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, August 24, 2021

Commentators and Journalists Weigh In On Digital Health And Related Privacy, Safety, Social Media And Security Matters. Lots Of Interesting Perspectives - August 24, 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/politics/federal/vaccine-passports-to-combine-jab-records-with-qr-check-ins-for-more-freedoms-20210820-p58kmh.html

‘Vaccine passports’ to combine jab records with QR check-ins for more freedoms

By David Crowe

August 21, 2021 — 5.00am

Millions of vaccinated Australians will be able to use their mobile phones to gain exemptions to lockdown rules at cafes, restaurants and public events under a national cabinet plan to use digital records to verify vaccine status.

A federal vaccine record will be combined with state check-in systems to expand the use of QR codes at public venues to be sure those who gain entry have been immunised against COVID-19.

With almost six million Australians fully vaccinated, the plans clear the way for the exemptions to begin when states and territories have vaccinated at least 70 per cent of people aged 16 and over.

Called a “vaccine passport” by some, the proposal relies mostly on the QR codes already mandated across the states and territories for people to record the places they visit so contact tracers can check on outbreaks.

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https://www.australianageingagenda.com.au/executive/aged-care-training-should-include-digital-skills/

Aged care training should include digital skills

Aged care courses and employers should incorporate digital competencies into training programs to ensure new workers have the skills they need, an industry forum on technology has heard.

by Sandy Cheu August 19, 2021

A panel of experts at the ITAC August International Forum on Thursday discussed the importance a digitally enabled aged care workforce.

Aged Care Industry Workforce Council CEO Louise O’Neill said many aged care roles requiring digital skills would emerge as the sector became more digitally enabled.

“We will need to see an uplift in the way that digital skills are taught through Certificate III and Certificate IV qualifications and other qualifications across all sorts of job types,” Ms O’Neill told the ITAC August International Forum.

It may also fall to employers to do more in-house on-the-job training around digital proficiency rather than leaving it all to training organisations, she said.

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https://www.innovationaus.com/online-retailers-race-to-the-bottom-on-australians-privacy/

Online retailers ‘race to the bottom’ on privacy

Joseph Brookes
Senior Reporter

18 August 2021

Online retailers offer no genuine competition on privacy to Australian consumers, allowing them to conduct “pervasive” and “unnecessary” data collection, a leading privacy expert has told the competition and consumer watchdog in its current investigation of ecommerce giants.

New analysis of eBay, Amazon, Catch and Kogan’s Australian privacy terms found they offer little variation in quality or competition, despite significant variance in form, including eBay’s 22,000-word privacy terms dwarfing Kogan’s 1,500-word policy.

The analysis, by UNSW senior lecturer Dr Katharine Kemp, found the “vague” and “complex” terms conceal the true data practices and intentions of online retailers, helping to minimise competition and consumer choice.

“No marketplace wishes to provide consumers with substantial privacy choices while their rivals may continue to undermine consumers’ privacy to their own advantage without detection, which makes the present situation a ‘race to the bottom’,” Dr Kemp said.

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https://www.innovationaus.com/technology-lessons-of-covidsafe-must-be-learned/

Technology lessons of COVIDSafe must be learned


Dr Lesley Seebeck
Contributor

17 August 2021

OPINION: As the government turns its thinking to a vaccination passport or similar, it would do well to learn some of the lessons from COVIDSafe.

COVIDSafe illustrates the need for a good understanding of both policy intent and how the technology works.

Aimed at ‘help[ing] assist health officials understand and contain the spread’ of COVID-19, the app is more than a benign study assistant.

It uses people’s smartphone Bluetooth functionality as an incomplete proxy for distance between potential carriers and other people. Collected data provides an approximate, near real-time social network.

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https://www.theage.com.au/national/a-lot-of-people-are-sleepwalking-into-it-the-expert-raising-concerns-over-ai-20210714-p589qh.html

‘A lot of people are sleepwalking into it’: the expert raising concerns over AI

It’s one of the most profound innovations of our time - and Manhattan-based Australian Kate Crawford wants us to wake up to AI’s inherent risks.

By Stephanie Wood

August 20, 2021

Kate Crawford, one of the world’s pre-eminent scholars on the social and political implications of artificial intelligence, is being watched. She has arrived at our meeting point outside an anonymous inner-Sydney building before me and, while she waits on the footpath, is twice questioned by people who seem to be security staff.

A woman is the first to come out of the building. Are you meeting someone here, she asks, do you have an appointment? I’m fine, Crawford replies. The woman hovers. A man emerges next. He asks Crawford if there’s anything she needs. She repeats her answer.

By the time I arrive, the staff have left her alone. Crawford, in black boots and leather jacket, directs my attention to a single bulbous black eye, a security camera, high on a wall above us. “The levels of security around this building are absolutely out of this world; let’s see if we get harassed,” she says, striding off to walk its perimeter. It’s only when we turn on to the street behind the building that it becomes clear how massive it is: looming above us is a shimmering, curved facade, perhaps 10 storeys high and stretching a city block into the distance like a beached ocean liner. “Look at that facility, that is vast,” Crawford says.

