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."

Monday, April 30, 2018

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 30th April, 2018.

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

Lots of bits and pieces week with a lot on the security / privacy theme. As well the ADHA seems to be increasing promotional activities and we see lots of digital start-up activity!
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With one click, GPs accidentally agree to share their patients' data

Did you pay attention when installing the latest edition of Medical Director?
27th April 2018
Medical Director says it's being as “open as possible” about its plan to share GPs' de-identified patient data, after some doctors complained they had signed up without realising.
The company, which provides practice software to 45% of Australia's GPs, is asking for permission to extract information — including prescriptions and immunisation records of all their patients — as part of its latest program update.
Dubbed MD Heart, the scheme will allow GPs who agree to the handover to compare their activity with other doctors.
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Australia, your privacy has been breached — we reveal the biggest health data leaks

Sue Dunlevy, National Health Reporter, News Corp Australia Network
April 23, 2018 12:00am
EXCLUSIVE
THE sensitive health data of Australians is subject to a data breach every two days and the organisations and governments that fail to protect it are facing no financial penalties.
As outrage builds over Facebook’s failure to protect privacy, a News Corp investigation has uncovered health data that shows if Australians have a sexually transmitted disease, mental illness, HIV or an abortion, even whether they’ve used a prostitute, is not properly protected.
A new mandatory notification scheme that requires businesses to report to the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner when there is a data breach shows in the first 37 days of the new regime a data breach occurred every two days in the health sector.
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“Creaking in the rigging”: The ADHA is warned to look beyond data warehousing to prioritise the people making sense of it all

Richard Lawrance | 23 Apr 2018
As Australian governments at state, territory and federal levels grapple with dramatically escalating healthcare costs, a bow wave innovation opportunity has arisen to provide a solution that will save billions at the same time as actually improving the quality of care: eHealth. 
The digitisation of health information in particular will enable the provision of medical records and other diagnostic and decision support data for health practitioners to point of patient care at any time, in any place with the right connectivity. 
Financial savings from reduced duplication of tests and endless repetition of patient history, along with the reduction of adverse patient events due to increase in information accuracy and integrity will transform the cost effectiveness as well as the service efficiency of care delivery. 
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Risk of failure points to budget fix for Medicare payment systems

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM April 24, 2018

Sean Parnell

The future of the Medicare payment systems — an issue that dogged the Coalition during the last election campaign — may have to be decided in the budget amid evidence there has been a “critically high risk of system failure”.
The payment systems are massive, responsible for up to 600 million health, aged-care and veterans’ affairs transactions each year, totalling about $50 billion. Several years ago, bureaucrats warned the existing systems were “old, overly complicated, expensive to operate and change and ... in need of redevelopment”. They have also stifled reforms in key portfolio areas.
Last term, a secretive systems-replacement project fuelled Labor claims the Coalition wanted to privatise Medicare. At the election, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull was forced to promise a new payments system would be owned, operated and controlled by the government, and work on a replacement continued last year.
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Data debacle earns health department a slap on the wrist

One of the odder privacy sagas seems have run its course
24th April 2018
It had all the hallmarks of a major blunder.
It was 2016 and the Federal Department of Health had just made public the MBS and PBS claims of some 2.5 million Australians, dating back 30 years.
The ostensibly de-identified dataset was supposed to be used for academic research.
But it wasn't long before three University of Melbourne boffins reported a potential flaw: using a few simple computer tricks, it was possible not only to identify the Medicare services provided by every GP in the data set, but also to identify patients and a significant amount of their medical history.
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ANDREW RYAN
April 26, 2018

Consent and ID after Cambridge

The Cambridge Analytica scandal, where the Facebook histories and personal records of more than 87 million people were extracted and used potentially for political influence, underscores a critical concept when it comes to digital identity: What rights do users have when it comes to giving consent?
According to Helaine Leggat, Principle Lawyer at Sladen Legal, Australian law does not distinguish digital identity from other forms or formats of personally identifiable information (PII).
“Global privacy and data protection laws includes information that identifies an individual, or has the potential to identify an individual,” she said.
“In relation to Facebook and Cambridge Analytica, both PII that indirectly identified individuals and inferential PII, was scraped and processed without consent,” she added.
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Patients demanding more tech in GP practices but the AMA says digital transformation comes at a cost

Lynne Minion | 26 Apr 2018
Consumer pressure is set to transform tech uptake in general practice, with new research claiming patients are increasingly demanding access to their medical records and SMS alerts to cut down on the time they spend in doctors’ waiting rooms.
But the AMA has said technologies are expensive to implement and doctors continue to have privacy and cybersecurity concerns about data sharing.
Tech-savvy patients are increasingly demanding technologies that provide improved choice and control, but there is a “clear divide” between expectations and availability, according to the GP Insights Report by the Commonwealth Bank.
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27 April 2018

My Health Record: It’s not all terrible, is it?

Posted by Felicity Nelson
I still haven’t decided whether I want to opt out from getting a My Health Record later this year. 
For more than half a decade, My Health Record (MHR) has received a hammering in the media for failing to make itself useful to patients or doctors. 
E-health experts have called for a reboot of the $2-billion project, but the people behind the venture seem to have fallen prey to the sunk-cost fallacy, rendering any attempt to restructure the project near impossible because of because of the weight of the accumulated emotional investment in it. 
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ACEM welcomes next phase of My Health Record

The peak body for emergency medicine in Australia and New Zealand has welcomed the next phase of the My Health Record.
According to the Australian Digital Health Agency, which is responsible for the My Health Record, records will be created for all Australians by the end of 2018, unless they choose not to have one.

The Australasian College for Emergency Medicine (ACEM) supports every Australian having a My Health Record.

