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, January 05, 2021

Commentators and Journalists Weigh In On Digital Health And Related Privacy, Safety And Security Matters. Lots Of Interesting Perspectives - January 05. 2021.

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This weekly blog is to explore the news around the larger issues around Digital Health, data security, data privacy, AI / ML. technology, social media and related matters.

I will also try to highlight ADHA Propaganda when I come upon it.

Just so we keep count, the latest Notes from the ADHA Board were dated 6 December, 2018 and we have seen none since! Its pretty sad!

Note: Appearance here is not to suggest I see any credibility or value in what follows. I will leave it to the reader to decide what is worthwhile and what is not! The point is to let people know what is being said / published that I have come upon.

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https://www.smh.com.au/technology/i-feel-naked-without-it-99-per-cent-of-smartphone-users-experience-nomophobia-20201223-p56psp.html

'I feel naked without it': 99 per cent of smartphone users experience 'nomophobia'

By Caitlin Fitzsimmons

January 3, 2021 — 12.00am

New research suggests nearly all Australian smartphone users experience "nomophobia" – or fear of being without their mobile phones - and more than one in eight have severe symptoms associated with illegal or dangerous behaviour.

A national survey of more than 2800 smartphone users found 99 per cent exhibited some degree of nomophobia. While 37 per cent had only mild symptoms, nearly half experienced the phobia in the moderate range and 13 per cent had a severe case.

Nomophobia includes the fear of not being able to communicate, losing connectivity, not being able to access information and giving up convenience.

Lead researcher Fareed Kaviani, a PhD candidate at Monash University, said nomophobia was different to fear of leaving the house without your wallet or keys because it was associated with compulsive use.

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https://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=1c578e60-c2ee-4e39-854b-2c91f0f9ead1

Australia’s Proposed New Online Trolling Laws: Labelled Toughest in the World

Criminal Defence Lawyers Australia

Online bullying, threating, intimidating, abusing and revenge porn are proposed to carry heavy fines of up to $111,000 for individual people, and more than $500,000 fine for corporations including Facebook and Twitter, for failing to take down such offensive material, or for failing to disclose the identities of the perpetrators.

Many millions of Australians communicate via social media, conduct their businesses and jobs.

While the technology provides great advantages, it also provides a platform for tragedy, namely online or cyber bullying or trolling. Arguably, the law must draw the line between free speech and maintaining the ability to express your views or opinions.

Victims of online abuse need protection, and “a lack of legislation in the online space affects us all- even if you are not online”, says sports news presenter Erin Molan.

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https://www.smh.com.au/technology/from-zoom-to-quibi-the-tech-winners-and-losers-of-2020-20201230-p56qti.html

From Zoom to Quibi, the tech winners and losers of 2020

By BARBARA ORTUTAY and MAE ANDERSON

December 30, 2020 — 11.45am

We streamed, we Zoomed, we ordered groceries and houseplants online, we created virtual villages while navigating laptop shortages to work and learn from home. In many ways, 2020′s pandemic-induced isolation threw our dependence on technology into overdrive, snipping away at our real-life connections while bringing digital relationships to the fore.

But for every life-changing Zoom, there was at least one soon-forgotten Quibi. Here's a look at the year's tech winners and losers.

LOSERS

Virtual Reality

As the world adjusted to a new stuck-at-home reality, the pandemic could have been virtual reality’s chance to offer an escape. With the use of special headsets and accouterments like gloves, the technology lets people interact with a 360 degree view of a three-dimensional environment, seemingly a good fit for people stuck indoors.

But people turned to easier-to-use software and games that they already had. Few rushed to spend hundreds of dollars on a clunky new headset or tried to learn the ropes of virtual reality meeting software. And no VR games broke into the mainstream. So virtual reality, on the verge of success for decades, missed its moment, again.

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https://www.smh.com.au/national/what-big-tech-does-in-the-shadows-shunning-social-media-won-t-protect-your-privacy-20201229-p56qop.html

What Big Tech does in the shadows: Shunning social media won't protect your privacy

Sacha Molitorisz

Academic and author

December 30, 2020 — 12.03am

Imagine you’re someone who doesn’t like social media, and who doesn’t want a social media presence. Problem is, social media can build a profile of you anyway. Maybe it already has. That’s because of the interconnected nature of our data. You appear in photos that other people post; you feature in other people’s conversations; and anyway, digital companies can accumulate data about you from other sources. They can buy it, and they can "infer" it.