But the size of the structure is not the only indication of scale. Crawford points out white, orange and pink fluorescent hieroglyphics on the footpath: numbers and letters, lines and symbols, a secret language of the street identifying what lies beneath: gas and water pipes, power and telecommunications lines, fibre-optic cables. “This is huge amounts of data capacity, the kind of grunt for data storage and processing.”

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https://www.hospitalhealth.com.au/content/technology/article/how-will-technology-really-help-us-meet-our-national-health-objectives--752372982

How will technology really help us meet our national health objectives?


By Amy Sarcevic
Friday, 30 July, 2021

Hospital + Healthcare speaks to RMIT Technology Professor Kate Fox about which up-and-coming health technologies are likely to become realities, and which are simply hype.

As a young girl, Technology Professor Kate Fox of RMIT had a technophilic fascination with the hit TV series CSI Miami.

“I was amazed by the way detectives could trace criminals from a single fingerprint, and other such sorcery,” she recalled. 

Later embarking on a career in technology research, Fox quickly grew disheartened. Fingerprints could of course be used in criminal identification, but the method was far from infallible, with experts often getting the matches wrong.

This gap between science fiction and reality is also evident in health care — a sector in which Professor Fox now specialises. She believes premature media reporting may be partly to blame. 

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https://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=b03a986a-0360-4d02-9cc8-1d56ef2d292b

A privacy quantum leap: Key takeaways from the recent OAIC decision (ignore at your peril)

Clyde & Co LLP  Alec Christie

Australia August 18 2021

A recent decision by the Privacy Commissioner/OAIC has removed the possibility of a ‘copy and paste, ‘one size fits all’ and ‘set and forget’ approach to privacy compliance. There is now a clear requirement to have a bespoke targeted program developed by skilled professionals which is both regularly updated to meet changing circumstances and tested. This decision has also, in an instant, made the actions of many offshore service (including technology services and Cloud) providers (service providers) subject to Australian privacy law.

Background

The Privacy Commissioner’s decision, following its Commissioner Initiated Investigation (CII) into one of the most well-known global ‘disruptor’ or ‘gig economy’ companies’ (Decision), is the most significant privacy decision in many years. Not because it is about one of the most well‑known ‘disrupter’ or ‘gig economy’ companies of our time but because it re-interprets some of the most fundamental (and often misapplied) aspects of the Privacy Act/APPs: extraterritoriality, APP 1.2, APP 11.1 and APP 11.2.

Offshore service providers (whether arm’s-length or related entities) which have no connection with Australia other than remotely providing services to entities that ‘carry on business in Australia’, beware: the Decision is a seismic shift in the extraterritorial application of Australian privacy law. For most of the entities subject to the APPs (now including many offshore service providers), your information security practices now need to be much better than before. As for ransomware attacks (and other cyber incidents), you must be prepared with a clear plan. Gone are the days when your ‘plan’ can simply be to pay the ransom and hope for the best. While we do not address the impact of the Decision on cyber incident/data breach handling and response here, our Cyber colleagues will in an upcoming article.

The Decision also confirms a change to the OAIC’s enforcement posture, building over the last 18 months, towards a “take no prisoners” approach. Both the findings and the reasoning of the Commissioner/OAIC in the Decision must be fully understood and applied by all entities ‘carrying on business in Australia’ or providing services to an entity ‘carrying on businesses in Australia’ that collect, use, hold or disclose (collectively, process) any personal information relating to Australia.

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/small-business/the-technology-handing-healthcare-to-the-masses/news-story/7dd026ccd613ff240256961b26b7b7a8

The technology handing healthcare to the masses

By Jackson Hewett

12:00AM August 20, 2021

At a time when healthcare needs to be as widely accessible as possible, Melbourne-based business Curve Tomorrow is empowering Australia‘s top medical researchers to get best-practice ideas out onto the field.

Junior sports is already becoming one such proving ground. One of the company’s most widely used apps is a collaboration with the Murdoch Children’s Research Institute to provide parents with a way to identify whether a knock on the football field could be a concussion.

HeadCheck, which takes users through a series of diagnostic questions to identify concussion symptoms and recommended courses of action, was originally targeted to worried parents at Auskick games. Now the app is being deployed by the Australian Football League to assist coaching staff at senior league games identify warning signs.

Curve Tomorrow co-founder Mohinder Jaimangal says there are countless ideas sitting in research centres that can be democratised in a similar way.

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https://www.itwire.com/security/businesses-fall-short-when-it-comes-to-data-privacy-expectations-study.html

Thursday, 19 August 2021 11:15

Businesses fall short when it comes to data privacy expectations: study

By Kenn Anthony Mendoza

Australian businesses are not keeping up with the data privacy expectations of their customers when digitising their offering, according to a new Heart Matters study announced by SAP Southeast Asia.

The study reports that when it comes to data protection, organisations fall short of expectations by up to 50%. More than four in five (84%) consumers want transparency into how their personal data is being used, but only 34% have been shown accountability.

The study adds that the expectation among Australians is higher than the APAC average expectations of three quarters (74%).

“COVID-19 accelerated the rate at which businesses implemented digital infrastructure to continue meeting customer demands for a seamless online experience,” explains SAP customer experience Australia and New Zealand executive general manager Scott Treller.