“Providing quality care in a modern health system relies on accessible and accurate clinical and patient information,” ACEM President Dr Simon Judkins said.
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Media release - Digital health leaders meet in United States to forge global plans

27-April, 2018
Digital health leaders from 17 countries and the World Health Organization (WHO) are participating in the Global Digital Health Partnership (GDHP), which has held its second Summit hosted in Washington DC on April 24-25. Participants discussed approaches to global collaboration in a range of topics related to the delivery of digital health services and associated policy priorities.
The GDHP is a collaborative of governments, territories, government agencies and the World Health Organisation to support effective implementation of digital health services. It was initiated in February 2018 in Canberra, Australia.
Australia, Argentina, Austria, Republic of Belarus, Canada, Hong Kong SAR, Republic of Indonesia, India, Italy, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, New Zealand, Singapore, Republic of Korea, Sweden, the United States, the United Kingdom, the Ukraine, and the World Health Organization (WHO) are participating in the GDHP.
The GDHP is a platform for international healthcare leaders to share best practice in the use of data and technology to advance health and care, said Tim Kelsey, CEO of the Australian Digital Health Agency, which hosts the GDHP secretariat.
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My Health Record – the connection to accessible information at any time

Hospital pharmacist Leonie Abbott discusses the benefits of My Health Record.
This article originally appeared on Australian Association of Practice Management (AAPM).
By the end of this year, every Australian will have a My Health Record unless they decide they do not want one – and all healthcare providers need to be prepared, wherever they are.
Already 5.5 million Australians – more than 20% of the population – have a My Health Record.
Almost 1,000 public and private hospitals around Australia have connected to the My Health Record system via their electronic medical record systems. Across Australia, 72% of public hospitals are connected to My Health Record – covering approximately 81% of available beds nationally.
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Framework for Action – invitation for contributions

24 April 2018
Have your say about the implementation of Australia’s National Digital Health Strategy – Safe, Seamless and Secure.
Australia’s National Digital Health Strategy – Safe, Seamless and Secure was published in August last year after an extensive national consultation. As we move towards the implementation of this overarching vision, we are once again seeking input from interested parties about this next phase of development.
This implementation plan is called the Framework for Action. The realisation of this strategic vision is expected to result in
  • Hospital admissions avoided
  • Fewer adverse drug events
  • Reduced duplication of medical tests
  • Better coordination of care for people with chronic and complex conditions, and
  • Better informed treatment decisions.
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Have your say on the Health Information Workforce Census

Your participation will assist in Australia’s digital health workforce planning.
24 April 2018
Are you part of Australia’s health information workforce? Do you work in, or are actively seeking work in, a role related to developing or managing health information? Hint: If you’re reading #Share, you almost certainly are!
If so, you should consider participating in the Health Information Workforce Census, which is being conducted by the University of Tasmania, the University of Melbourne, the Australian Digital Health Agency, and a host of other organisations. The purpose of this census is to count and delineate the current health information workforce in Australia, and to identify career pathways and future training and support needs for the sector.
As with any census, maximum levels of participation will lead to better quality data and more reliable forecasts. As a #Share reader, we encourage you to participate, and also to help promote the census in your workplace with the promotional materials available on site.
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International recognition for Australia’s my Health Memory app

Sydney Children’s Hospitals Network app wins at 2018 Health Innovation Awards.
“Make it easier for me to do what I want to do when I want to do it, and make sure I don’t miss anything that’s really important. Because I’m frightened ¬ especially if I’m looking after a young child ¬ that I’m going to miss something that’s critical for them.”
When the Sydney Children’s Hospitals Network (SCHN) embarked on an extensive consultation with patients about their needs, these are the key themes that emerged, Cheryl McCullagh, Director of Clinical Integration at the SCHN, tells us.
This consultation process shaped the design and development priorities of the My Health Memory app, which is being developed by Oneview Healthcare in collaboration with the SCHN. The ultimate goal of the app is to create a “shared health memory for life” which empowers patients to actively participate in their care. The functions of the My Health Memory app are therefore directly reflective of patients’ expressed needs.
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GDPR data breach notification letter

Originally Published: Apr 2018
Once the GDPR becomes enforceable on May 25, 2018, organizations everywhere will be subject to stiff fines and penalties for noncompliance. This download includes an overview of the information required for a basic data breach notification as well as a sample letter to help your organization create an appropriate response.

From the download:

In the current business environment, it is almost inevitable that an organization will experience a security breach that exposes collected personal data to unauthorized access. Under the provisions of the GDPR, regardless of the severity of the security breach, organizations must inform their EU customers and stakeholders of the incident in a timely manner.

GDPR compliance requires that all data subjects be notified that a security breach has occurred within 72 hours of first discovering it. Regardless of whether the notification is in the form of a public announcement, email, or text message, it should contain several key pieces of information:
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Reported breaches not painting complete picture of Australian security landscape

Although 63 data breaches were reported to the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner in less than six weeks, FireEye's Mandiant has warned the figure is higher, but organisations are unsure if their breach fits the brief.
By Asha McLean | April 23, 2018 -- 05:08 GMT (15:08 AEST) | Topic: Security
The Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) reported earlier this month it had received 63 notifications since Australia's Notifiable Data Breaches (NDB) scheme came into effect on February 22, 2018.
While 63 breach notifications may appear quite high for the period spanning just shy of six weeks, Charles Carmakal, vice president at FireEye's Mandiant, said the number is likely to be even higher.
"In general, any time a data breach disclosure law comes into effect, there are a lot of organisations that actually do experience a breach, but they're still trying to figure out if the law applies to them and whether or not they're dealing with a reportable incident," he told ZDNet.
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DHS begins search for Sterrenberg’s replacement

Human Services CIO role up for grabs
Rohan Pearce (Computerworld) 23 April, 2018 09:06
The Department of Human Services has officially begun the hunt for a new chief information officer to replace Gary Sterrenberg.
Sterrenberg held the Human Services CIO role for half a dozen years before tendering his resignation last year in order to complete his PhD on ‘Measuring public value created through the introduction of a disruptive, digital platform-servicing model in the disability sector in Australia’. Prior to joining the department Sterrenberg was CIO at ANZ.
From January, Charles McHardie — general manager at Human Services’ CIO Group — has been acting CIO at the department.
The department’s recruitment documents state the CIO position is “arguably the most significant role of its kind in Australia”.
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ACT govt steals Health IT exec as next digital chief

By Justin Hendry on Apr 24, 2018 5:00PM

To drive transformation.

The ACT government has poached Department of Health IT executive Bettina Konti as its new chief digital officer, iTnews can reveal.
Konti, who has worked at the department for more than ten years, will assume the whole-of-government role on May 31.
She replaces inaugural CDO Jon Cumming, who departed the position in January to move to the UK.
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DHS used up child support system project budget two years ago

By Justin Hendry on Apr 27, 2018 6:53AM

Forced to rely on BAU funds.

The Department of Human Services spent all $102 million budgeted for the development of its new child support IT system almost two years ago and has "absorbed" extra funding demands ever since.
The department has been trying to replace its legacy ‘Cuba’ child support system since 2009, when it determined the system was incompatible with new initiatives and policy directions, and would soon reach the end of its usable life.
It was given $102.3 million over five years in the 2013 budget to replace Cuba with an “agile and responsive” system based on SAP commercial off-the-shelf technology.
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Orangeworm menaces healthcare computers

By Juha Saarinen on Apr 24, 2018 10:42AM

Plants Kwampirs backdoors.

