not necessarily. The trial population that we are looking for across, again, a minimum of two and a maximum of five, would be about a million people. So it would probably be an amalgam of some PHNs and it could be based on postcodes that join a couple of PHNs together. We want to get a spread that includes lots of people or individuals and lots of GPs and specialists, allied and private, and public hospitals to get the whole connected community of health care providers for that community involved.
Senator MOORE: Have the terms of the trial been determined yet?
Mr Madden: No. Where we have got to at the moment is to describe the criteria that would pick out what those trial areas might be. We will be looking to appoint an independent person to create the evaluation criteria for that, certainly well before the trials begin.
And here:
Senator MOORE: I was just talking with you, Mr Madden, and also with NEHTA about the opt-out trials and in terms of the process you said you were going to look at two sites. Is that right?
Mr Madden: Yes. We are looking for a minimum of two sites. We do not want to go any larger than five. Again, we have criteria that would describe what would make for the best sites or not for the best sites. Did you want to know about the logistics of the opt-out?
Senator MOORE: Yes, I do, because of the process.
Mr Madden: By September we are looking to have the sites selected. In the funding for the opt-out trials or what we have called the participation trials, we have funding for education, communication and training for healthcare providers and certainly a heavy dose of communication for individuals in the areas so they are aware of what this means to them, what they get as a benefit, what their rights are and what they do if they choose to opt out. We would be looking to do that from early 2016 with the training starting around about the same time for the healthcare providers.
We then have a period for two months where we have a system available for the communities to inquire and get information about staying in the system or opting out of the system. They will have a system where they can indicate their expectation or their option to opt out of the system and after that two months we will create skeleton eHealth records for all of those people who did not choose to opt out. We will then give them six weeks or so for them to log into and take control of their records, if that is what they choose to do, because the eHealth system will still have the patient or the personally control aspects. They can still determine who can operate their eHealth record on their behalf, healthcare providers that might be allowed to or not allowed to upload records to their record and who can or cannot see particular records. They will have five weeks to take control of those and to put all of those controls in place if that is what they choose to do. Then about two weeks after that we will create the records. We are looking to target that for having records in the hands of healthcare providers and individuals after the controls have been set some time during July 2016.
Senator MOORE: So it is just over the year?
----- End extract.
So, in summary, after site selection we will have:
1. Education of providers and consumers on what is happening, what their rights will be to opt-out starting in early 2016 - with some training for providers in early 2016.
2. Two months will then be spent with consumers being able to try the system and inquire about and choose to opt-out etc.
3. Then everyone who did not opt out will have a skeleton record created within the system - presumably using data from the IHI service.
4. The opted in consumers will then have five weeks to take control of their record and set their desired access controls.
5. Two weeks after that the record will be populated with all the other information like, presumably PBS and Medicare claims data.
6. Providers and users will then have access and the system will be available for use a little over a year from now. Of course there will still be limited numbers of Shared Health Summaries and other useful clinical documents.
At present we do not seem to have information on:
1. How long the trials will actually run? - it would need to be a reasonable while - at least a year in my view.
2. Just how the trials will ensure the consumers (and providers) are actually engaged with all this - we are, remember, talking about a million people - many of whom will be children, homeless, lacking literacy or internet access, be mentally impaired or incompetent, be just who just ignore Government messages etc. (is no response treated as agreement to have a record or not?).
3. What the evaluation criteria for the Trials will be and how the trial outcomes will inform what happens next?
4. How will those who move in or out of a geographic trial area be detected and informed what is to happen to them and what they need to do?
5. How will those who reach an age of competence for independent decision making be alerted that they need to take some decisions and how will children who desire independence from parental access to their record be managed?
6. How will children who do not have control of their record and who want to suppress information (medications, referrals etc. that has been automatically loaded) from parents and others and who are old enough to know what they are doing, obtain the control they want of their record?
7. How will it be determined who controls an opt-out record if the patient is for some reason not able to take control for themselves?
8. What will happen if a disengaged consumer has information automatically loaded into the PCEHR they are concerned about being known to others and this information is then disclosed via clinician access to the record (or more likely their staff)?
9. How will control of created PCEHRs be adjusted in the event of divorce, family violence etc?
Feel free to add further concerns of your own regarding the trials. I am sure there are many others.
I have to say to have an unconsented record created and populated for you when you are a demented 90 year old in a nursing home or a fifteen year old who wants nothing to do with her abusive parents having access to her auto-created record seems pretty bizarre. Surely we need to have a positive response agreeing to opt in before record are created? If not the Government is setting itself for a ‘world of pain’ I reckon. I wonder has this been properly thought through?
David.