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https://www.itwire.com/technology-regulation/e-marketing-unsubscribe-laws-clarified.html

Tuesday, 17 August 2021 17:22

E-marketing unsubscribe laws clarified

By ACMA

AUTHORITY NEWS: The law setting out how businesses must action unsubscribe (or ‘opt-out’) messages from consumers receiving commercial SMS and email has recently been further clarified.

Businesses must not require consumers to do either of the following:

• Provide personal information (other than the electronic address to which a marketing message was sent)

• Create or log-in to an account.


The rules are set out in the updated Spam Regulations 2021 that commenced on 1 April 2021 after being reviewed by the Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Communications.

The ACMA is actively monitoring for indications of non-compliance. If breaches of the spam laws are found, those responsible for sending or authorising the messages may face penalties of up to $222,000 per day and/or action in the Federal Court of Australia.

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https://fabfm.podbean.com/e/my-healthrecord-comes-totheaid-of-essential-workersand-thosehaving-prescriptionsfilledfab-fms-paul-makingetsthegoodoil-fromdr-steve-hambleton/

My Health Record Comes To The Aid Of Essential Workers And Those Having Prescriptions Filled - FAB FM’s Paul Makin Gets The Good Oil From Dr Steve Hambleton

August 17, 2021 ADHA Propaganda

FAB FM's Paul Makin talks to Dr Steve Hambleton about COVID-19 tests and the LATEST with 'My Health Record'. Essential workers can now get pathology results with 759,000 report views by consumers in one month alone. Electronic prescriptions can now be accessed, with the majority of Australians being able to choose an electronic prescription as an alternative to paper. Dr Steve is a General Practitioner in Brisbane, a former State and Federal President of the Australian Medical Association and serves the Digital Health Agency as the Chief Clinical Advisor to the Senior Executive Committee and CEO. www.myhealthrecord.gov.au/

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/life/gadgets/windows-365-lifts-business-to-cloud/news-story/517c077bbac4cc01b54271bbf5d77e40

Windows 365 lifts business to cloud

Chris Griffith

5:50AM August 17, 2021

Once upon a time computers needed hardware. Now they can exist as bits of software in the cloud.

I have been trialling a Microsoft Windows 365 computer that is cloud based. The screens that this cloud computer generates on my home monitor look the same as those on any ordinary Windows 10 computer, but this is a virtual desktop.

You open a browser window, point it to windows365.microsoft.com, login and you have your cloud computer available from any internet connected on Planet Earth. You can install the Windows Remote Desktop app and get a better experience than a browser offers with Windows 365, including multiple screen support.

You might ask: why operate a Windows computer in the cloud when you use a physical computer to access it? Why not use your computer’s Windows system? You wouldn‘t be Robinson Crusoe to ask that.

This isn’t about offering home users a cloud computing alternative. Microsoft is targeting business and enterprise with a system that lets them quickly allocate work applications to staff working at home or in the field, or casual staff. Businesses equally can revoke access when no longer needed.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/govts-set-first-national-data-sharing-priorities-568644

Govts set first national data sharing priorities

By Justin Hendry on Aug 16, 2021 11:36AM

Agree to create an 'Australian Data Network'.

Australian governments will prioritise sharing data related to natural disasters and emergencies, waste and road safety under the first national data sharing work program.

Digital ministers from the Commonwealth, NSW, Victoria, South Australia and ACT governments agreed to the first work program and initial priority areas last Friday.

It comes a month after national cabinet signed off on an intergovernmental agreement, which commits all states and territories to share data between jurisdictions by default.

The default position will see governments “use best endeavours to share data between jurisdictions” for recognised purposes, granted privacy standards are met.

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/technology/killer-drones-decide-who-lives-and-dies/news-story/3b8628a1275ff8440ec04ffcdecacf3e

Killer drones decide who lives and dies

By Toby Walsh

7:29PM August 13, 2021

Imagine a swarm of kamikaze drones, relentlessly hunting down and attacking dozens of people, without any human in control. Sounds like a bad Hollywood movie. Except it isn’t.

According to a recent report from the United Nations Security Council, such an incident took place in March 2020 during the civil war in Libya. The drones were built by Turkey, based on a consumer quadcopter that was packed with explosives and equipped with machine vision to identify, track and dive-bomb targets.

Do we want to have such machines deciding who lives and who dies?

When accepting the Nobel Peace Prize in 2001, Kofi Annan, then Secretary-General of the United Nations said, “In the twenty-first century I believe the mission of the United Nations will be defined by a new, more profound, awareness of the sanctity and dignity of every human life.”

Respecting the sanctity and dignity of every human life seems a reasonable and uncontroversial cause for the world to agree upon.

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/economics/privacy-must-be-protected-as-data-plays-key-role-in-pandemic-fight/news-story/e6c14470e1d585df9c625a8c7087e8c2

Privacy must be protected as data plays key role in pandemic fight

Angelene Falk

10:51PM August 15, 2021

As millions of Australians remain in lockdown due to the Covid-19 Delta variant, a range of strategies and options are being debated for the future, including whether there will be a role for vaccination certificates to be used as “vaccine passports”.