Security vendor Symantec believes it has identified a hacking group that is planting remote access software on medical computers in order to steal information.
Dubbed Orangeworm by Symantec, the attackers have conducted supply chain attacks on healthcare providers, pharma companies, as well as IT solution providers and equipment makers for the medical sector, since January 2015.
Targets are chosen carefully, Symantec said, with attackers planting the Kwampirs backdoor that was first discovered in August 2016 on computers.
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Orangeworm group takes aim at healthcare sector

An attack group named Orangeworm is using a backdoor known as Kwampirs to target Windows machines in the healthcare sector and related industries in the US, Europe and Asia.
Security firm Symantec said the use of legacy versions of Windows like XP in these sectors was one reason why they were being targeted.
There was some confusion in the company's blog post about Orangeworm with claims that it was both "a previously unknown group" and also that it was "first identified in January 2015". Obviously both these statements could not be true.
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Submitting a health provider related tip-off

Page last updated: 22 December 2017

About this form

You can confidentially report suspected fraud or suspicious activity by health providers against health related programmes. It doesn’t matter how much or little information you have, every detail is valuable.
Health providers are:
  • professionals (e.g. doctors, pharmacists, dentists and allied health professionals)
  • organisations (e.g. medical practices, hospitals and administrative staff).
Health related programmes include:
  • Medicare
  • Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS)
  • Child Dental Benefits Schedule (CDBS)
  • Health Provider incentive programmes.

Security

This is a secure online form to protect your privacy.

Completing this form

Please supply as much information as possible in the following sections to enable us to assess your concerns.
You do not need to provide your personal details on the form. You can remain anonymous, but it may be helpful if we can contact you to ask for more information.
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  • Apr 23 2018 at 4:00 PM
  • Updated Apr 23 2018 at 4:00 PM

Garvan Institute uses Microsoft Azure grant to build genetic index to hunt disease cures

Sydney-based biomedical researchers at the Garvan Institute will kickstart an ambitious plan to create a genetic index including summary data of 5000 aggregated human genomes to help the global hunt for cures to diseases, after receiving a grant from Microsoft to crunch the data on its Azure cloud infrastructure.
The index will require enormous amounts of computing power, and the Garvan Institute hopes it will make a major contribution to ongoing international efforts, such as the hunt for cancer treatments, by making the resource accessible to the worldwide genomics community.
Chief of informatics at the Garvan Institute Warren Kaplan said there had been extraordinary advances in the technology of DNA sequencing during the past 10 years, meaning the different genomes could now be split into groups, in order to run hugely complex queries to try to pinpoint the causes of different abnormalities or diseases.
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Alcidion announces acquisition of MKM Health and Patientrack to create international specialist health informatics company

 Posted April 24, 2018
Highlights
  • Transformative acquisition creating a market leading, international specialist health informatics company focused on decision intelligence and analytics technology for improved health care
  • The combined Alcidion Group will have:
    • Specialised IT capabilities and a diversified product platform with lead products including: Miya and Smartpage products (Alcidion) and Patientrack (MKM Health)
    • Extensive capabilities in IT implementation, integration and data management in healthcare, supporting the product platforms
    • Proven sales and go-to market capabilities
    • Large diversified customer base including 20 UK National Health Service (NHS) hospitals, over 50 Australian public and private hospitals, and Health Departments and 11 District Health Boards covering more than 30 New Zealand hospitals
    • Combined revenue of approximately A$13 million in FY17 (on a pro forma basis)
  • Patientrack is highly complementary with Alcidion’s existing products and has an established customer base in the United Kingdom, New Zealand and Australia
  • UK market represents a new international market for Alcidion, with immediate cross selling opportunities
  • Initial Acquisition consideration of A$12 million with A$10 million to be satisfied by the issue of 198 million Alcidion shares and A$2 million payable in cash, subject to completion adjustments, and funded from existing cash reserves. A further contingent consideration of up to A$4 million payable in 12 months in Alcidion shares, subject to the revenue and EBITDA performance of MKM Health and Patientrack in that 12 month period
  • Highly experienced Board and management team to be led by Ray Blight as Executive Chairman, with Ms Kate Quirke – currently CEO of MKM Health – to be appointed as CEO of the enlarged Alcidion Group
  • Investor conference call scheduled for Tuesday 24th April, 11.00am AEST (registration and dial in details provided at the bottom of this announcement).
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PainChek takes strides toward commercialisation for e-health tool

08:26 26 Apr 2018
Pain often goes undetected and untreated in people with dementia.
A carer can use the app, PainChek™, to check if a patient is experiencing pain
PainChek Ltd (ASX:PCK) had a busy March quarter working towards commercialisation in Australia for its pain assessment tools.
PainChek™ is the world’s first smartphone pain assessment and monitoring device that detects pain through facial recognition technology using a smartphone or tablet.

Targeting people with dementia

Clinical studies conducted in Australian residential aged care centres, have been published in the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease.
The published article indicates that PainChek™ is a valid and reliable pain assessment tool for people with moderate to severe dementia, who can no longer self-report their pain.
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Sponsored

How genomics can lead doctors to 'knowing ahead of time'

Oracle Australia

By Rob Preston, Oracle
Wednesday, 04 April, 2018
A relative handful of patient success stories show the promise of genomic medicine in treating previously confounding health disorders, but the big challenge now is to expand that patient universe from hundreds of people to hundreds of millions.
During a presentation at Oracle Industry Connect on 20 March, Dr Robert B Darnell, senior physician at The Rockefeller University and a founding director of the New York Genome Center, laid out how far we’ve come and how far we still need to go in customising medical care to individuals’ unique genetic makeups.
In setting up the enormity and complexity of the data challenge alone, Darnell offered this nugget: If you were to take the genomic data on just 400 or so people and represent it on a board, it would stretch from Earth to Mars.
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Citadel Group acquires medical SaaS provider Anaesthetic Private Practice for $2 million

The Citadel Group has acquired Queensland-based medical software-as-a-service provider Anaesthetic Private Practice (APP) in a $2 million all-cash deal.
APP was founded in 2010 and provides cloud-based practice management and billing solutions to anaesthetists in private practice, with close to 300 customers mostly in Queensland.
According to Citadel, 89 percent of APP's revenue is recurring, with approximately $500,000 in annual earnings.
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NBN boss says mixed technology build behind network complaints

  • The Australian
  • 9:50AM April 27, 2018

Supratim Adhikari

Outgoing NBN Co chief executive Bill Morrow has blamed poor customer experiences with the network on the Turnbull government’s multi-technology approach to building the $49 billion project.
In a new position paper, Mr Morrow acknowledges that NBN Co’s task of rolling out a national network while looking to make a profit had led to the high wholesale prices charged to the retail telcos.
Mr Morrow says that although the multi-technology mix has allowed NBN Co to roll out the network at a much faster rate, it has introduced a host of complexities and led to customer confusion.
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NBN Co to create a class war on its network

By Ry Crozier on Apr 24, 2018 6:55AM

Exclusive: How its new price construct really works.