Profiles of non-users are known as "shadow profiles". Researchers have shown that they’re easy to build, as long as a social network is big enough. For its part, Facebook denies having them, but does admit to collecting data on non-users to keep users safe. And shadow profiles are just one of the major challenges when it comes to protecting privacy in a digital age.

Currently, a major reform of Australia’s privacy law is underway. Indeed, it’s part of a range of media law initiatives and reforms, many stemming from the ACCC’s Digital Platforms Inquiry. Other initiatives include: the news media bargaining code, which saw legislation introduced to Parliament this month and looks set to make Google and Facebook pay for news content; the development of a voluntary code of practice to combat mis- and dis-information; and defamation law reform. To cap it all, late last month the federal government released its "Media Reform Green Paper", which seeks to link spectrum and licensing reform to investment in Australian content and local news.

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https://www.smh.com.au/national/how-conspiracy-theories-led-a-fringe-scientist-to-escape-quarantine-20201228-p56qhj.html

How conspiracy theories led a 'fringe scientist' to escape quarantine

By Harriet Alexander

December 29, 2020 — 5.35pm

Trapped under quarantine and ravaged by allergies in a Perth hotel room, Jenny D'Ubios slid into an internet vortex of conspiracy theories in the week before her Boxing Day escape.

The self-described "fringe scientist" shared with her Facebook followers articles about the dangers of 5G, a post by an anti-fluoride group that suggested coronavirus was a hoax, a video about the COVID-19 test (which was blocked by Facebook) and support for Reignite Democracy Australia, an activist group that sprang up in protest against the Melbourne lockdown.

Anti-COVID testing, anti-COVID vaccination and heavily populated by COVID-deniers, Reignite Australia was a group that clearly spoke to Ms D'Ubios and emboldened her to take drastic action against her confinement. By her seventh day in quarantine, she was spitting with fury.

"Everyone in the world is lazy and fearful," she said in a video posted to Facebook.

"They're going to use the army to mass vaccinate you for a 0.03 per cent contraction rate of a virus that doesn't exist with a 99 per cent healing rate. I'm done having to suffer because people won't stand up for their rights.

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https://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=40e338f0-5807-495b-9c11-b6b48d2e167d

Australian privacy law reforms: insights from the OAIC's submissions

Clayton Utz

While much will depend on the final form of any legislative amendments, those amendments will inevitably increase the administrative and financial costs associated with compliance with the Privacy Act for businesses.

Further to our recent article about the Federal Government's review of the Privacy Act 1988 (Cth), the Office of the Australian Information Commission (OAIC) last week made its submission to the Federal Government.

The OAIC broadly supports the Federal Government's proposed review of the Privacy Act and has identified four key foundations to the review – the opportunity to:

  • encourage global interoperability;
  • enable privacy self-management;
  • ensure organisational accountability; and
  • align privacy regulation with community expectations.

Impact on individuals

Recent studies[1] suggest that most individuals are uncomfortable with privacy policies and only accept them because the cost of opting out (typically the inability to obtain the goods or services) is too high.

The OAIC's recommendations seek to empower individuals by:

  • ensuring that individuals are able to exercise meaningful choices and control by understanding how their personal information is being handled through notice and consent;
  • when personal information is collected from an individual, and that information is used or disclosed, requiring the entity to ensure that the use or disclosure is fair and reasonable;
  • introducing an independent third-party certification scheme to allow individuals to quickly assess the data protection offered by the entity;
  • prohibiting the scraping of personal information from online platforms, inappropriate surveillance or monitoring of individuals through audio or video functionalities on an individual's devices, profiling and monitoring of children, and certain uses of AI technology to make decisions about individuals; and
  • granting individuals a direct right of action to enforce breaches of the Privacy Act or the Australian Privacy Principles (APPs), coupled with a statutory tort for serious invasions of privacy.

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https://www.afr.com/policy/economy/facebook-amazon-surpass-australian-government-revenue-20201221-p56pd5

Facebook, Amazon surpass Australian government revenue

Matthew Cranston Economics correspondent

Dec 28, 2020 – 2.59pm

The combined revenue of Facebook and Amazon has surpassed that of the Australian federal government for the first time in history, heightening security concerns around the rapidly growing power of technology companies in areas of information and commerce.

Facebook and Amazon brought in a combined $US391 billion ($518 billion) in revenue for the last reported 12 months, while the federal government's actual revenue collection for financial year 2020 was $469 billion.