Throughout the pandemic, the use of personal information has been central to the public health response, while government release of timely and accurate information has helped citizens around the world respond and support containment efforts.

Overseas, a growing number of governments are introducing a form of vaccine passport for travel and access to large gatherings and major facilities, among other uses.

In Australia, there is also discussion about the use of vaccination status to facilitate increased mobility, particularly international travel. There are suggestions that a vaccination certificate could have a role in domestic journeys, entry to large venues and events, and some businesses and workplaces.

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/new-laws-needed-to-protect-privacy-if-vaccine-passports-introduced/news-story/8b06152beffbe79aa8c6257c02010045

New laws needed to protect privacy if vaccine passports introduced

Helen Trinca

10:43PM August 15, 2021

Australia’s privacy chief has warned new legislation may be needed to protect privacy if vaccine passports are introduced.

Angelene Falk, the Australian Information Commissioner and Privacy Commissioner, whose office administers the federal Privacy Act, says there needs to be a national “harmonised” approach with privacy protections built in “from the ground up”.

In her first public comments on the growing debate about ­individual privacy and the vaccine passports or certificates, she says: “The strongest privacy protections are those mandated by legislation and parliamentary oversight, with clear accountabilities.”

In an opinion piece in The Australian on Monday, Ms Falk writes that while large organisations and health service providers have ­existing obligations under the act to “respect and protect personal information”, not all employers or businesses are covered by this law. Private- sector employee records are also ­exempt from existing legislation.

Under the act, vaccination status is protected and individuals are under no obligation to reveal whether they have had the jab.

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https://insightplus.mja.com.au/2021/30/mental-health-grey-zones-tele-tech-offers-choices/

Mental health “grey zones”: “tele-tech” offers choices

Authored by

Matthew Zoeller Kate Blundell

Issue 30 / 16 August 2021

THE mental health crisis is as much a systems crisis as it is a modern, behavioural human problem, with deep biological, psychological, social and existential roots.

We refer to this combined problem as the “mental health grey zones”, which denotes the various challenges encountered by each individual from the onset of dysfunctional psychological distress to complete resolution and return to functional normality or a well managed state of chronic illness.

These zones include:

  • insight and recognition of the problem – encompassing education, self-awareness, culture and cognitive capacity;
  • decision and commitment to seeking help – including motivation, emotional resilience, support structure, and reasons behind the decision;
  • access barriers – such as geography, time, cost and stigma with regard to physically visiting a GP and/or psychologist or psychiatrist; and
  • momentum on the pathway, including compliance with ongoing care requirements – such as in-session therapy and additional “at-home” work.

Currently, for most of the psychological distress present in our society, we know what works: high quality, evidence-based, psychological therapy delivered by qualified, registered mental health professionals

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https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/potential-for-discrimination-human-rights-body-urges-caution-on-vaccine-passports-20210815-p58iv7.html

‘Potential for discrimination’: Human rights body urges caution on vaccine passports

By Anthony Galloway

August 15, 2021 — 1.40pm

The nation’s human rights watchdog has urged state and federal governments not to impose vaccine passports unless other restrictions are removed at the same time, warning they had the potential to discriminate against vulnerable Australians.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has opened the door to the use of vaccine certificates domestically on the basis it will encourage more Australians to get vaccinated faster under national cabinet’s planned four-phase reopening of the country, but stressed it would have to be imposed by the states.

A growing number of Coalition MPs are speaking out against the use of vaccine certificates for domestic travel and attendance at venues and events, with at least two threatening to cross the floor if the government brings on legislation.

In an advisory note, the Australian Human Rights Commission said any move to impose vaccine passports or certificates should be “reasonable, necessary, and proportionate” and “must take into account the potential for discrimination”. It said groups that could be discriminated against include people who have a medical reason not to be vaccinated, individuals who seek to avoid contact with government agencies including migrants and vaccine-hesitant Australians.

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https://www.afr.com/companies/media-and-marketing/streaming-tv-ad-revenue-growth-exceeds-all-expectations-20210815-p58itz

Streaming TV ad revenue growth exceeds all expectations

Miranda Ward Media writer

Aug 16, 2021 – 12.00am

Advertisers are starting to invest more into broadcast video-on-demand (BVOD), with ad revenue for the digital channel and traditional broadcast TV surging in the past six months.

According to industry body ThinkTV, BVOD platforms such as 7plus, 9Now, 10 Play, Foxtel Go, Foxtel Now and Kayo delivered revenue growth of 74.8 per cent to $145 million for the six months to June 30, with BVOD revenue for the total financial year up 63.4 per cent year-on-year to $278 million.

As audiences turn to BVOD to consume TV content, either through connected TV apps or web browsers, advertisers are looking to push more ad dollars into the medium that comes with the benefit of deep verified user data, especially as the free-to-air players build up their data offering through the use of mandatory logins, as used by Seven to recently capture those wanting to watch the Olympics.

“BVOD continues its impressive run as Australia’s fastest-growing media
channel, with a growth rate exceeding all expectations,” ThinkTV CEO Kim Portrate said.

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Comments more than welcome!

David.

Monday, August 23, 2021

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 23 August, 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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Really a very quiet week with very little of note – except some extra Digital Health development funding from the Government.