NBN Co is set to divide its customer base into two classes in October: those who can afford to pay for a higher minimum standard of service, and those who can’t.
The company’s retail service providers - particularly those that have a lot of 12Mbps users - face being caught in the middle and are already bracing for a backlash.
The situation came to light in part because NBN Co finally released technical details [pdf] of a new permanent price construct it announced late last year.
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NBN Co accused of using Sky Muster as 'dumping ground'

By Ry Crozier on Apr 23, 2018 7:20AM

For hard-to-serve metro premises.

NBN Co has been accused of using its Sky Muster satellite service as a “dumping ground” for premises on metropolitan fringes that are otherwise too hard or expensive to serve.
In a submission to the joint parliamentary inquiry into the NBN, BIRRR (Better Internet for Rural, Regional and Remote Australia) expressed disappointment that more underserved areas of Australia were only being offered Sky Muster services.
It said that “despite extensive research” it was often unclear why NBN Co made choices about the access technology a particular town or community would get.
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Alien spacecraft speculation after WA telescope captures 'cigar-shaped' object

By Franziska Rimrod
10 April 2018 — 10:33am
When astronomers using WA's giant Murchison telescope first detected a mysterious cigar-shaped object in our solar system they thought it must be a comet or asteroid.
But after further study they realised it came from another solar system, prompting speculation it could be an alien spacecraft,  International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research reveals.
Researchers using the Murchison telescope, which is about 800 kilometres north of Perth, had been searching for radio transmissions coming from the object since late last year but did not find any signs of intelligent life.
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Enjoy!
David.

Sunday, April 29, 2018

The Harvard Business Review Explains Why The myHR Is A Flawed Digital Health Initiative!

This article appeared a few days ago:

How to Accelerate the Adoption of Digital Health Technology

April 26, 2018
In 1997, health information technology and digitial health pioneer Warner Slack wrote his bold and prophetic book, Cybermedicine: How Computing Empowers Doctors and Patients for Better Care.  Slack argued that “the electronic digital computer, with its capacity to hold large amounts of data and to execute multiple complex instructions and accuracy would…find an important clinical role in both diagnosis and treatment.”
While the digitization of health information has solved many problems in American medicine — particularly, helping to reduce medical errors by enhancing clinical decision support — it has inevitably created many new ones. Clinician-oriented solutions such as electronic health records (EHRs) are contributing to physician burnout instead of facilitating patient care. Many anticipated that health information technology would reduce costs by limiting the duplication of tests and studies, but there is little evidence that it has accomplished this. And while patient-oriented digital solutions have proliferated in number, their clinical impact has been limited. Slack anticipated a world in which patient access to records would enhance “patient power” — yet many patient-oriented solutions have little relevance in the clinical exam room.
Yet there are rays of light, each of which shares a common denominator: a rigorous focus on the specific needs of the end user, be it patient or clinician. When creative health systems consider and engage the end user of the digital technology as the “customer” of that technology, adoption levels are high and so, too, is the impact. Two CareMore Health initiatives serve as examples: One provides patients with non-emergency transportation, and the other is a new secure platform for clinical team communication and collaboration.
Patient-oriented solutions.
----- Lots omitted
Clinician-oriented solutions. As a physician-led organization, CareMore’s approach to health IT implementation fully embraces the end user at the outset. Clinicians identify the problems to be solved and collaborate during the testing of solutions to help the information technology team refine the app. Once fully implemented, continual refinement and oversight of the solution is managed collaboratively by physicians and members of a digital implementation team to ensure that the technology is being embraced and effectively utilized so its benefits are fully realized.
An example is TigerText, CareMore’s new secure platform for clinical team communication and collaboration. Inpatient, hospital-based physicians were accustomed to using phone calls, text messages, faxes, and e-mails to communicate with various outpatient physicians such as primary care doctors and specialists, and information was delivered to the members of the clinical team in question in a fragmented and inconsistent way. The new platform required clinicians to move to a single platform for communication.
----- More omitted
When the end user identifies the problem, participates in building in the solution, and continues to engage during its refinement, adoption is inevitable.
***
The American health care system is in constant need of innovation and digital health has the ability to provide solutions to some of its biggest challenges. As simple as it is, the industry has often failed to engage the end user in building solutions. By placing greater emphasis on the problems of the end user — and less emphasis on the systems themselves — health care systems  will perhaps succeed in creating the cybermedicine revolution prophetically envisioned by Dr. Slack.
The full article is here:
This sentence says it all:
“Yet there are rays of light, each of which shares a common denominator: a rigorous focus on the specific needs of the end user, be it patient or clinician.”
I have been making this point since the days of the PCEHR. You can’t have a system that at the same time is optimised for the clinician to use and at the same time for the patient. It just does not work and HBR agrees!
Why can’t the ADHA just stop this nonsense before we are all both clinically and technically frazzled. One application simply cannot be optimised for both clinicians and patients!
David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 420 – Results – 29th April, 2018.

Here are the results of the poll.

Do You Expect General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Like Regulations In Australia Over The Next Few Years?

Yes 12% (16)

No 80% (105)

The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Is A Total Mystery To Me 7% (9)

I Have No Idea 1% (1)

Total votes: 131

Looks like 80% see no revamp of personal data protection in the next few years.

I believe the majority are wrong – but there you go!

Any insights welcome as a comment, as usual.

A really, really great turnout of votes!

It must have been a really easy question as just 1 reader was not sure what the appropriate answer was.

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

David.

Saturday, April 28, 2018

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links – 28th April, 2018

Here are a few I came across last week.
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 a single source of truth database is helping one health system drive analytics success

Health Quest concluded it needed one database to help inform its approach to various clinical, financial and operational initiatives.
April 19, 2018 02:22 PM

Health Quest, a Hudson Valley-based health system comprising four hospitals and provider organizations, decided it needed a single source of truth database where it could send its staff for projects focused on achieving the Triple Aim.
With some work, it was able to combine its homegrown enterprise data warehouse with another developed by vendor Health Catalyst.
With that goal achieved, Health Quest is now seeing results.
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April 19, 2018 / 9:05 AM / 2 days ago

AI pharma firm BenevolentAI raises $115 million in funding

LONDON (Reuters) - BenevolentAI, a British pharmaceutical company that uses artificial intelligence to identify new drug candidates, said it had raised $115 million in a funding round that valued it at $2 billion. 
The company, which has more than 20 drugs in development, said it would use the funds to scale its activities, broaden the disease areas on which it focuses, and extend its AI platform capabilities.
Founder and chairman Ken Mulvany said the company had grown rapidly since it was founded in 2013.
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Is Your Health Data About to Get Hacked?