The rate of revenue increase for the tech giants is faster than that of the government and comes as they display their growing power, rolling out end-to-end encryption across platforms at the same time as rejecting up to one in five data disclosure requests from Australian law enforcement bodies.

Secretary of the Department of Home Affairs Michael Pezzullo has expressed his concern over the growing strength of the tech giants and their threat to institutions and the prosperity of nations.

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https://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=c3adfcd8-58f3-45d0-8ef9-ca205d23b484

Directors and officers will face increased exposure for cyber related incidents

Clyde & Co LLP

22 December, 2020

In what has been dubbed 'big cyber game hunting', companies the world over are experiencing an increase in the volume and severity of cyber-attacks.

The direct financial impact, supply chain interruption and reputational harm that often flows means that companies and their officers are facing increased scrutiny in the aftermath of an incident.

Business interruptions losses, mega fines and share price drops are providing the ideal feeding ground for onlookers. Regulators, shareholders and the public watch on to examine what directors and officers did or did not do to prevent such events, or to mitigate the impact of the event on the company.

We predict that in 2021 there will be a rise in the number of claims under non-cyber policies which have as their genesis in a cyber related incident.

Over the years, the US has seen a number of cyber related securities class actions which seek to recover losses suffered by shareholders after a cyber security incident. Given the volume of cyber incidents being experienced by companies outside the US, it is only a matter of time before we see this trend follow in other jurisdictions.

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Comments more than welcome!

David.

Monday, January 04, 2021

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 04 January, 2021.

 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

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Well in Deep Summer that does not actually feel like Summer the news flow is pretty slow!

Just a few items worth a browse!

Enjoy 2021

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/life/21-innovations-in-science-and-tech-that-will-change-our-world-in-2021/news-story/5a459634cf5ab5c19b1957f7ce381617

21 inventions that will change our world

Breakthroughs in medicine and technology, set to roll out this year, bring hope of a healthier, more entertaining future.

By Natasha Robinson and Chris Griffith

Medicine

3D printed kidneys

Almost 2000 Australians in any given year are waiting for a kidney transplant, and 12,000 more are on dialysis. Many die waiting for a kidney. But those with end-stage kidney disease may have much better prospects in coming years with expectations that 3D printed kidneys could eventually be used for transplants. Scientists at the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute have bio-printed tiny human kidneys using a stem cell paste. The mini-kidneys, just the size of a fingernail, contain thousands of tiny tubes and blood vessels and fully resemble a full-sized human kidney. As the technology comes of age it’s expected that full-sized kidneys will be able to be bio-printed and used in transplants.

Fertility cryopreservation

When children and young people are diagnosed with cancer, their parents are confronted not only with their child’s mortality but also difficult decisions about preserving future fertility.

One choice open to parents is to have part of their child’s ovarian or gonadal tissue removed and frozen for future use. The technique was until recently considered experimental, but ovarian tissue grafting has resulted in the birth of several babies in Australia in recent years. Slices of the tissue are implanted into the abdomen or pelvis, where it regrows and has the capacity to reverse menopause, releasing eggs that can then be fertilised via IVF.

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https://www.zdnet.com/article/nsw-says-qr-codes-are-the-most-effective-system-for-covid-19-contact-tracing/

NSW says QR codes are the most effective system for COVID-19 contact tracing

State government reminds hospitality businesses and hairdressers they need to use the Service NSW QR code system come January 1.

By Chris Duckett | December 30, 2020 -- 01:17 GMT (12:17 AEDT) | Topic: Innovation

The New South Wales Minister for Customer Service Victor Dominello has lauded the state's QR code venue check-in system, prior to it becoming mandatory for hospitality businesses and hairdressers when 2021 arrives.

If businesses do not use the Service NSW QR code check-in system, they face AU$5,000 fines, closure of the business for a week, and should the venue further fail to comply, potentially a month's closure.

"The consequences of non-compliance and complacency when it comes to electronic record keeping are serious -- it puts people's health at risk and destroys jobs," Dominello said. 

"The feedback we've received from contact tracers is that the Service NSW QR code is the most effective system in assisting NSW Health to protect the community.

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/security-lapse-gives-hackers-a-free-pass/news-story/9c4bc21cf1e984abaf6d895de1b3cdd7

Security lapse gives hackers a free pass

Richard Ferguson

Treasury and Defence are among a number of federal government departments that have failed to fully implement a cybersecurity system designed to protect them from ­malicious emails.