Interesting to see some emerging competition for the NBN from 4 and 5G providers!

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https://www1.racgp.org.au/newsgp/clinical/hopes-telehealth-detox-service-could-be-a-game-cha

Hopes telehealth detox service could be a ‘game-changer’

Sydney-based Dr Chris Davis has already set up a GP-led home detox program. Now he hopes a new telehealth program will help even more people.

Jolyon Attwooll


18 Aug 2021

For anyone with concerns about alcohol use, the pandemic has been a troubling time.
 
While the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare is circumspect about whether consumption has increased during COVID-19, alcohol retail sales certainly spiked when the pandemic began.
 
Good news for liquor store owners, not so much for health practitioners such as Dr Chris Davis, a Darlinghurst GP with a passion for treating addiction.
 
However, the limitations of lockdown may also have spurred a project that could have an enduring positive impact.
 
Dr Davis, who treated alcohol dependency in London before moving to Sydney in 2014, has the experience; he set up Clean Slate Clinic in Blacktown to treat mild-to-moderate alcohol dependency after being surprised there was no GP-led home detox service on offer in Australia.
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https://www.healthcareit.com.au/article/australia-continues-subsidise-sms-costs-e-prescriptions

Australia continues to subsidise SMS costs for e-prescriptions

Adam Ang | 17 Aug 2021

The Australian government will continue shouldering the SMS cost for e-prescriptions until 30 June 2022.

WHY IT MATTERS

Subsidies are specifically provided for costs related to the issuance of e-prescription tokens. SMS costs are incurred each time a prescriber writes an e-prescription and sends a token to a patient's mobile phone.

The subsidy extension comes after prodding by the Australian Medical Association, which has been calling on the Health Department and the Australian Digital Health Agency to develop long-term solutions to avoid passing those costs onto prescribers.

Earlier, the provision of subsidies was supposed to lapse at the end of March but was extended until 30 June.

THE LARGER TREND

There are other means for prescribers to issue digital prescriptions without incurring costs, such as the Active Script List system. Among providers, Fred IT introduced in May its My Script List solution that combines a patient's e-prescriptions in one digital list, removing the need for prescription tokens.

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https://www.ausdoc.com.au/news/govt-extends-subsidy-gps-send-sms-prescriptions

Govt extends subsidy for GPs to send SMS prescriptions

It comes after the number of e-scripts issued in Australia passed 15 million this month

18th August 2021

By Siobhan Calafiore

The Federal Government has again extended its subsidy for SMS prescriptions, meaning GPs won’t have to bear the full cost themselves until at least the middle of 2022. 

It comes after the number of e-scripts issued in Australia passed 15 million this month, with the bulk sent to patients’ mobile phones via SMS.

Until now, the technology has been supported with a 15c allowance per text message, although the subsidy was due to end in June, having already been delayed once earlier this year.

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/ai-technology-catching-early-prostate-cancer-diagnoses/news-story/d3f026890a60e1b10ea92e4ba375597e

AI technology catching early prostate cancer diagnoses

Ellie Dudley

9:30PM August 15, 2021

Danny Hansen presented no symptoms of prostate cancer when he was diagnosed with the disease.

Neither did Kevin Montier, who thought he was too young and healthy to develop cancer.

Greg Smith knew he was in the at-risk category, but wasn’t diagnosed because test ­results didn’t show signs of grave illness.

These three men are among those who caught their diagnoses early due to advancements in artificial intelligence technology.

The technology assists men in ­early discovery of prostate cancer and improves their chances of starting treatment earlier in the disease.

Elliot Smith, founder of Maxwell Plus, an AI diagnostic tool specifically for prostate cancer, said much more needed to be done to allow room for new technology in catching early signs of the illness.

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https://www.hinz.org.nz/news/577086/GPs-have-smoother-transition-to-digital-first-in-lockdown.htm

GPs have ‘smoother transition’ to digital first in lockdown

Wednesday, 18 August 2021  

NEWS - eHealthNews.nz editor Rebecca McBeth

An overnight switch to a digital first approach for patient consultations has been a “smoother transition” for GPs this time around, says Royal NZ College of GPs president Samantha Murton.

The move into Alert Level 4 nationwide means general practices are doing consultations remotely, via phone or video, where possible to help reduce the spread of Covid-19.

Murton says most practices have increased their capability in the telehealth space over the past 18-months. 

“Using phone consultations and triage calls has become part of the norm and patients have found it quite useful as well,” she tells eHealthNews.nz.
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https://www.afr.com/street-talk/inventive-health-to-merge-with-covid-19-test-developer-virusight-20210816-p58j6g

Inventive Health to merge with COVID-19 test developer Virusight

Anthony Macdonald and Yolanda Redrup

Aug 16, 2021 – 9.32pm

Gary Cohen’s tech-focused healthcare solutions company Inventive Health is poised to merge with Israeli-based Virusight Diagnostic, in a deal valuing the joint entity at $111 million.

Gary Cohen’s Inventive Health is merging with Israel’s Virusight Diagnostics. 