Monday, June 15, 2015

Weekly Australian Health IT Links –15th June, 2015.

Here are a few I have come across the last week or so.
Note: Each link is followed by a title and a few paragraphs. For the full article click on the link above title of the article. Note also that full access to some links may require site registration or subscription payment.

General Comment

An interesting week with lots of private sector activity and what has to be described as the same-old same-old  from the public sector.
The continuing dialog between interest groups and the e-Health Division, sadly, just seems to confirm that there is still a very big gap between what is hoped for and what might be achievable in the hands of those present running the e-Health  Division The depth of apparent understanding of what might work seems very limited.
Time will tell as time passes.
-----

Hard decisions on CDC software

By Natasha Egan on June 12, 2015 in Technology Review
CIOs and executives know it is all systems go for consumer directed care from next month, yet the information and communications technology to support its delivery are still evolving.
As the sector has been getting itself ready for the 1 July transition to consumer directed care (CDC), heads of aged care organisation’s IT departments have been tasked with getting home care information and communication technology (ICT) systems ready.
Gavin Tomlins, the chief information officer (CIO) of Queensland not-for-profit provider Sundale, says: “We know what our project timeline is and we know what we need to do. We will be ready,” he tells Technology Review. “We will have the new software package in place.”
Sundale had been using the People Point Software solution, which was acquired by Procura in 2013. Rather than automatically updating to Procura’s single source solution “we thought it was an opportune time to reinvestigate what is out there in the marketplace,” Tomlins says. This has involved “a lot of due diligence” comparing the major industry vendors and products, he says.
-----

Medicare toolkit dubbed ‘more crap’

12 June, 2015 Tessa Hoffman
An exhaustive “online toolkit” to teach GPs how to avoid getting busted by Medicare investigators has been launched by the Department of Human Services.
The Medicare Billing Assurance Toolkit was launched this week, with officials suggesting practices complete the self-audit process at least once a year.
The initiative has already been lambasted by one GP as “more crap”.
It includes a self-assessment guide as well as before and after questionnaires for doctors and practices to complete. And there is a "charter" that practices can adopt, pledging their allegiance to the non-abuse of the Medicare system.
-----

University of Sydney, Dell launch ‘Artemis’ supercomputer as research tool

Chris Griffith

A supercomputer commissioned by University of Sydney is helping unlock the secrets of the Ebola outbreak in west Africa.
Known as Artemis, the Dell computer is assisting researchers in molecular biology, economics, mechanical engineering and physical oceanography and offers powerful crunching of research data. The university and Dell Australia announced its launch yesterday.
The supercomputer is not your average desktop. It has 1512 cores of compute capacity, almost 10 Terabytes of fast DDR4 memory, 10 Nvidia Tesla K40 graphics units and 480 Terabytes of Lustre file storage.
-----

The power of data on the nitty-gritty of public health practice

Michelle Hughes | Jun 13, 2015 7:22PM | EMAIL | PRINT
Rebecca Zosel writes:
The second of the CEIPS (Centre of Excellence in Intervention and Prevention Science) Seminar Series was delivered by Dr Stephen McKenzie, CEIPS Research Officer on Monday 27 April: ‘Using health promotion practice records to inform practice’. The seminar profiled CEIPS’ long standing efforts to document public health practice so it is visible and can be shared, in order to build our understanding of effective practice and drive quality improvement.
Dr McKenzie illustrated the power of data on the nitty-gritty of public health practice by presenting an example of a recording method recently used in Healthy Together Geelong.
Healthy Together Geelong staff used three databases (healthy children, healthy workplaces, and other events) to document their practice. The databases – ‘Event Trackers’ – were an adaptation of the event logs recording method developed by CEIPS for use by Healthy Together Victoria health promotion teams, but their pedigree goes back much further. The original event logs were developed first by The University of Kansas Community Toolbox group. The team at CEIPS first adapted them to document community development practice in Australia in the mid-nineties.
-----