After a slew of attacks this year by state-based hackers against the government and ­Australian businesses, only Home Affairs, Services Australia and the Australian Signals Directorate have told the Senate they have fully ­integrated the Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting and Conformance protocols, which prevent attackers from ­getting in through emails.

Questions on notice to Senate estimates and checks via domain name networks show Treasury, ­Defence, Health, Education, Industry, Parliamentary Services and ­Attorney-General have only partially implemented the cyber ­protections.

A Department of Home Affairs spokesman said the cyber uplift programs would help departments bolster cyber defences, and that Home Affairs was seeing an uptick in DMARC protocols in commonwealth offices.

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https://www.smh.com.au/technology/sleep-gadgets-add-complexity-when-we-really-should-relax-20201215-p56no6.html

Sleep gadgets add complexity when we really should relax

By Alice Clarke

December 29, 2020 — 8.00am

Ah sleep. The one time of day you can escape all your worldly burdens, close your eyes and vividly dream of spiders, or being best friends with the moon, or something. It's vital, and natural.

But in the same way that tech and shoe companies keep making running — the least complicated sport in the world — more complex and expensive, tech and device companies are finding new ways to quantify and sell you stuff for sleep.

Bose is back on the bandwagon again after the many tech failures of its first attempt to make earbuds that help you sleep. I have to admit that I used my original Sleepbuds a lot on planes until they eventually stopped charging, and I do find that I get to sleep sooner and more soundly when I wear the $380 second-generation buds now that I’m trying to get used to the noise of the city again (lockdown was so quiet).

But even these new Sleepbuds can’t play anything other than the included sounds, my right bud keeps randomly cutting out, they’re uncomfortable if you sleep on your side, and I find that I wake up groggier when I wear them. I still plan on wearing them on planes eventually, but a pair of 50 cent ear plugs might serve most people better.

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https://au.reset.tech/

30 Dec 2020 8:56 AM AEST

Perth’s quarantine escapee just tip of the iceberg of social media threat to Australia’s COVID-19 response

Australia's COVID-19 response is under threat from unchecked social media companies, as public health authorities have little insight into the scale of the problem, says Reset Australia.

News reports that a woman left quarantine in Perth after being indoctrinated by misinformation on Facebook is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to misinformation online, says Chris Cooper, executive director of Reset Australia.

"Social media has supercharged conspiracy theories and misinformation, pushing people into echo chambers where false information is all they see. Algorithms amplify the most sensationalist or conspiratorial content to keep us engaged and online longer, but that's often not factual or accurate information."

It's not just Australians leaving quarantine, the longterm threat that fewer people will be willing to take up the COVID-19 vaccine because of unchecked misinformation means meaningful action on social media is needed now, said Mr Cooper.

“Every important service provider or industry in our country has an inspection and enforcement method except Facebook and other social media giants. It’s time for social media to grow up and respond to proper public oversight.

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https://www.greataustralianpods.com/2020/12/australian-digital-health-agency-podcast.html

Australian Digital Health Agency Podcast

December 30, 2020

Podcast: Australian Digital Health Agency Podcast
By: Australian Digital Health Agency
Category: Health and Fitness
Sub-Category: Health, Management, Tech News
First Episode: 2020

Description:
Australia’s need for a connected healthcare system is now greater than ever. One that’s accessible, progressive, and importantly secure.

Website: Australian Digital Health Agency
Connect: Twitter and Facebook and YouTube and LinkedIn
Listen: Google or Apple or Spotify or RSS

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/technology/telstra-backs-melbourne-cofense-cyber-security-centre-to-defend-asia-pacific/news-story/64489386e16e03e1afc848490aa56f23

Telstra backs Melbourne Cofense cyber security centre to defend Asia Pacific

Jared Lynch

Telstra is backing a new centre to be built in Melbourne aimed at combating a sharp increase in sophisticated cyber attacks — some from foreign powers — across the Asia Pacific region.

The centre will aim to prevent phishing, or malicious emails, infiltrating Australia and the region’s biggest businesses, who are also battling their own war in securing talent to prevent unwarranted cyber intrusions.

Telstra’s venture capital arm, Telstra Ventures, has backed the company behind the centre — US-based Cofense, which is based near the CIA’s headquarters in Virginia.

