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, March 05, 2019

Commentators and Journalists Weigh In On The #myHealtRecord Debate And Related Matters. Lots Of Interesting Perspectives - Week 33.

Note: I have excluded (or marked out) any commentary taking significant  funding from the Agency or the Department of Health on all this to avoid what amounts to paid propaganda. (e.g. CHF, RACGP, AMA, National Rural Health Alliance etc. where they were simply putting the ADHA line – viz. that the myHR is a wonderfully useful clinical development that will save huge numbers of lives at no risk to anyone – which is plainly untrue) (This signifies probable ADHA Propaganda)
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Note: I have broadened this section to try to cover all the privacy compromising and impacting announcements in the week – along with the myHR. It never seems to stop!
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Wills 2.0: how to protect digital wealth before you log off from life

  • By James Whiley
  • 12:00AM March 2, 2019
A failure to protect digital assets was recently and emphatically demonstrated when the CEO of multi-million-dollar cryptocurrency exchange start-up Quadriga CX died suddenly, taking with him the passwords to $275 million worth of coins and cash.
Gerald Cotton, who started his company five years ago, was security-conscious, protecting his laptop, emails and messaging with encrypted passwords. He took sole responsibility for running the company and, unfortunately, all attempts by his widow to find any passwords or business records for the company’s digital assets have failed.
Hopefully, his family can find a breakthrough. Either way, there are valuable lessons in this for all of us. OK, we may not have a $200m-plus estate to worry about, but we may each be holding substantial digital assets that must be considered as part of our estate planning should we wish to pass these assets on.
Also, it may be difficult for our family to find these assets, given there is no longer a paper trail — even traditional assets such as bank accounts may all be online.
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Welcome to the ‘open era’ of health information

“When I graduated, my medical notes were an aide-memoire to help me treat my patients. When I joined a group practice, I realised that my notes helped my colleagues and me treat our patients. Since computerisation, my notes and health summaries have helped me to write better referrals so that colleagues outside my practice can assist me in treating patients more effectively. Now that I can share an up-to-date health summary on MyHR, I realise that my notes can help my patients to achieve better outcomes from the health system, even when I am not directly involved.”
Five years ago, in 2014, I wrote about OpenNotes because I thought it was a new and fascinating concept. I soon discovered that giving patients access to health records triggered strong emotional reactions: patients loved it and many doctors thought it was one of the scariest ideas ever.
Fast forward to 2019, and about 90% of the Australian population has access to the national My Health Record (MyHR). According to the Australian Digital health Agency over 80% of general practices and pharmacies, 75% of public hospitals, and 64% of private hospitals have registered.
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Who pays for Google and Facebook's free lunch?

By Ross Gittins
March 2, 2019 — 12.00am
There may be banks that are too big to be allowed to fail, but don’t doubt that the behemoths of the digital revolution are too big to be regulated. It won’t be long before Google and Facebook cease to be laws unto themselves.
It’s the old story: the lawmakers always take a while to catch up with the innovators. But there are growing signs that governments around the developed world – particularly in Europe and Britain - are closing in on the digital giants.
And here in Australia, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission is busy with the world’s most wide-ranging inquiry so far, which will report to the newly elected federal government in June. The commission’s boss, Rod Sims, gave a speech about it a few weeks ago, and another this week.
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My Health Record could be $2 billion waste

RENDEZVIEW: Seven years after its launch and $2 billion down the track there isn’t much to celebrate in the My Health Record so far, writes Sue Dunlevy. If it’s to succeed, medicos must embrace it.
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Coalition claims credit for $14b digital economy growth

Australia's digital economy has grown by slightly more than $14 billion between the years 2012-13 and 2016-17, a report from the Australian Bureau of Statistics says.
The Coalition Government has been in power from September 2013 to date and, in a statement Industry, Science and Technology Minister Karen Andrews claimed her government was responsible for this growth. Labor was in power from 2007 uptil September 2013.
The ABS report said domestic production of digital products had grown from about $79 billion in 2012-13 to $93.5 billion in 2016-17.
Andrews said: “Australia’s ongoing economic success depends on our ability to embrace the benefits of technological advances and use them to improve existing businesses, create new products and markets, and enhance daily life.
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How can Australia do remote healthcare better?