The merged venture, which will retain the Virusight name, combines the Israeli company’s ultra-rapid, artificial intelligence-powered pathogens diagnostic device SpectraLIT with Inventive’s experience bringing digital healthcare solutions to the global market.

Under the terms of the deal, Inventive shareholders will own 18 per cent of the merged company.

It will be led by Cohen, who was also the founder of iSOFT, and his team, and have offices in Israel, Sydney and London.

The company is commercialising diagnostic tests using spectrophotometry to generate high resolution “spectral signatures” (unique wavelengths), which can be analysed in 20 seconds using artificial intelligence to detect in seconds the presence of a virus.

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https://www.hospitalhealth.com.au/content/aged-allied-health/article/rising-mental-health-concerns-call-for-digital-solutions-913032051

Rising mental health concerns call for digital solutions

Thursday, 19 August, 2021

All Australians are being urged to take care of their mental health, with new data revealing that fewer than one in six people with psychological distress are seeking professional help.

Psychotherapy is proven to be an effective management and treatment option for many psychological and mental illnesses, and may be delivered in person or virtually. Concerningly, however, a significant proportion of our population who stand to benefit from psychotherapy currently lack access.

Several natural disasters and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic have resulted in rising psychological distress among Australians, leading to the urgent plea, from doctors, patients and mental health advocates, to reinforce the critical need for innovative digital solutions to ensure every Australian has timely and affordable access to professional mental health support, no matter what their situation, location or socio-economic status.

According to Dr Matthew Zoeller — an intensive care specialist at Northern Beaches Hospital, and CEO and founder of virtual mental health clinic My Mirror — there are still many substantial barriers to overcome to enable Australians to gain access to professional mental health services.

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https://www.healthcareit.com.au/article/rauland-equips-care-hotel-adelaide-safety-monitoring-fall-detection-devices

Rauland equips care hotel in Adelaide with safety monitoring, fall detection devices

Adam Ang | 16 Aug 2021

ECH Dandelion, a care hotel operated by South Australia-based home care provider Enabling Confidence at Home, has been equipped with a technology platform for aged care communication and delivery from health IT provider Rauland Australia.

WHAT IT'S ABOUT

Rauland's Concentric Care platform, which was launched last year, has been introduced in the newly opened ECH Dandelion in Walkerville, Adelaide.

The hotel, which offers short term care and respite needs, has sixteen suites. These comprise eight short-stay rooms for patients transitioning from hospitals and eight rooms for people with dementia.

Rooms are installed with discrete 4D radar safety monitoring and fall detection devices. In case of a fall, staff are quickly notified via automated alerts on their mobile devices. Each suite also features voice-activation technology that enables guests to make a request for staff assistance as needed.

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https://www.innovationaus.com/melbourne-health-embraces-ibm-digital-uplift/

Melbourne Health embraces IBM digital uplift

Stuart Corner
Contributor

16 August 2021

Melbourne Health is one of Australia’s leading public healthcare providers, responsible for the Royal Melbourne Hospital, NorthWestern Mental Health and the Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory.

All up, these encompass 71 buildings across 33 sites with more than 10,000 staff and some 32,000 assets.

Melbourne Health was using paper-based systems to manage its assets and the many processes and procedures undertaken by staff for everything from patient care to building maintenance, meals and cleaning.

These processes and procedures were time-consuming and opaque: Melbourne Health was not easily able to gather the data on many aspects of its operations needed to support funding requests.

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https://www.itwire.com/mobility/samsung-galaxy-watch4-and-classic-tracks-and-measures-ecg-and-blood-pressure.html

Wednesday, 18 August 2021 10:42

Samsung Galaxy Watch4 and Classic track and measure ECG and blood pressure

By Kenn Anthony Mendoza

The Samsung Health Monitor application is launching to provide access to blood pressure tracking and TGA-approved electrocardiogram (ECG) monitoring via the Galaxy Watch series.

From 10 September, Australians will have access ECG and blood pressure readings on Samsung’s latest wearables, the Galaxy Watch4 and Galaxy Watch4 Classic. These are the first accessories available in the country to offer both blood pressure and ECG monitoring.

The Samsung Health Monitor app will also be available on the Galaxy Watch3 and Galaxy Watch Active2 via a software update in the coming months.

Samsung Australia says ECG monitoring on compatible Galaxy watches is registered as a medical device with the Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods (ARTG) when connected to a compatible Galaxy smartphone.

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ANDHealth Receives $19.75M From Medical Research Future Fund to Invest in Digital Health Commercialisation

ANDHealth, Australia’s leading digital health commercialisation organisation, has today announced it has been successful in securing $19.75M in funding received from the Australian Federal Government under the Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF) Early Stage Translation and Commercialisation Support program.

The funding will support the expansion of Australia’s most successful digital health commercialisation program, ANDHealth+, supporting up to 25 high-growth-potential SMEs. SMEs will be selected via a competitive process and will receive up to $1M of investment from the ANDHealth Digital Health Accelerator Fund, alongside a dedicated ANDHealth support team, access to a c-suite industry advisory panel and specialised services from pre-vetted suppliers.

The program will also be supported by ANDHealth’s leading industry members, including the Murdoch Childrens’ Research Institute, RMIT University, Novartis Pharmaceuticals, Planet Innovation, Roche Australia, Potential(x), Curve Tomorrow, HPM Executive and HealthXL.