Integrating prevention, primary and acute care

What happens when four of the nation's leaders get together on a very interactive panel, facilitated by the feisty MC Julie McCrossin? Hard questions were asked, and mostly answered in a good natured and wide ranging debate during the Integrating Prevention, Primary and Acute Care forum.
Featured panelists included Prof. Mary Foley, secretary, NSW Health; Dr Steve Hambleton, chair, NEHTA and chair of the recently convened Primary Health Care Advisory Group; Richard Royle, Executive Director, UnitingCare Health and chair of the 2013 review panel of the PCEHR; and Prof. Diana O’Halloran, who among her many roles is chair of WentWest the GP training authority and also in transition from Medicare Local to Western Sydney Primary Health Network.
With the focus on integrating prevention with acute and primary care Prof Mary Foley kicked off proceedings by noting that integrated care is something that is much talked about and that IT is a major enabler because people now want to share information between providers, patients and other sources. 
Citing the HealtheNet program as an example of NSW progress in the area, she was congratulated by other panel members when confirming that 85% of Local Health Districts across the state (soon to be 100%) are now able to access a consolidated view of the patient’s clinical information, the patient’s PCEHR where it exists and with the majority sending electronic discharge summaries. The next steps are to integrate items such as pathology and radiology.
-----

Medical home potential

Nicole MacKee
Monday, 8 June, 2015
A SHARED-savings initiative used in a US-based medical home model that reduced patient hospitalisation and increased primary care visits has potential in Australia, according to experts.
A US study, published in JAMA Internal Medicine, found pilot medical home practices that received bonuses of up to 50% of any savings generated, contingent on meeting quality targets, had lower rates of all-cause hospitalisation and all-cause emergency department visits, and higher rates of ambulatory primary care visits across the 3-year study period. (1)
Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP) president Dr Frank Jones welcomed the findings, saying the research, together with existing evidence of reduced emergency department presentations and improved patient satisfaction, vindicated the College’s continued support for the medical home model.
-----

Ten apps to help beat the blues

Date June 9, 2015

Hannah Francis

Technology Reporter

Nineteen-year-old Isabella Merrilees-White is no stranger to anxiety and depression.
It started back in high school, when supporting her friends through relationship and family issues, on top of her school work, eventually took its toll.
"It was kind of stressing me out but I didn't really know how to help them," she said. "When you're that young, it's hard to know how to be there for people."
Like so many things today, there's now an app for that.
Clinical researchers are increasingly turning to technology to assist young people,  one in six of whom are affected by anxiety and depression, according to research from youth support service ReachOut Australia.
-----

Cash incentives on way for some PCEHR work

5 June, 2015 0 comments
GPs will be paid cash incentives to upload e-health summaries to the rebooted PCEHR — but only for patients with MBS care plans.
Federal Department of Health officials have told a Senate Estimates hearing that the move is aimed at encouraging greater clinical engagement with the moribund system.
"The incentives will be paid as an entitlement to those who use the system to upload records on behalf of their most in-need patients, and they'd be the ones who have care plans," the department's special advisor for e-health, Paul Madden, told the hearing.  
-----

Profiles and Exceptions to the Rules

Posted on June 9, 2015 by Grahame Grieve
One of the key constructs in FHIR is a “profile”. A profile is a statement of how FHIR resources are used for a particular solution – or, how they should be used. The FHIR resources are a general purpose construct, and you can do kind of general purpose things with them, such as store the data in a PHR, and do generally useful display of a clinical record etc.
But if you’re going to do something more specific, then you need to be specific about the contents. Perhaps, for instance, you’re going to write a decision support module that takes in ongoing glucose and HBA1c measurements, and keeps the patient informed about how well they are controlling their diabetes. In order for a patient or an institution to use that decision support module well, the author of the module is going to have to be clear about what are acceptable input measurements – and it’s very likely, unfortunately, that the answer is ‘not all of them’. Conversely, if the clinical record system is going to allow it’s users to hook up decision support modules like this, it’s going to have to be clear about what kind of glucose measurements it might feed to the decision support system.
-----
Exalt Resources www.exaltresources.com.au
Exalt Resources (ASX:ERD) is a resource and energy exploration company, with one NSW based gold and base metal exploration projects.

Exalt Resources acquiring ehealth software company MedAdvisor

Thursday, June 11, 2015 by Proactive Investors
Exalt Resources (ASX:ERD) is acquiring cloud based ehealth software company MedAdvisor International Pty Ltd that has contracts with four major pharmaceutical clients.
MedAdvisor has developed a world-class software platform that assists individuals in correctly using medication via a ‘virtual pharmacist’, dramatically improving health outcomes through improved medication adherence.
The software uses a cloud computing approach, in conjunction with optimised user experience on mobile and web devices.
-----
  • Jun 11 2015 at 5:36 PM
  • Updated Jun 12 2015 at 2:30 PM

Diagnose your ailments with apps ... sorting the quacks from the genuine help

Of the thousands of medical apps claiming to fix you, these are some that actually might. Finding the gems among the charlatans and quacks is a bit of a task, but Jessica Sier is here to help.