Hafizah Osman | 28 Feb 2019
With an evolving healthcare tech environment and changing consumer needs, Australia has to rethink the way it approaches telehealth and remote care, a major healthcare conference has heard. 
Speaking during a panel session at the recent AFR Healthcare Summit, Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP) President Dr Harry Nespolon said the way remote healthcare and telehealth is offered has changed little since the 1960s.   
“Doctors still need to see patients in front of them to dispense care. It hasn’t changed much over the last 50 years. I used to work for the AMA [Australian Medical Association] and my boss once said, ‘fish and chips shops today have more technology than most GPs’. There is still some truth in that,” he said. 
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My Health Record: 5 problems and 1 solution

In an ideal world, e-health records are a terrific idea - in real life, however, there are several medicolegal issues that are of concern
Dr Craig Lilienthal
28th February 2019
I have been trying to get my head around the medicolegal implications of My Health Record for some time now.
I have studied the legislation (which is confusing for a non-lawyer) and statements from the Minister for Health (which change every time pressure is applied by diverse, interested groups).
In an ideal world, e-health records would be terrific if they could be relied upon and privacy could be guaranteed. I doubt either of these objectives can be fully achieved.
Nevertheless, the following issues with My Health Record (MHR) strike me as areas of medicolegal concern.
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ACCC seeks more ad industry data for digital platforms inquiry

ACCC chair Rod Sims is seeking more data from the advertising industry about the preliminary conclusions reached by the competition watchdog's inquiry into digital platforms.
He told the Australian Association of National Advertisers and a ThinkTV audience of marketing and television advertising executives in Sydney on Wednesday night that a company was allowed to be be big and exert substantial market power.
It has been estimated that more than two-thirds of every digital advertising dollar spent in Australia goes to either Google or Facebook.
Pricing of intermediary services, such as the cut of the amount paid by the advertiser for the ad impression, is being examined by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission as it can often be quite opaque.
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India hosts ‘4th Global Digital Health Partnership Summit’

25 February 2019 | News
Digital health interventions are accelerating transformation of health sector in India: J P Nadda
J P Nadda, Union Minister of Health and Family Welfare inaugurated the ‘4th Global Digital Health Partnership Summit’ in the presence of Ravi Shankar Prasad Union Minister of Law & Justice and Electronics & Information Technology and Health Ministers from several countries.
The global intergovernmental meeting on digital health is being hosted by the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare in collaboration with World Health Organization (WHO) and the Global Digital Health Partnership (GDHP).
Upendra Yadav, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Health, Nepal; Dr Tawfiq Al Rabiah, Minister of Health, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia; Zahid Maleque, Minister of Health and Family Welfare, Bangladesh; Lena Hallengren, Minister of Health, Sweden; Dr Arlindo Nascimento do Rosário, Minister of Health, Cape Verde; Dr Ulana Suprun, Minister of Health, Ukraine; Faizal Cassim, Deputy Minister of Health, Nutrition and Indigenous, Sri Lanka; Biggie Ganda Butale, Assistant Minister of Health and Wellness, Botswana; Dr. Shah Mahir , State Minister of Health, Maldives and government officials from over 35 countries were also present at the inaugural session.
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GCPHN staff able to help patients learn more about My Health Record at General Practices

26/02/2019 ADHA Propaganda
Now that patient records have been set up for My Health Record, Gold Coast Primary Health Network (GCPHN) is providing one-on-one support for patients visiting a general practice, to assist them in how to use the system.

Gold Coast Primary Health Network CEO Matt Carrodus said it was an important free service that practices could take advantage of.
“We understand that practice staff may be getting a number of inquiries from their patients, about how to access the records that have been created for them,” Mr Carrodus said.

“We understand practice staff are very busy, which is why we have staff available to provide a practical demonstration to patients about the My Health Record software, helping them a set up and access their My Health Record, setting up access codes, authorised representatives or recording personal notes.”

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My Health Record – where to from here?