ANDHealth’s CEO, Bronwyn Le Grice says, “This funding represents a significant milestone in the development of Australia’s digital health industry with the establishment of the first dedicated fund providing significant capital investment, alongside a proven program of global expertise and support, for Australia’s most promising digital health companies.
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https://www.zdnet.com/article/australian-government-hands-out-au79m-to-fund-digital-health-tech-development/

Australian government hands out AU$79m to fund digital health tech development

Four organisations will each receive AU$19.75 million to help Australian SMBs commercialise their medical research.

By Aimee Chanthadavong | August 20, 2021 -- 04:19 GMT (14:19 AEST) | Topic: Innovation

The Australian government has announced it will invest AU$79 million to develop new digital health technologies, medical devices, and medicines.

The funding, delivered under the Medical Research Future Fund's Medical Research Commercialisation initiative, will be equally shared among four organisations that will work with local small and medium-sized businesses to commercialise the application of their research. Each organisation will receive AU$19.75 million.

"The initiative has already supported implementation of new products that are changing clinical practice and improving lives," Minister for Health Greg Hunt said.

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https://www.innovationaus.com/govt-backs-medical-innovation-research-with-79m/

Gov’t backs medical innovation, research with $79m


Ben Grubb
Editor

20 August 2021

Federal Health Minister Greg Hunt has announced $79 million in grants for three organisations to help develop new medical devices, medicines and digital health technologies, with half the money going to a venture capital firm focused on early-stage biomedical discoveries.

The organisations receiving the grants are ANDHealth, a provider of accelerator, incubator and commercialisation programs for digital health technology companies; the Medical Research Commercialisation Fund (MRCF), a life science venture capital fund which is run by Brandon Capital Partners; and MTPConnect, the government funded not-for-profit industry growth centre aiming to accelerate the medical technology, biotechnology and pharmaceutical sector in Australia.

The funds come from the Medical Research Commercialisation initiative, which is part of the Medical Research Future Fund – the federal government’s $20 billion 10-year investment in Australian health and medical research.

MRCF received $39.5 million in total, with $19.75m to support preclinical medical research or medical innovation projects with commercial potential and the other $19.75m to support early clinical development of novel drugs, or novel uses for existing drugs, with commercial potential. The other two companies each received $19.75m.

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https://www.hospitalhealth.com.au/content/technology/article/how-technology-is-boosting-aged-care-outcomes-at-arp-912384216

How technology is boosting aged-care outcomes at ARP

By Eric Anderson, CEO, Adventist Retirement Plus
Thursday, 19 August, 2021

We often hear that developing a strategy for digital transformation comes down to how it’s ultimately going to benefit customers. This makes digital innovation in health care an incredibly high-stakes endeavour, as our ‘customers’ are the men, women and children that we treat and care for every day.

This ethos underpins our digital strategy at Adventist Retirement Plus (ARP), as a longstanding provider of retirement accommodation and aged-care services in Southern Queensland.

Previously an organisation with limited IT expertise and a lot of manual, paper-based processes, we recognised a huge opportunity to modernise some core services and foster improved outcomes for over 400 residents and home-care clients.

This proved challenging for a variety of reasons. We had infrastructure that wasn’t business grade, and we were relying on a wide range of diverse, disparate applications and unintegrated processes to get things done.

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https://www.hospitalhealth.com.au/content/technology/article/the-device-set-to-reform-stroke-care-for-all-australians-741774983

The device set to reform stroke care for all Australians

Friday, 13 August, 2021

Scott Kirkland is Co-Founder and Executive Director at EMVision, a healthcare technology company aiming to change the stroke care paradigm. EMVision has developed a portable brain scanner for rapid, point-of-care stroke diagnosis and monitoring, which is set to transform stroke care, particularly for Australians living in regional areas, who are 17% more likely to suffer a stroke than those in metropolitan areas, and often unable to access specialised care. There is a critical need to narrow the gap in stroke care between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians living in regional areas, with First Nations Peoples having close to three times the rate of acute ischemic stroke incidence and mortality.

Kirkland told Hospital + Healthcare about the company’s mission to provide equal access to healthcare, how EMVision’s technology is set to transform stroke care and diagnosis for rural/regional Australians, and why we need to act urgently.

What factors contribute to the higher rate of stroke and poorer stroke outcomes outside metropolitan areas?

For stroke outcomes, time is everything. The best outcomes are achieved when a patient is treated in the first few hours after stroke onset, ideally within the ‘golden hour’. The tyrannies of distance play a significant role here. Unfortunately, only 3% of patients in rural and remote areas of Australia are treated in a stroke unit, compared with 77% of patients in metropolitan areas. In fact, most rural and remote patients need to travel more than 200 kilometres to access care.

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/technology/tpg-ramping-up-nbn-alternatives/news-story/8763c0aa530447e1943937f5641d4d38

TPG ramping up NBN alternatives

David Swan

2:58PM August 20, 2021

TPG says its NBN alternatives are growing apace, with the telco posting a slight drop in revenue and profit as it fights off Covid and NBN-related headwinds, and eyes a major infrastructure sell-off.