It is part of Telstra Venture’s $US100m ($131m) bet on more than a dozen cybersecurity start-ups to bolster defences for big business, as attacks from criminals and foreign powers increase in volume and scale.

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https://www.healthcareit.com.au/article/motorolasolutions-extends-mission-critical-managed-service-ambulance-victoria

Motorola Solutions extends mission critical managed service with Ambulance Victoria

Dean Koh | 30 Dec 2020

Communications and analytics company Motorola Solutions has extended its agreement to provide the Victorian Government with a dedicated emergency data communications managed service for use by Ambulance Victoria, an agency of the Department of Health and Human Services.

Known as the Mobile Data Network (MDN), the network was the first emergency communications network to be procured under a build, own and operate public-private services model in Australia. It was first deployed in 2005 and provides secure, mission-critical data communications for Ambulance Victoria, primarily to support ambulance dispatch capabilities across the greater Melbourne metropolitan area
.
The new agreement will see Motorola Solutions maintain the service to its current mission-critical standards whilst introducing new and emerging technologies.

Under the extended agreement, Motorola Solutions will work with Ambulance Victoria to integrate a number of its technologies within a single platform. This will ensure the state’s paramedics receive the right information at the right time so they can deliver better care and outcomes for all patients.

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https://www.smh.com.au/business/companies/tensions-with-telcos-and-network-gaps-to-challenge-nbn-co-in-2021-20201231-p56r0f.html

Tensions with telcos and network gaps to challenge NBN Co in 2021

By Supratim Adhikari

January 1, 2021 — 12.00am

The national broadband network has sailed into the new year with a spring in its step, with the federal government declaring the $53 billion network is finally "built and fully operational". But its management should be under no illusion as to how arduous 2021 is likely to be.

Having taken over a decade to hit its target of making 11.86 million premises ready to receive broadband services over the NBN, the management team in charge of the network needs to crack on with connecting the homes that were put in the too hard basket.

That number currently stands at around 35,000 and there's also the issue of helping some 238,000 or so homes get the minimum 25 Mbps (megabits per second) speed that they are paying for but can't receive. Most of these under-served homes are on fibre-to-the-node connections that rely on copper rather than fibre for services.

As with all things NBN, the numbers need to be put in context and the overall number of premises with no or poor services makes up just over 2 per cent of the total footprint of the network. But 2 per cent of 11 million is still a pretty large number, and those missing out on fast internet speeds, especially during a pandemic, won't be shy in making a noise about it.

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https://www.smh.com.au/technology/to-mars-and-beyond-why-2021-could-be-a-huge-year-for-space-20201231-p56qyc.html

To Mars and beyond: Why 2021 could be a huge year for space

By Christian Davenport

December 31, 2020 — 4.34am

We all know that 2020 was a no-good, horrible, fearful, tumultuous year that will be remembered for the coronavirus pandemic and a polarising US election. But for space enthusiasts, it was actually quite a good year, providing bits of promising news amid the bleak headlines of disease, economic hardship and protests.

SpaceX launched astronauts to the International Space Station (ISS) twice. NASA launched a rover to Mars and snagged a sample from an asteroid 200 million miles away.

2021 has potential for even more good news. Here's just some of what could happen in the new year.

SpaceX to return to ISS

After two successful flights carrying astronauts to the ISS, SpaceX is set to do it again. Crew-2, its second fully operational mission, is scheduled to launch a quartet of astronauts from the Kennedy Space Centre in Florida in the northern spring, followed a few months later by Crew-3.

Not since the space shuttle has NASA had routine flights to the space station from US soil. If all goes well, SpaceX will become the shuttle's successor, filling a major gap in America's spaceflight program in a coming-of-age moment for what was once a spunky start-up.

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Enjoy!

David.

Sunday, January 03, 2021

I Think We Are Sowing The Seeds Of Our Own Destruction By Not Calling Out The Utter Rubbish On Social Media.

Rant Alert - If you an individual that believes that 5G technology causes COVID19, that paedophiles are running a ‘deep state’ in the US or that Bill Gates is aiming to sterilise us all with vaccines I would stop reading now!

I have been watching social media content for a good few years, more so since COVID19 arrived and frankly I am horrified.

What I am seeing is apparently a very considerable acceptance of and belief in what can only be described as unscientific bullshit by an increasingly large and diverse sections of our society!