ADHA Propaganda
While the My Health Record (MHR) opt-out date of January 31 has come and gone, people still have the option to permanently delete their record at any time. Here’s some top tips to communicate to patients about MHR moving forward.
The national MHR opt-out period received widespread media attention. So much so, that the deadline was extended from 15 November 2018 to 31 January 2019.
Now that the opt-out period has passed, records will be created in February for every Australian who has chosen to have a MHR.

Benefits of having a My Health Record

Much of the public discussion has focused on privacy and security concerns, while the benefits of the system have received comparatively little attention. It is valuable discussing with your patients the benefits of having a MHR to help them make informed choices about how they wish to use the system.
For instance, it will be possible to collate key health information in one place, such as a medicines list. This makes it easier for pertinent health information to be accessed by their doctors, pharmacists, specialists or hospitals. This will help improve medicine safety by reducing risk of duplication, missing therapy or dose errors, particularly at transitions of care.  
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How parliament hack response showed we are actually doing cybersecurity better

By James Turner
Updated Feb 25, 2019 — 1.39pm, first published at 12.00pm
Leaders in the cyber security industry have been saying for years that cyber risk isn't merely an IT problem, it's a business risk.
Never is this more apparent than when an organisation goes through a serious security incident in the public eye.
We are seeing this with increasing frequency in Australia, and each disclosure is merely further proof that we are all in this together. It's a digital ecosystem now, and the hyper-connectedness between our organisations means that all business executives should absolutely care about the welfare online of their suppliers, customers, peers and competitors.
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On the record

Pharmacy’s contribution to the uptake of My Health Record revealed to Parliament

The impact of the new My Health Record program to health care has been graphically illustrated in testimony presented to the current Senate Estimates hearings.
And even the Australian Journal of Pharmacy garnered a mention as Senators discussed the uptake of the system and what it is bringing to the table in terms of health benefits.
Tim Kelsey, CEO of the Australian Digital Health Agency (ADHA) outlined anecdotal evidence of how the MHR had proven its worth during the recent North Queensland flooding.
“We have put in place a benefits realisation program to evaluate benefits of My Health Record both currently, before opt-out had finished, and obviously subsequently,” he said.
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Get ready for the age of sensor panic

Cameras, microphones and other sensors are showing up everywhere. And this is just the beginning.
Mike Elgan (Computerworld (US)) 23 February, 2019 22:00
A passenger on a Singapore Airlines flight this week noticed a small, circular indentation below the image playing on the seatback in-flight entertainment system in front of him. Could that be, he wondered, a camera?
The passenger did the only logical thing: He tweeted out a photo and asked the Twitterverse for opinions, setting off a chorus of complainers on Twitter.
Singapore Airlines also responded to the tweets, saying that the camera was not used by the airline to capture pictures or video. It then told media outlets in a statement that the embedded cameras “have been intended by the manufacturers for future developments. These cameras are permanently disabled on our aircraft and cannot be activated on board. We have no plans to enable or develop any features using the cameras.”
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Algorithm flaw meant Census responses could be identified

By Justin Hendry on Feb 25, 2019 11:55AM

Vulnerability already fixed by ABS.

Researchers from Macquarie University uncovered a vulnerability in the Census data visualisation tool that would have allowed individuals to be re-identified through their responses.
The exploit, which the Australian Bureau of Statistics says has now been addressed, also made it possible to reconstruct original data from the population count, the new study [pdf] reveals.
Dr Dali Kaafar and Hassan Jameel Asghar discovered the vulnerability in the perturbation algorithm used for the agency’s online tool TableBuilder, which allows users to create tables, graphs and maps of census data.
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Women's health is the next tech boom, but that's not necessarily all good news

ABC Science
By technology reporter Ariel Bogle
Updated 9 January 2019 at 11:41 am
Do women know what women want? A new generation of start-ups focused on their health and wellbeing test that theory.

Key points:

  • Emerging start-ups are focused on women's health and wellbeing
  • There are concerns about the privacy implications of the technology, including period-tracking apps
  • Some women criticise femtech's 'one-size-fits-all' approach to women's health
For years, consumer health technology has been faulted for overlooking women as customers and building devices for the default white male consumer.
Men also control the purse strings, and for that reason, what gets built. A 2017 Crunchbase survey estimated that among the top 100 global venture firms, the percentage of women partners hovered at only 8 per cent.
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Comments welcome!
David.