In March, Under Armour announced that the accounts of more than 150 million MyFitnessPal users had been compromised. What does that mean for the rest of the workout app industry?

Apr 19, 2018
Data breaches are now literally more than a daily occurrence—2,216 happened in the past year alone, according to Verizon’s annual Data Breach Investigations Report, released on April 10.
Health-related organizations accounted for a quarter of those incidents. Three weeks ago, that group claimed a troubling new member: Under Armour’s MyFitnessPal, which announced a data breach had exposed information (usernames, email addresses, and passwords) of up to 150 million users.
This is the first known data breach of a major consumer fitness app. (In 2016, Fitbit suffered a small breach, but the issue involved just a few dozen accounts where hackers stole user passwords independently, and used the accounts to seek fraudulent refunds.) But it likely won’t be the last. And what’s at stake is data far more intimate than passwords and usernames. Fitness trackers know our heart rates and step counts. They know we didn’t sleep well last night, maybe because they also know we ate barbecue and had a couple beers. And they track detailed patterns on when and where we like to work out, with whom, and where we live.
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FDA's 2019 budget request cites digital health; agency rolls out medical device initiative

April 18, 2018
Digital health appears to be making its way onto the national stage. Yesterday, FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb gave the field a shout-out in his remarks to the US House Subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development concerning the Fiscal Year 2019 budget request for the FDA. 
“The Budget requests new resources for the FDA to make significant investments in advancing critical areas of science, domestic technology and public health,” Gottlieb said to the subcommittee.  “Among these efforts, we're seeking to advance a new paradigm in the regulation of digital health technology that I believe will allow us to grow this promising field more quickly.”
The President’s Fiscal Year 2019 budget request asks for a total of $5.8 billion for the FDA, which means an increase of $663 million or 13 percent more than the FY 2018 Annualized Continuing Resolution, according to Gottlieb. 
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NHS Digital’s sharing of non-clinical patient data branded “inappropriate”

17 April 2018
NHS Digital’s sharing of non-clinical patient information with the Home Office has been branded “entirely inappropriate” by MPs, who say they are concerned about the body’s ability to act as a reliable steward of the data.
The Health and Social Care Committee launched an inquiry into the memorandum of understanding (MoU) on data sharing between NHS Digital, the Department of Health and Social Care and Home Office.
The memoradum, which came into effect in January 2017, allows the Home Office to gain access to patient data – including non-clinical information – for the purpose of tracing immigration offenders and vulnerable people.
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HIT Think How automation is thwarted when humans get involved

Published April 20 2018, 3:41pm EDT
Automation holds incredible power to streamline our work and personal lives and is a significant contributor to the progress being experienced in healthcare. Automation has a huge impact on lowering cost, but too often “automated” processes require far too many manual touches.
It’s hard to think of another industry where data plays such a dynamic role, with millions of transactions occurring daily between healthcare providers and suppliers. Automation has helped to speed those orders and payment transactions, but too often, price discrepancies, bad data or other data errors require manual intervention that disrupts the entire process, creates more opportunity for error, and raises overall costs. It’s the cascading effect of humans.
What’s needed is a heightened priority for validating the accuracy of data before sending it through to the next function in the order-to-pay process. The best way to get speed into the process is accuracy. Errors will always stop automation cold.
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AMIA letter casts broadband as a social determinant of health

Published April 19 2018, 7:21am EDT
The American Medical Informatics Association is calling on Congress to provide some kind of exemption for healthcare uses of the Internet from recently finalized federal rules on net neutrality.
The professional organization this week wrote letters to Reps. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) and Michael Doyle (D-Pa.), leaders of the House Energy and Commerce committee, which recently held a hearing on the issue of Internet prioritization.
“We’re trying to say that when Congress thinks of policies impacting availability of and cost of broadband, they have to know that care has become digitized,” says Jeff Smith, AMIA’s vice president of public policy. “How we give care has become digital.”
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Telemedicine can accurately diagnose rare cause of preemie blindness

Published April 19 2018, 7:23am EDT
Telemedicine has been shown to accurately diagnosis a rare cause of blindness in premature babies as effectively overall as in-person eye exams.
Researchers from Oregon Health & Science University teamed with seven medical institutions to examine the eyes of 281 infants who were at risk for retinopathy of prematurity (ROP), a rare but devastating cause of blindness in preemies.
They compared the accuracy of in-person exams with digital eye images that were remotely evaluated using telemedicine and found that there was no difference in the overall accuracy between the two evaluation methods. Results of the study were published in the journal JAMA Ophthalmology.
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Interoperability at top of CMS, White House agenda

Published April 19 2018, 7:24am EDT
Interoperability is a top priority for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the White House as well, according to Kate Goodrich, MD, chief medical officer and director of the CMS Center for Clinical Standards and Quality.
There’s “lots of ongoing work around interoperability,” including coordination with the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT and the Department of Veterans Affairs, said Goodrich during Wednesday’s HIT Advisory Committee Meeting.
“We are looking very broadly at all of the levers we have within CMS around how we can promote interoperability,” she added. “There were a number of roundtables held at the White House around this topic, which actually gave us a lot of terrific ideas that we are actively exploring. You will see some provisions intended to enhance the ability for folks to have access to their data from a patient-centric point of view.”
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Special Report: Diagnostic digital pathology

While experts welcome the current interest in diagnostic digital pathology, they believe that implementation of digital workflows, which includes integration between systems and software, is key to achieving widespread adoption and driving improvements. Claire Read reports.
As a key voice in digital pathology, Darren Treanor admits with a chuckle that people probably expect him to have foreseen the “absolute explosion” of interest in the field over the past 12 months.
But after over a decade as one of the few UK pathologists using the technology – in which slides are scanned into a computer for review, rather than being viewed on a glass slide down a microscope – he and others had become used to waiting for a moment which seemed determined not to arrive.
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KLAS report explores health IT buying decisions, customer satisfaction

The new study takes a broad view of dozens of healthcare market segments, from acute EHRs to virtual care platforms, and assesses the how providers choose vendor partnerships.
April 18, 2018 04:32 PM
When choosing a vendor, customers focus on integration, consolidation and functionality, according to a new study from KLAS that looks at how IT decision-makers choose their technologies in different market segments.
Satisfaction level of existing customers and retention rate (the percent of buyers planning to continue with a given vendor) were also included as reasons.
The Decision Insights 2018 report draws on the insights of buyers of EHRs, population health platforms, analytics tools, imaging systems and more to track the rationale for the initial acquisition and assess customer satisfaction afterward.
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Lean Methodology Boosts EHR Documentation Quality, Efficiency

Lean methodologies helped improve EHR documentation quality and efficiency, extended patient care time, and increased patient and provider satisfaction.