Everyone knows the joke about the girl trying to take a pregnancy test online and the plethora of websites claiming to do just that, you know, from getting a general pregnant-vibe from her eyeballs looking at the screen.
Many doctors are concerned about dangerous, inappropriate and plain wrong medical apps aimed at helping people diagnose or treat themselves at home. Since apps are so easy to make, there have been a swarm of farcical software on both iOS and Android.
Instant Blood Pressure was a $4.99 app promising to measure your blood pressure by using a smartphone's microphone and LED light. By placing your iPhone on your chest it just "reads" your blood pressure. Just like that. A nurse I showed this to started laughing at the idiocy of the premise but abruptly stopped when I mentioned Instant Blood Pressure was one of the top five downloaded apps in the health section of the app store.
-----
For Immediate Release on the 10 June 2015

Map of Medicine now integrated with MedicalDirector Clinical giving Primary Health Networks a new level of support at the Point of Care

Map of Medicine has provided clinically-led care pathways to support evidence-based decision making for more than twelve years. As part of its development for Australian customers, Map of Medicine is integrated with MedicalDirector Clinical and linked to the National Health Service Directory (NHSD). Now the latest clinical information is delivered directly to GPs’ desktops for use at the point of care. This means clinicians have access to the latest evidence-based, practice informed pathways, guidance and forms to review or share with patients during a consultation.
The leading provider of care pathways, Map of Medicine, now sits alongside MedicalDirector Clinical and can be accessed instantly via a neat sidebar which sits on the side of the screen while MedicalDirector Clinical is open. A clinician can use MedicalDirector Sidebar during a consultation to instantly access pathways and information relevant to the patient’s presenting condition. When the clinician enters a patient diagnosis, MedicalDirector Sidebar uses this to search the database in Map of Medicine. These search results are filtered and locally relevant information is given priority.
-----

Accenture Doctors Survey 2015: Healthcare IT Pain and Progress

Accenture research reveals that healthcare IT functions are on the rise across the board. 
Accenture commissioned a six-country survey of 2,619 doctors to assess their adoption and attitudes toward electronic health records and healthcare IT. The online survey included doctors across six countries: Australia (510), Brazil (504), England (502), Norway (302), Singapore (200) and the United States (601). The survey was conducted online by Nielsen between December 2014 and January 2015.
The survey shows improvement in Australian doctors’ adoption of electronic health records and in use of many healthcare IT functions, but some capabilities are still not part of the regimen.
Specific Country Findings
Among the survey findings, Australian doctors (85 per cent) overwhelmingly agree that they are more proficient using electronic health records (EHR) in their clinical practices today than two years ago. The top IT functions used routinely by Australian doctors include: receive clinical results electronically that populate patients’ EMR (72 per cent) and enter patient notes electronically (70 per cent).
-----

Queensland GP says eHealth can improve clinical care

Created on Friday, 12 June 2015
Queensland GP and obstetrician Ewen McPhee is a member of NEHTA's Clinical Usability Programme (CUP) and is outspoken about the value of the eHealth record system to his patients.
Read more about what Dr McPhee had to say by downloading the PDF below.
Alternatively, the full text is available as follows.

eHealth can improve clinical care

eHealth records may be unfairly getting a bad rap because of confusion among many clinicians, says a rural GP.
Emerald Queensland GP and obstetrician Ewen McPhee is outspoken about the value of the eHealth record system to his patients and says it surprises him more practitioners are not actively participating.
-----

Online Health Bookings Boom With HealthEngine's 1,000,000 Appointment

Friday, June 12th, 2015 - Edelman
HealthEngine has reaffirmed its place as Australia’s largest online GP booking system, announcing a major milestone of its one millionth online booking. The booking was made at Gap Road Medical Centre in Sunbury, Victoria. 
As digital technology advances exponentially, the need to adopt technology to help meet the challenges in healthcare has never been clearer. E-health continues to rise globally and HealthEngine is leading the way in Australia, bringing the benefits of digital health and helping to empower people of all ages as they take more control over their health. 
In June 2012, 4,000 bookings had been made on HealthEngine. Today, just three years later, this has increased to 1,000,000 bookings and a health appointment is booked every 20 seconds compared to every 2.5 hours in 2012. HealthEngine plans to continue this momentum, with 120,000 bookings a month its projected bookings will increase by a further 300 per cent within the next 18 months. 
-----