Monday, March 04, 2019

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 4th March, 2019.

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

It almost went through to the keeper but the ADHA has sprung all those unsuspecting citizens with a Government held record of their health information.
Do you reckon the ADHA will tell us about how many deletions and additions they have each week. The should among a wide range of other useful metrics.
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Log in to your My Health Record

All Australians now have a My Health Record, unless they chose to opt out before 31 January 2019. Log in to your My Health Record to view and manage your health information.
You can decide what you want to include and start sharing health information with your treating healthcare providers.
To access your My Health Record online, you need to have a myGov account and to link it to your record.

Video: How to access your My Health Record online

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The agency in charge of the My Health Record had planned a $100,000 training event at the SCG

Sue Dunlevy, National Health Reporter, News Corp Australia Network
March 1, 2019 12:00am
Subscriber only
Exclusive: Taxpayers were to foot a $100,000 bill for an extravagant get together for staff at the agency in charge of the controversial My Health Record.
The event at the Sydney Cricket Ground scheduled for May was intended to bring the Australian Digital Health Agency’s (ADHA) 424 staff together for a very expensive face-to-face occupational health and safety briefing.
News Corp has confirmed that the ADHA made a tentative booking at the Sydney Cricket Ground.
However, the agency says the SCG was ruled out as the venue on February 4 and “the SCG was notified of the decision not use their venue on 5 February”.
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Challenges accessing patient records a driver of unnecessary healthcare

GPs, specialists and hospital staff cite challenges in accessing patient information from other clinicians as a common reason for requesting unnecessary medical tests, treatments or procedures, according to a new report from Choosing Wisely Australia.
In survey findings published today in the 2018 Choosing Wisely Australia Report: Conversations for change, 54% of GPs, 61% of specialists and 36% of health services reported that difficulties accessing information from doctors in other settings, including results, was a key reason for requesting unnecessary healthcare.
Health professionals also identified patient expectations, potential for medical litigation and uncertainty of diagnosis as common factors behind low-value healthcare.
NPS MedicineWise CEO Steve Morris said: “The appetite for reducing unnecessary tests, treatments and procedures is strong among Australia’s health professional bodies, in primary and specialist care and in our hospitals.
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Survey finds communication key reason for unnecessary healthcare

More than half of the GPs in a nationwide survey cited difficulties in accessing patient information as a crucial aspect of unnecessary healthcare.
The findings, published in the latest Choosing Wisely Australia Report, show that 61% of specialists and 36% of hospital staff also reported challenges in accessing information from doctors in other settings, leading to avoidable medical tests, treatments and procedures.

More than 80% of the GPs surveyed said there is a problem with the use of unnecessary tests, treatments and procedures in medical practice, which are also driven by patient expectations, potential for medical litigation and uncertainty of diagnosis.

However, while 62% of GPs and 42% of specialists cited patient expectations as a driver for ordering unnecessary tests, only 14% of consumers said they had made such requests.

Steve Morris, CEO of the report’s publisher, NPS MedicineWise, said there is a strong appetite in Australian healthcare for reducing unnecessary tests, treatments and procedures.
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Melbourne's See-Mode has built software that sees a stroke before it strikes

Updated Feb 27, 2019 — 8.17pm, first published at 8.00pm
Sudden death from a stroke is the fate of five million people a year, but a Melbourne start-up is showing artificial intelligence can help detect and prevent a scourge estimated to subtract $5 billion a year from Australia's economy.
See-Mode Technologies, founded by Melbourne-based biomedical engineering PhDs Dr Milad Mohammadzadeh and Dr Sadaf Monajemi, has used computer vision to scan thousands of medical images from people who went on to have a stroke, and built software they hope can warn clinicians of patients that could be next.
Nearly 500,000 Australians are living with disability caused by strokes. They occur when blood flow to an area of the brain is cut off, usually through high blood pressure causing a haemorrhage, or high cholesterol levels leading to the formation of artery-blocking plaques.
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CSIRO's CUNE uses artificial intelligence to find disease genes