April 18, 2018 - Applying Lean methodologies to an inefficient, first-generation electronic health record (EHR) system could enhance EHR documentation quality and efficiency, increase patient care time, and improve both provider and patient satisfaction, according to a study published in AHIMA’s Perspectives in Health Information Management.
Led by Maryane M. Dinkins, MS, PT, the research noted that many healthcare professionals are concerned that EHR use is obstructing quality care although one of the primary goals of an EHR is to provide clinicians with timely, accurate, and complete patient data,.
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FDA Announces Plan to Advance Medical Device Safety and Cybersecurity

April 18, 2018
by Heather Landi
While medical devices play an increasing role in patient care and provide life-saving benefits to patients, these devices can be vulnerable to security breaches and therefore pose significant risks to healthcare cybersecurity. To address medical device safety, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has announced plans to advance new frameworks for identifying risks and protecting consumers, including proposals aimed at advancing medical device cybersecurity.
This week, the FDA released the Medical Device Safety Action Plan: Protecting Patients, Promoting Public Health. This new Action Plan outlines the FDA’s vision for how the agency can continue to enhance programs and processes to assure the safety of medical devices. “Our aim is to make sure that the new advances in technology that are enabling better capabilities and benefits are also harnessed to bring added assurances of safety, so that more patients can benefit from new devices and address unmet needs,” FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb, M.D., said in a statement.
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What are the challenges to getting precision medicine into the mainstream?

Experts point to the need to demonstrate value, as well as challenges integrating genomic data into EHRs and handling massive amounts of data.
April 17, 2018 02:59 PM
Research and innovation in personalized medicine are surging. However, adoption of personalized medicine technologies into clinical practice is comparatively slow.
There are a number of significant challenges to the integration of personalized medicine into healthcare practice. The Personalized Medicine Coalition is one organization that has been working to help identify and categorize challenges as well as identify strategies for providers to overcome these challenges.
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US, UK accuse Russia of actively targeting internet routers, devices

The rare joint alert says Russia, behind the global NotPetya attack, has been laying the groundwork for future cyberattacks and targeting critical infrastructure.
April 17, 2018 12:59 PM
Russian hackers are actively targeting devices that control the flow of internet traffic to gain access and spy on Western governments and businesses, according to a rare joint alert from the U.S. and U.K. released Monday.
Delivered by the Department of Homeland Security, FBI and U.K. National Cybersecurity Centre, the warning outlines Russian state-sponsored cyberattacks penetrating software programs and devices, including firewalls and internet routers, on a global scale.
The goal, according to officials, is to steal company secrets and spy on these countries. The hackers also are attempting to lay the foundation for future cyberattacks, the agencies said.
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How Apple's Health Records could reshape patient engagement

Dignity Health's chief digital officer explains why he thinks Apple can succeed for population health and precision medicine efforts where other PHR launches have not.
April 18, 2018 09:46 AM
As a longtime collaborator with Apple – since before it even beta-tested its Health Records project, live now at 39 hospitals – San Francisco-based Dignity Health is in sync with the iPhone developer's vision, said Shez Partovi, MD.
"We had been working with Apple prior to their initial announcement for some time," said Partovi, chief digital officer and senior vice president of digital transformation at Dignity Health. "We'd been working with them for a while because we're aligned in our philosophies of empowering patients by giving them their data."
As part of the Health Records launch, Dignity will leverage HL7's FHIR standard to securely move patients' health data from own electronic health record system to the iPhones of patients using iOS 11.3 – enabling them manage meds, labs, allergies, conditions and more, and notifying them when the health system makes changes to their health information.
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DEA to share prescription drug data with 50 attorneys general, crack down on drugmakers

Apr 18, 2018 11:32am
The Drug Enforcement Agency has reached an agreement with 50 attorneys general to share prescription drug data with one another to support ongoing investigations.
As part of the agreement, the DEA will provide attorneys general in 48 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico with data from its Automation of Reports and Consolidated Orders System (ARCOS), which collects 80 million prescription drug transactions from manufacturers and distributors each year.
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Obstetrician will no longer be able to deliver babies after refusing electronic records training

Apr 18, 2018 8:50pm
Computers have spelled the end of delivering babies for an Illinois obstetrician.
Jeffrey B. Johnson, M.D., 75, has declined to participate in mandatory training to learn how to use the new electronic medical record system at St. Alexius Medical Center located in Hoffman Estates, Illinois, a Northwest suburb of Chicago. 
That means he won’t be able to continue to deliver babies at the medical center after a more than 50-year career, according to a column in the Daily Herald.
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Smaller practices struggle to use advanced EHR features, Black Book finds

Author Tony Abraham

Published April 17, 2018

Dive Brief:

  • Nearly 90% of practices with six or fewer practitioners aren't using advanced EHR features such as electronic messaging, clinical decision support, interoperability, data sharing and patient engagement, according to a recent Black Book survey of about 19,000 EHR users.
  • The majority of larger practices use advanced features frequently, and 30% of practices with 11 or more clinicians said they expect to replace their current EHR system by 2021. 
  • Although larger practices are better positioned to implement new IT tools, 93% of all practices with functioning EHR systems are using basic features that are directly tied to customer satisfaction. 
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NIST Unveils Latest Version of Its Popular Cybersecurity Framework

The National Institute of Standards and Technology has released version 1.1 of its popular Cybersecurity Framework.