World's first 'feeling' leg prosthesis unveiled

Date June 9, 2015 - 11:45PM

Nina Lamparski

Wolfgang Rangger, a patient of Professor Hubert Egger, of Linz University, poses with his "feeling leg prosthesis" in Linz on Monday. Photo: SAMUEL KUBANI
The world's first artificial leg capable of simulating the feelings of a real limb and fighting phantom pain has been unveiled by researchers in Vienna.
The innovation is the result of a twofold process, developed by Professor Hubert Egger at the University of Linz in northern Austria.
Surgeons first rewired remaining foot nerve endings from a patient's stump to healthy tissue in the thigh, placing them close to the skin surface.
-----

Allergic reaction to antibiotic medication kills woman

CATE BROUGHTON
Laurie Richardson feels robbed of a milestone 60th year with his wife after a hospital mishap led to her death.
The Canterbury District Health Board (CDHB) has apologised to Eunice Richardson's family after she was given an antibiotic she was allergic to, despite the presence of a MedicAlert bracelet and warnings on her file.
The 80-year-old died in Christchurch Hospital after she was given bacteriostatic antibiotic, Trimethoprim, for a urinary tract infection, in November 2013.
-----

What is Code?

For those who ever wanted to know anything about coding - all 38,000 words of it.
Really worth a  browse.
-----
Enjoy!
David.

Sunday, June 14, 2015

There Are A Large Number Of Attributes Of PCEHR Usability The DoH Can’t Fix! It Is Likely To Remain A Lemon No Matter What They Do.

One of the big claims from Government, which has been associated with the three years of additional funding for the PCEHR, is that they are going to re-develop the PCEHR to make it more usable for clinicians as this issue was raised by the Royle Review as a major problem.

It seems to me that this is a very, very hollow claim. Thinking about it lets see what can’t be fixed.

1. The PCEHR can never have the flexibility of a locally based Clinical System in displaying the various information held. Simply clicking the various tabs can display much more information than will ever be held (or should be) in the PCEHR.

2. The PCEHR will never be a primary system for the GP and will only be consulted for the occasional patient (who is new to the practice or is away from home) whereas the GP System will be used all the time but it will need to be consuming practitioner time (and costing money) while waiting for the PCEHR to be updated.

3. The speed of access to the PCEHR via the internet will never match the speed and convenience of a local system and most of the time will be irrelevant for the care of most patients.

4. The PCEHR interface will inevitably be less familiar and different to the familiar GP system and so may be less speedy to interpret and understand.

5. Access to the PCEHR during the consultation will always require a conscious decision and extra key clicks and time.

6. Consent for information upload of a clinical summary will need to be obtained on every occasion - with the time involved - in the opt-out environment as consent cannot be assumed before each consultation.

7. Without a major re-design the information held in the PCEHR will not be discreet information but rather lumpy .pdfs which will not provide the utility of results obtained direct from laboratories in terms of cumulative reporting and trend observation.

8. The local system will inevitably contain information which has been locally developed and derived and so will be intrinsically more useful to and trusted by the practitioners in that practice.

9. Inevitably access to the PCEHR will impose workflow and speed consequences and even if a record is known to exist there will be quite a high threshold to spend the time to look up the PCEHR in most cases - unless such access is made mandatory - in which case a clinical revolt, in the absence of major financial incentives, - would be inevitable.

In essence there is no amount of application of lip-stick to this pig that will give it the ease of use, speed, comprehensiveness, familiarity and relevant detail provided by local systems.

I am sure this is what most GPs would see as usability and it seems to me the PCEHR is never going to be in the ball park of what might be required for GP satisfaction.

Delivering the speed, richness and familiarity that is required for real acceptance is just not possible IMVHO.

Do you think the DoH can deliver a usable fix or do you have other issues to add? Let us all know.

David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 274 – Results – 14th June, 2015.



Here are the results of the poll.

Do You Believe The Government Has Any Real Idea About How To Fix The Useability Of PCEHR?

Yes 2% (3)

No 97% (138)

I Have No Idea 1% (2)

Total votes: 143

This has to be the clearest vote ever. Virtually no one who reads here thinks the Government can fix PCEHR usability.

I wonder how long it will be before we see the details of the Government Useability Plan?

Good to see such a great number of responses!

Again, many, many thanks to all those that voted!

David.