CUNE uses AI to provide a more reliable way to recreate gene mutations in the lab.
By Asha McLean | March 1, 2019 -- 00:07 GMT (11:07 AEDT) | Topic: Innovation
Researchers from the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation's (CSIRO) Australian e-Health Research Centre have developed a more powerful way to find the genes that cause disease using artificial intelligence.
The software offers a more reliable way to recreate gene mutations in the lab, touted by CSIRO as being a step closer to better diagnosis and treatment of genetic diseases.
The new cloud-based software, CUNE, is the result of a collaboration between CSIRO and the John Curtin School of Medical Research at the Australian National University.
The software -- detailed this week in Scientific Reports -- makes HDR-based editing 83 percent more efficient.
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Qld Health injects $30m more into hungry new ERP system

By Justin Hendry on Feb 28, 2019 6:55AM

After integration, change management issues.

Integration and change management complications have forced Queensland Health to funnel another $30 million into replacing its long-out-of-support ERP system.
The new funding for the financial system renewal project (FSR) was approved by the department last December after a business case change request was issued in July 2018.
It brings the total cost of the project to $135.4 million - $109.4 million of which has so far been spent - since the department began its second attempt at replacing the system in December 2016.
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Navigating a New Era in Aged Care Access

A new network of aged care navigator centres, information hubs and specialist advisers aims to streamline aged care access, with a $7.4 million national trial being rolled out by the Australian Government.
Page last updated: 25 February 2019

25 February 2019

A new network of aged care navigator centres, information hubs and specialist advisers aims to streamline aged care access, with a $7.4 million national trial being rolled out from today by the Morrison Government.

Launched under the Aged Care System Navigator initiative, the three new trial programs will offer face-to-face assistance to senior Australians and their families in every state and territory, including selected rural and remote areas.
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Watching this video could dull your pain

By Liam Mannix
March 2, 2019 — 1.01pm
As the doctor pushed his fingers deep into her stomach and started to move her baby into position, all Elizabeth Deitz could do was focus as hard as she could on the lanterns, hanging up there in the night sky.
“When it got really bad, I was just thinking ‘get the lantern, get the lantern’. It’s something to have your mind going towards so you’re not focusing on the ouch.”
Ms Deitz is one of the first people in the world to trial virtual reality therapy to cut pain while undergoing a procedure to fix a complication of her pregnancy.
Across the country, VR is being trialled as a way of dulling pain for people undergoing operations and for those with chronic-pain issues, in addition to promising work treating PTSD and other mental health conditions.
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Medical technology: Necessity auntie of invention at Loop+

  • 12:00AM March 2, 2019
What started as a passion project by two sisters determined to improve the health outcomes of young Evander Conroy is now on the verge of becoming a global digital healthcare solution for wheelchair users.
Clare Conroy was set on improving the health of her son Evander, who was born with a neuroblastoma tumour compressing his spinal cord, and spent years seeking top care in Australia and the US.
Mrs Conroy sought various rehabilitation programs but found there was no proper feedback that would be useful for her son who can’t move spontaneously from the chest down.
There was also no feedback to inform her that the rehabilitation work Evander was doing was helping to manage his health and avoid complications such as scoliosis, pressure sores and pneumonia.
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Tracking products to patients to improve patient safety

By Catherine Koetz*
Friday, 01 March, 2019
We can trace an apple back to its grower, but can’t track medical products throughout the supply chain to patients. Traceability needs to be a focus of our healthcare system.
As patients in our health system, we expect the same level of product traceability that is becoming the norm for the consumer products and food that we buy. We can now scan an individual piece of fruit and the processes used and available data enables us to track its origin back to the grower. But are we able to track products through the supply chain all the way to patients across our healthcare system? The answer today is no. So why haven’t we introduced these concepts in the health system to improve our safety, information and experiences as Australian health consumers?