April 17, 2018 - The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) recently released version 1.1 of its popular Cybersecurity Framework, which incorporates feedback received from public comments and workshops during 2016 and 2017.
Version 1.1 of the Framework for Improving Critical Infrastructure Cybersecurity (The Framework) includes updates on authentication and identity, self-assessing cybersecurity risk, managing cybersecurity within the supply chain, and vulnerability disclosure.
The new version adds a section explaining how the Framework can be used by organizations to understand and assess their cyber risk and sections on risks associated with the supply chain and purchasing commercial off-the-shelf products and services.
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Physician practices disillusioned as they don’t maximize EHR benefits

Published April 18 2018, 5:26pm EDT
Nearly 90 percent of physician practices with six or fewer practitioners are not using optimization tools included in their electronic health record systems, according to findings in a new report from Black Book Research.
Those capabilities give practices the ability to take advantage of patient engagement services, secure messaging, decision support and health information exchange. Black Book surveyed about 19,000 EHR users across practices of all sizes and types to assess the industry environment for EHR replacement activity.
“Traditionally, it’s been the smaller and solo practices with the highest dissatisfaction ratings for electronic health record applications,” says Doug Brown, managing director at Black Book. “We confirmed also that the smaller the practice, the less likely they are to use advanced IT tools, and that’s where EHR frustration among small practices is generally focused.”
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HIT Think Why the new EU privacy rule will be challenging for providers

Published April 18 2018, 5:53pm EDT
While Facebook is in the hot seat for failing to safeguard data privacy, the European Union is about to take a giant step forward to protect personal data. The EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), adopted two years ago, will go into effect on May 25, and the implications are large for companies that handle data belonging to Europeans.
This includes SaaS providers looking to develop and deploy apps that work with data across international boundaries. It also impacts healthcare organizations collaborating with countries in Europe to speed research and development of healthcare solutions.
Key provisions
The GDPR takes a broad view of what constitutes personal identification information. Organizations that must comply with GDPR will need the same level of protection for an individual’s IP address and cookie data as for their name, address and medical ID number. Companies can hold and process only the minimum amount of data needed to achieve their objectives, only for as long as necessary.
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Facebook knows a ton about your health. Now they want to make money off it.

April 18 at 6:00 AM
Kirsten Ostherr is a media scholar and digital health technology researcher at Rice University.
Let’s say you have had discussions on Facebook about your breast cancer diagnosis. It has been a useful forum for comparing treatment options with others who have dealt with similar health issues. There’s only one problem: Facebook has now categorized you as a patient, and you constantly receive precisely targeted ads about cancer services available near you. They are showing up on your computer screen at work, for all your co-workers to see, right when you’re up for a big promotion.
Many users experience a version of this scenario when they receive creepily personalized ads while browsing on Facebook. When those ads follow users onto sites outside Facebook, it feels like an invasion of privacy. But how do you regulate data privacy in an age of big-data black boxes?
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CIO reflections from HIMSS18: What to do with all that EHR data

Penn Medicine chief information officer Mike Restuccia shares four tactics for ensuring success with big data projects.
April 17, 2018 08:53 AM
The HIMSS18 Global Conference held in Las Vegas, Nevada was once again a delight to attend and exchange thought leadership among fellow colleagues. It seemed that thousands of vendors promoted services and solutions, all with the intent of facilitating better patient care, advancements in research, safer work environments and more efficient organizations.  
At the core of many of these offerings is data, and in some cases vast amounts of Big Data. Patient monitoring systems, wearables, patient reported outcomes, and new research algorithms are just a few of those offerings which transmit large streams of data.  Almost as befuddling to the Information Services executive as attempting to navigate the HIMSS18 vendor floor is what to do with all of this data.  The challenge is multi-faceted and despite the claims of many in the vendor community; not easily addressed.  
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Follow the money: Where Gartner, IDC and HIMSS Analytics say hospitals will invest the most in 2018

With bold projections that we are on the cusp of the biggest IT spending growth in a decade, new predictions from industry analysts show how much, and on which technologies, hospitals will acquire, modernize or optimize IT.
April 17, 2018 09:24 AM
IT spending is on the rise. Everyone working in healthcare leadership positions, information and technology, or even remotely paying attention to the sector already knows that.
And for executives trying to balance a budget to stay competitive amid a tech talent shortage and ever-evolving regulatory landscape, having a strong sense of where rivals and even partners are planning to spend on IT could prove to be make-or-break insightful.
Let’s take a look at what Gartner, IDC and HIMSS Analytics have to say about IT investment plans in 2018 and beyond.  
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Alexa Is a Revelation for the Blind

Legally blind since age 18, my father missed out on the first digital revolution.
“Is it ‘Electra?’” my father asks, leaning in close to the Amazon Echo my mother has just installed. Leaning in close is his trademark maneuver: Dad has been legally blind since age 18, the result of a horrible car crash in 1954. He has lived, mostly successfully, with limited vision for the 64 years since.
“Call it the right name!” my mom shouts as Dad tries to get the device’s attention. In response, he adopts an awkward familiarity, nicknaming the Echo “Lexi.” Hearing this, I groan. There goes Dad again, trying to be clever, getting it wrong, and relishing the ensuing chaos.
Then I stop myself. Isn’t it possible that he expects Alexa to recognize a prompt that’s close enough? A person certainly would. Perhaps Dad isn’t being obstreperous. Maybe he doesn’t know how to interact with a machine pretending to be human—especially after he missed the evolution of personal computing because of his disability. Watching him try to use the Echo made me realize just how much technology forms the basis of contemporary life—and how thoroughly Dad had been sidelined from it.
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How many hospitals are on each stage of HIMSS Analytics' EMR Adoption Model?

Written by Jessica Kim Cohen | April 16, 2018 
Most hospitals sit on the second-highest level of the EMR Adoption Model, an eight-stage roadmap developed by Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society subsidiary HIMSS Analytics.
The EMR Adoption Model, which runs from Stage 0 to Stage 7, measures the degree to which a hospital utilizes its EMR functions. Hospitals are scored on standards related to digital imaging, interoperability and data security, among other capabilities.
Here's how all 5,487 registered U.S. hospitals stacked up in the fourth quarter of 2017.
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Report: VA, DoD EHR Contracts to Spur Federal Health IT Spending

April 16, 2018
by Rajiv Leventhal
The federal government has estimated that federal healthcare spending will increase 80 percent, from $918 billion in 2015 to $1.7 trillion in 2025, with one of the key IT-related factors being the Department of Veterans Affairs’ (VA) and Department of Defense’s (DoD) implementations of new EHR (electronic health record) systems.
The estimation, coming from Deltek’s Federal Health Information Technology Market report, noted that “Federal health IT spending over the forecasted period is greatly influenced by these new EHR platforms as well as potential solutions by the Coast Guard and Department of State. Efforts to increase medical innovation, mobile health, healthcare cost control and combat public health issues such as the current opioid epidemic will also solidify investments in health IT products and services.”
The report’s authors also stated that requirements for improved quality, interoperability, data sharing and privacy will drive federal agencies taking on the role of promoter, provider or payer to invest in more IT solutions for enhanced health effects and to thwart waste, fraud and abuse.
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Every hospital tested for cybersecurity has failed