My fear is that easy acceptance of this rubbish is as a direct result of the lack of intellectual rigor and scientific training and awareness in our community and that this is now reflecting a polity unable to distinguish fact from fiction and that this erosion will lead to a progressive decay in both the quality of political decision making and community coherence.

Take this quality individual as an exemplar.

How conspiracy theories led a 'fringe scientist' to escape quarantine

By Harriet Alexander

December 29, 2020 — 5.35pm

Trapped under quarantine and ravaged by allergies in a Perth hotel room, Jenny D'Ubios slid into an internet vortex of conspiracy theories in the week before her Boxing Day escape.

The self-described "fringe scientist" shared with her Facebook followers articles about the dangers of 5G, a post by an anti-fluoride group that suggested coronavirus was a hoax, a video about the COVID-19 test (which was blocked by Facebook) and support for Reignite Democracy Australia, an activist group that sprang up in protest against the Melbourne lockdown.

Anti-COVID testing, anti-COVID vaccination and heavily populated by COVID-deniers, Reignite Australia was a group that clearly spoke to Ms D'Ubios and emboldened her to take drastic action against her confinement. By her seventh day in quarantine, she was spitting with fury.

"Everyone in the world is lazy and fearful," she said in a video posted to Facebook.

"They're going to use the army to mass vaccinate you for a 0.03 per cent contraction rate of a virus that doesn't exist with a 99 per cent healing rate. I'm done having to suffer because people won't stand up for their rights.

Vastly more here:

https://www.smh.com.au/national/how-conspiracy-theories-led-a-fringe-scientist-to-escape-quarantine-20201228-p56qhj.html

Sadly this good soul is not alone and many, many like her, feeding on the huge and expanding bubble of unscientific and ignorant mis-information and conspiracy theories found in social media have the potential to damage and impair our public health efforts to keep the population safe.

While ever we have an increasing  population so ignorant of basic scientific principles and lacking even a reasonable factual base from which to draw, combined with provocateurs exploiting them on social media for nefarious purposes, we are at risk of societal disharmony or worse.

Being a PhD trained scientist I can recognise most of this rubbish for what it is, but how do we help others to escape from the nonsense? I suspect the answer is way above my pay grade but I fear for our society while ever such nonsense is promulgated and ignorant politicians like Craig Kelly push such ignorant kant.

How can we ensure the nutters do not become any more influential and dangerous than they already are and arm the citizenry with what they need to distinguish fact from fiction.

I have to say my worries are also echoed here ( I have no association with them!):

30 Dec 2020 8:56 AM AEST

Perth’s quarantine escapee just tip of the iceberg of social media threat to Australia’s COVID-19 response

Australia's COVID-19 response is under threat from unchecked social media companies, as public health authorities have little insight into the scale of the problem, says Reset Australia.

News reports that a woman left quarantine in Perth after being indoctrinated by misinformation on Facebook is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to misinformation online, says Chris Cooper, executive director of Reset Australia.

"Social media has supercharged conspiracy theories and misinformation, pushing people into echo chambers where false information is all they see. Algorithms amplify the most sensationalist or conspiratorial content to keep us engaged and online longer, but that's often not factual or accurate information."

It's not just Australians leaving quarantine, the longterm threat that fewer people will be willing to take up the COVID-19 vaccine because of unchecked misinformation means meaningful action on social media is needed now, said Mr Cooper.

“Every important service provider or industry in our country has an inspection and enforcement method except Facebook and other social media giants. It’s time for social media to grow up and respond to proper public oversight.

“We don’t let restaurants just say their kitchens are clean - we have random inspections and we investigate any food poisoning.

“We don’t just accept people are paying their taxes - the tax office audits people.

More here:

https://www.medianet.com.au/releases/195683/

What do you think about all this?

David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 560 – Results – 3rd January, 2021.

 Here are the results of the poll.

What Do You Think Is The Most Important Digital Health Initiative For The Next 2-3 Years?

E-Prescribing 16% (12)

Telehealth 30% (23)

The My Health Record 3% (2)

State Based Health Information Exchange 23% (18)

None Of The Above 25% (19)

I Have No Idea 4% (3)

Total votes: 77

Telehealth and State Based Info Exchange along with e-prescribing were seen as important and the #myHR not at all with very little support! Can people please comment re: what the ‘none of the above’ initiatives were?

Any insights on the poll welcome as a comment, as usual.

A very reasonable number of votes, given the time of year.  

It must also have been a bit hard with 3/77 readers were not sure how to respond.

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

David.