Think like a healthcare consumer

If we step outside our organisational lenses for a minute and think like the health consumers that we are, we probably assume that our health system already has the basic technology to support traceability and track all patient activities in real time.
Technologies like blockchain, artificial intelligence (AI) and the Internet of Things (IoT) are the new tech buzzwords that have captured our attention. What you may not know is that the data interoperability and data capture that is needed to make these new technologies a success starts with technology basics such as unique identification and barcode scanning at point of care.
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Flood-affected areas to receive boost with GP telehealth services

The Federal Government has announced it will provide essential telehealth support services for rural communities impacted by the Queensland floods.
01 Mar 2019
The recent devastating floods have disrupted rural communities across Northern Queensland, with many in need of extra support.

Federal Health Minister Greg Hunt has unveiled telehealth support services to assist rural patients in flood-affected areas of Queensland will be provided from 2 March.

The Government will introduce eight new Medicare items that will allow rural and remote patients in flood-affected areas to receive care from their regular GP via phone, email or videoconference until 30 June. The new items are the same as the current standard GP consultations, and will attract the same Medicare fees and rebates.
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GP-printed splints may be a mouse click away

TGA says it needs a regulatory plan for 3D-printed medical devices
Antony Scholefield
1st March 2019
3D printing is supposedly the future of medicine.
3D printers craft raw materials such as resin-like substances into an object by building it layer upon layer. It’s also known as additive manufacturing.
The technique is meant to make it relatively cheap to create patient-specific prostheses, hip replacements and even experimental silicon hearts.
In the US, 3D printing is controversial because people have started printing parts of guns, with no serial numbers.
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Do you see patients using complementary medicines? Then you need this app

HOT APPS: It explains the chemical effects of various herbs on the body and any evidence to support their use
Dr Rob Park
25th February 2019
Patients regularly bamboozle me. Recently, their favourite way has been to bring in a large bag of mixed herbs and bottles from the chemist, eBay or China; and sometimes all three.
I used to smile sheepishly and apologise that I can google these with them but I don’t know much about chai hu or goldenseal.
However, the last time a patient asked me about Isatis root, I was prepared.
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Patients’ fees open for all to compare

  • 12:00AM March 2, 2019
Patients may finally be able to compare specialist fees and charges before treatment and know their likely out-of-pocket expenses upfront after the Coalition vowed to strike a deal with health groups for a new government website.
But the pre-election push for greater transparency may also shine a spotlight on the contribution made by Medicare and health insurers to rising medical bills and prompt calls for further reform.
Health Minister Greg Hunt will today release advice from an expert committee, headed by Chief Medical Officer Brendan Murphy, and commit to fund and develop its proposed website.
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Federal Government announces new website to name and shame specialist doctors who charge big out-of-pocket fees

Annabel Hennessy The West Australian
Saturday, 2 March 2019 1:06PM
There has been an increase in doctors' fees across the country, with some patients paying up to $120 to visit a GP.
Doctors who slug patients with huge out-of-pocket bills for specialist treatments will be named and shamed in a new website being launched by the Federal Government.
Health Minister Greg Hunt will today announce a new website which will list fees and out-of-pocket expenses charged by individual specialist doctors.
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Iran or China? Competing claims about actor behind Parliament hack

The Australian Parliament was hacked by a group based in Iran, a hitherto unknown security firm has claimed, adding that the Mabna Institute, which was backing the person or people involved, had also been implicated in attacks on the US and other Western countries.
The company which made the claim, Resecurity, said the attack was part of a wave which had targeted the Five Eyes intelligence alliance: the US, the UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.
The attack was made public on 8 February and on Monday Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison claimed a sophisticated state actor was behind the breach.
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Sec firm claims ASD agrees with Iran hack findings

The security outfit Resecurity, that claimed the infiltration of the Australian Parliament was the work of an actor backed by Iran, says the Australian Signals Directorate has confirmed this attribution.
Resecurity researcher Jean-Jacques Gonçalves told iTWire that the company had been monitoring the Iranian group, which was backed by an organisation known as the Mabna Institute which is said to be allied with Iran's Revolutionary Guard, for some time.
Asked about Resecurity's claims, the ASD responded with a statement from the Australian Cyber Security Centre which did not address the question, but merely repeated the same message it had provided when asked to comment on the initial claims made by Resecurity a couple of days ago.
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Toyota Australia corporate IT systems still down due to hack