Chris Smyth, Health Editor
April 18 2018, 12:01am, The Times
All 200 hospitals and other NHS organisations tested so far have failed cybersecurity checks, according to a report by MPs that finds not enough has been done to protect patients from hackers.
Some hospitals have not fixed the original vulnerability that led to last year’s cyberattack and NHS chiefs are not working fast enough to protect the health service, even though a repeat is a matter of “when, not if”, the public accounts committee (PAC) says.
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Netsmart introduces EHR focused on post-acute care

Written by Anuja Vaidya (Twitter | Google+)  | April 13, 2018 
Netsmart, an EHR solutions and services provider, launched a cloud-based EHR geared toward home health and senior living communities.
The myUnity platform features analytics, interoperability as well as consumer and family engagement capabilities. It aims to consider the unique needs of various types of post-acute organizations.
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How health apps factor into a $950B ecosystem

Apr 16, 2018 2:34pm
Healthcare apps played a prominent role in a new report that estimates the mobile app industry has evolved into a $950 billion ecosystem.
Highlighting the ubiquity and importance of smartphones across multiple industries, a new report by ACT | The App Association indicated that two out of three businesses utilize enterprise apps. And many of those opportunities are rising up throughout the healthcare industry.
“Innovations in the app economy are providing new avenues for users to interact with their doctors, make financial transactions, manage employee contracts, and even secure parking permits,” the report stated. “With these new opportunities, patients will need secure channels to share health data with their doctors and insurance companies.”
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Impact of the implementation of electronic health records on the quality of discharge summaries and on the coding of hospitalization episodes

International Journal for Quality in Health Care, mzy075, https://doi.org/10.1093/intqhc/mzy075
Published: 13 April 2018

Abstract

Objective:To determine whether the implementation and use of the electronic health records (EHR) modifies the quality, readability and/or the length of the discharge summaries (DS) and the average number of coded diagnosis and procedures per hospitalization episode.
Design: A pre–post-intervention descriptive study conducted between 2010 and 2014.
Setting:The ‘Hospital Universitario 12 de Octubre’ (H12O) of Madrid (Spain). A tertiary University Hospital of up to 1200 beds.
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6 health data privacy takeaways from Zuckerberg testimony

Published April 13 2018, 8:46pm EDT
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg spent two days on the hot seat getting grilled by members of Congress regarding the social media company’s use of consumer data. In separate Senate and House hearings earlier this week, Zuckerberg was both apologetic and defiant in response to questions and allegations from lawmakers about Facebook’s abuse of personal information collected by the online platform.
Zuckerberg was specifically called to Washington to respond to the Cambridge Analytics scandal and Russia’s interference in the 2016 U.S. election. However, he was more broadly questioned about Facebook’s sharing of sensitive consumer data—including health information—with third parties.
Apps that collect information from consumers—and not on behalf a provider, health plan or healthcare clearinghouse—are not subject to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act as either a covered entity or business associate. As a result, developers are not required under HIPAA to protect the privacy and security of consumers’ data, which is not considered protected health information (PHI). It’s a loophole that has gotten the attention of lawmakers in the Zuckerberg hearings.
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Opioid Crisis: How 4 health providers are using tech to fight the epidemic

Published April 13 2018, 11:57pm EDT
America’s opioid epidemic shows no sign of letting up. Addiction to legal painkillers and illegal drugs like heroin has resulted in more than 42,000 overdose deaths in 2016, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention figures released at the end of March.
Health Data Management, over the past few months, has profiled a number of healthcare organizations that are turning to health information technology to combat the crisis. What follows is a look at four of those initiatives.
Geisinger: Pairing EHR and e-prescribing data
Geisinger, an integrated health system, is curbing patient use of opioids by leveraging health information technology and electronic prescribing, according to CIO John Kravitz, who contends that other healthcare organizations can generate similar results through effectively using their EHRs or clinical order entry systems.
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Enjoy!
David.

Friday, April 27, 2018

A Comment For The Ages I Believe. Just Too True To Ignore!

This popped up last week:
Anonymous said...
...the Australia Digital Health Agency does not guarantee, and accepts no legal liability whatsoever arising from or connected to, the accuracy, reliability, currency or completeness of any material contained on this website or on any linked site.

The Australian Digital Health Agency recommends that users exercise their own skill and care with respect to their use of this website and that users carefully evaluate the accuracy, currency, completeness and relevance of the material on the website for their purposes.

Well that's OK then. The website is about as reliable as the My Health Record itself.

How "users carefully evaluate the accuracy, currency, completeness and relevance of the material on the website for their purposes" isn't explained.

Trust us, but don't rely on us.
----- End Comment:
I guess that must include the myHR since surely it is a linked site!
Here is the shiny new front page:

What is My Health Record?

My Health Record is an online summary of your health information. You control what goes into your record, and who is allowed to access it. Share your health information with doctors, hospitals and other healthcare providers from anywhere, any time.

Learn more about My Health Record

Here is the link:
For the first time we are fully told what to do to opt out of having a myHR. (Item 5)
However, if your record is created for you it will hang around for a very long time:

Cancel my record

If you have a My Health Record, you may cancel your record at any time.
You can also cancel the record of someone else if you are their authorised representative.

How to cancel your My Health Record

To cancel your My Health Record, or the record of someone in which you are their authorised representative:
  1. Log in to your My Health Record through myGov.
  2. Select the 'Profile & Settings' tab.
  3. Select profile and navigate to the bottom of the page.
  4. Read the information and click on ‘Cancel My Health Record’.

What happens when you cancel a My Health Record?

When you cancel your record, it means that:
  • Healthcare providers will not be able to upload documents to the record, or access the record - even in an emergency.
  • You, or your representative can only access the record by making a request to us.
  • Once your record is cancelled, it will be retained for a period of 30 years after your death or, if the date of death is unknown, for a period of 130 years after the date of your birth.
  • Your My Health Record may be accessed by us for the purposes of maintenance, audit and other purposes required or authorised by law.

Records contained in local clinical information systems

Even if you cancel your My Health Record, healthcare providers will continue to hold copies of any records they have uploaded to My Health Record stored on their own clinical information system.

Re-register a cancelled My Health Record

If you have cancelled your My Health Record, you can re-register at any time by:
If you re-register online, your record will include information which was in your record before it was cancelled. If you re-register via the call centre you can ask for the record to be cleared of all previous documents. These documents will remain in the archive but will not be able to be viewed by you, your representatives or your healthcare providers.
----- End Extract.
Usual rules therefore apply – stay away unless you have some compelling reason to use it!
Just why is it you can’t delete your record – technical reasons they say, but with the GPDR making Facebook and Google be able to delete records how long is it going to be the case with the myHR. The ADHA’s attitude to whose data it is must change and fast!
David.