Toyota Australia's corporate IT systems were still offline on Friday following what the company yesterday described as a "cyber attack", according to a notice on its website.
The notice said: "At this stage, we do not believe that customer and employee data has been compromised."
Toyota said it had set up an emergency call centre to handle customer inquiries about the recall of Takata airbags.
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Toyota Australia corporate IT systems still offline

More than a week after it was hit by a self-admitted cyber attack, Toyota Australia's corporate IT systems are still offline, the company says on its website.
The company continues to say that it does not believe that customer and employee data has been compromised. The attack is said to have been noticed on 19 February.
The notice seen on Friday said the company's guest experience centre was back online. The attack was made public on 21 February.
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Tech giants and civil liberty groups call out ghost cops and source code demands under Australian encryption laws

Submission attempts to convince Canberra that forcing companies to hand over source code or silently add cops into chats are bad ideas.
By Chris Duckett | February 25, 2019 -- 06:47 GMT (17:47 AEDT) | Topic: Security
A collective of companies and civil liberty groups including Apple, Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Facebook, Privacy International, Linux Australia, and the Electronics Frontier Foundation have issued a warning that requirements to silently add law enforcement into encryption chats could introduce vulnerabilities and create new risks to systems.
The plan to create so-called "ghost users", detailed as a discussion starter by Technical Director of the National Cyber Security Centre Ian Levy and Technical Director for Cryptanalysis for GCHQ Crispin Robinson in November, was claimed to allow end-to-end encryption to remain, and have an extra end for law enforcement.
"It's relatively easy for a service provider to silently add a law enforcement participant to a group chat or call," the pair said.
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Amazon, Apple, Google and Microsoft back call for changes to Australia’s ‘encryption’ law

Tech industry, civil liberties advocates call for rework of surveillance legislation
Rohan Pearce (Computerworld) 22 February, 2019 13:25
A coalition of groups that brings together civil liberty and privacy advocates with major technology firms has called for a major rework of controversial Australian legislation that they argue could weaken the cyber security of popular online services.
Apple, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Twitter and Facebook are among those calling for changes to the law.
In total, 36 groups have endorsed a submission to the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security (PJCIS) which is examining the legislation that was rushed through parliament at the end of last year in somewhat bizarre circumstances.
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Mozilla may treat Aussie staff as 'insider threats' to code base

By Ry Crozier on Feb 25, 2019 5:12PM

Seeds of mistrust sewn by anti-encryption laws.

Mozilla - maker of the Firefox browser - and hosted email provider FastMail are worried that individual employees will be put in untenable positions by law enforcement exercising new anti-encryption laws.
In separate submissions to a senate inquiry examining the now-passed laws, the two technology companies raised concerns about how they could trust their workers.
Both Mozilla [pdf] and FastMail [pdf] worry that individual employees could be targeted by law enforcement to make secret changes to systems.
The employee would then be under secrecy provisions that prevented them from even informing their own employer about what they had done.
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FastMail loses customers, faces calls to move over anti-encryption laws

By Ry Crozier on Feb 25, 2019 1:53PM

Australia no longer 'respects right to privacy'.

Hosted email provider FastMail says it has lost customers and faces “regular” requests to shift its operations outside Australia following the passage of anti-encryption laws.
The Victorian company, which offers ad-free email services to users in 150 countries, told a senate committee that the now-passed laws were starting to bite.
“The way in which [the laws] were introduced, debated, and ultimately passed ... creates a perception that Australia has changed - that we are no longer a country which respects the right to privacy,” FastMail CEO Bron Gondwana said. [pdf]
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Five Eyes fears rise over Aussie encryption laws

By Bo Seo
Feb 25, 2019 — 11.00am
Australia is facing increased criticism from industry and advocacy groups across the group of intelligence-sharing nations known as the Five Eyes, with fears its new data encryption laws could represent a weakening of the alliance, and leave it out on a limb on citizens' security and privacy rights.
The concerns, detailed in interviews with The Australian Financial Review, come after an international coalition of 36 civil society organisations, technology companies and industry bodies filed a submission to the Australian government calling for amendments to the law on Friday.
Australia's Telecommunications Assistance and Access laws, passed in December, granting government agencies new powers to force technology companies to decrypt messages on their platforms to aid criminal and national security investigations.
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Software firm claims new law was meant to break encryption

Custom software development firm ThoughtWorks has rejected the Federal Government's assertion that it is not interested in breaking encryption, pointing out that the encryption law passed in December has "the direct and inevitable consequence of compromising the integrity of cryptographic systems".
In a submission to the ongoing inquiry into the law - officially known as the Telecommunications and Other Legislation Amendment (Assistance and Access) Act 2018 - the company said that breaking a secure system for one person meant that it would become insecure for all users.
"Whilst the Assistance and Access Act may not explicitly mandate the breaking of cryptographic algorithms, it requires tech companies to compromise/break the security of their systems and their users’ data," the submission said.
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Alcidion Group releases H1 FY2019 financial results

Alcidion Group Limited has today released its financial results for the first half of FY2019.
During the period Alcidion completed the acquisition of the MKM Health and Patientrack businesses and commenced integration of these newly acquired businesses. The Group now has a broader portfolio of products and services, a larger and more diversified customer base and an enhanced financial profile.
For the six months to 31 December 2018, total revenue grew nearly six-fold to $7.3 million compared to the prior comparable period (H1 FY2018: $1.3 million), a direct result of the contribution of the newly acquired business as well as new contract wins and renewals. New contract wins and renewals over the period totalled $23.4 million and included contracts with several large public health organisations such as Queensland Health, Alfred Health, NT Department of Health and ACT Health.
As at 31 December 2018, Alcidion had a total of $14.8 million in contracted revenues which are expected to be realised in the current financial year. The Group therefore anticipates reporting revenue for H2 FY2019 of at least $7.5m, prior to winning any new contracts. In addition, the Group has a further $27.4 million in contracted revenues to be realised over the next five years from FY2020.
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ACT Health to expand use of Patientrack – new contract signed

Yesterday, Alcidion Group Limited (ASX:ALC) announced it signed a new contract with ACT Health to further extend the use of Patientrack across the ACT. The total value of the new contract is $711K over 2.5 years (to October 2022).

This new contract supersedes a prior contract through which ACT Health originally acquired a perpetual licence to use Patientrack at The Canberra Hospital (TCH) and then at the new University of Canberra Hospital (UCH) for an initial 2.5-year term.

The new contract covers the ongoing licensing, support and maintenance of the Patientrack software at TCH and UCH through to October 2022, as well as extending licensing and support arrangements to cover the Calvary Public Hospital, Bruce for an initial three-year term.
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Welcome to the 5G age

  • 12:00AM February 28, 2019
The fifth generation of cellular mobile communications is with us. 5G phones exist and 5G networks are firing up.
The Mobile World Congress in Barcelona this week has been brimming with new gadgets and services related to 5G, and several records were broken.
Inseego claimed the world’s longest 5G data call, about seven hours. It’s a start.
The US, China, South Korea and Japan are the trailblazers as 5G networks roll out around the world. You can expect 5G handsets in Australia by midyear.
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NBN available to 75% of premises: Fifield

NBN services are available to three-quarters of Australian premises, Communications Minister Mitch Fifield says.
As previously reported, NBN Co's half-yearly report for the period ending December 2018 showed 9.5 million premises were ready for service, more than three-quarters of the 11.6 million expected by June 2020.
Noting that NBN Co had reached this milestone, Fifield said NBN Co was on track to connect every Australian home and business to affordable, high-speed broadband by 2020.
“The NBN rollout is now reaching every corner of our country, transforming Australia’s communications landscape,” said Fifield, perhaps with an eye towards the coming Federal election.
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Massive NBN Co push to flip a million unserviceable premises

By Ry Crozier on Feb 28, 2019 6:30AM

By the end of June.

NBN Co is planning a massive cull of premises that are currently listed as unable to carry retail services between now and June, equivalent to almost one million homes and businesses.
If achieved, it would mean over 70 percent of the premises that are sometimes known as “service class zero or equivalent” will be made serviceable in just the next four months.
The number came to light after an apparent error in a status update on how NBN Co was tracking against its ready to connect target in the corporate plan of 9.7 million premises.
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Enjoy!
David.