In its half-year FY21 results on Friday – one full year after its $15bn merger with Vodafone – TPG lifted its revenue 61 per cent year-on-year to $2.63bn and its earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) were up 67 per cent to $886m, given the prior year’s results only counted four days’ contribution from TPG.

On a pro forma basis, if the merger had been effective throughout the prior financial year, revenue was down 3 per cent from $2.71bn and EBITDA down 3 per cent from $918m.

Its shares had slipped down 1.66 per cent to $6.50 at 3pm AEST.

“The group’s EBITDA result is pleasing and demonstrates a solid underlying performance achieved through the realisation of $38m in merger cost synergies and strong commercial management,” CEO Iñaki Berroeta told investors.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/tpg-telecom-sees-rapid-early-growth-in-nbn-alternatives-568850

TPG Telecom sees "rapid early growth" in NBN alternatives

By Justin Hendry on Aug 20, 2021 1:15PM

4G home wireless customers triple in first half.

TPG Telecom is seeing “rapid early growth” in NBN alternatives, with the number of 4G home wireless customers more than tripling in the first half of 2021.

The telco provided the update in its half-year results as its plan to improve fixed broadband margins through growing its on-net products gains momentum.

It has previously estimated that it can save around $50 million a year for every 100,000 customers it can entice off the NBN and onto its own network infrastructure.

TPG said total on-net subscribers – which also includes FTTN, HFC, VDSL – grew by 17,000 to 154,000 in the first half of 2021, representing a 12 percent increase.

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https://ia.acs.org.au/article/2021/vastly-different-telstra--leans-into-energy--health.html

'Vastly different' Telstra leans into energy, health

Waiting for 5G to jump-start mobile revenues.

By David Braue on Aug 17 2021 01:11 PM

The COVID-era explosion in demand for data didn’t translate into a revenue surge for Telstra, which saw earnings drop last year as it nears the end of a major restructuring that includes investing hundreds of millions in new industries such as energy and healthcare.

Total income for the company dropped by 11.6 per cent during fiscal 2020/21, the company revealed during its recent full-year results presentation, in which it revealed that earnings before interest, taxation, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) had dropped by 14.2 per cent compared to the previous year.

Net profit after tax earnings per share crawled into the black, up 3.4 per cent, after Telstra announced in February that it would fire 1,400 employees.

Telstra is a “vastly different company” two years into the execution of its T22 strategy, CEO Andy Penn said in revealing that Telstra had achieved 80 per cent of the milestones in the three-year plan announced in 2018.

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/latest-news/nuclear-scientists-hail-us-fusion-breakthrough/news-story/95888d516449bb27cc26563f51a1b976

Nuclear scientists hail US fusion breakthrough

AFP

8:48AM August 18, 2021

Nuclear scientists using lasers the size of three football fields said Tuesday they had generated a huge amount of energy from fusion, possibly offering hope for the development of a new clean energy source.

Experts focused their giant array of almost 200 laser beams onto a tiny spot to create a mega blast of energy -- eight times more than they had ever done in the past.

"This result is a historic advance for inertial confinement fusion research," said Kim Budil, the director of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, which operates the National Ignition Facility in California, where the experiment took place this month.

It differs from fission, a technique currently used in nuclear power plants, where the bonds of heavy atomic nuclei are broken to release energy.

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Enjoy!

David.

 

Sunday, August 22, 2021

I Suspect The ScoMo / Gladys Wish For Freedom And To Open Up From The Pandemic Are Really Over Riding Both His Common Sense And Reality As To What The Population Will Tolerate!

In the last few weeks there has been a febrile excitement about the possibility of reducing restrictions once we hit 70-80% of adults doubly vaccinated in early November – ignoring, as this does, that  we need to wait 2-3 weeks after the second dose to be as safe as you can be.

Here is a typical report.

9.25AM

Case numbers are not the whole story: PM

The Prime Minister said it was “highly unlikely” there was any chance of Australia getting back to zero COVID cases.

“Case numbers are not the whole story...but right now, of course, we need to make the lockdowns effective, we need to suppress the virus as best we can, and we need for people to isolate, stay at home, get tested and of course, go and get vaccinated.

Asked whether NSW and Victoria could start reopening once vaccination rates hit 70 to 80 per cent rates, Mr Morrison said that was possible, saying that in phase b, lockdowns should be “highly unlikely” and “targeted”.

“The advice we have from the Doherty Institute is the starting point does not ultimately alter the conclusions of the modelling, and so of course we continue to always update these things.

“What we have been advised by Professor McVernon is that the starting point doesn’t ultimately change the ultimate conclusion point of where case numbers arrive.

“See, once you go in the next phase, of course case numbers will rise.”

Here is the link:

https://www.afr.com/politics/federal/nsw-sticks-to-reopening-plan-despite-delta-surge-20210822-p58kt1

Sadly it rather seems the Doherty report is being rather misinterpreted!

From today also we have the truth from the Doherty.

8.23AM

Doherty report model assumed small daily caseloads

Professor Jodie McVernon, director of Doherty Epidemiology, said the Doherty report did not consider reopening when there were still hundreds of cases a day, as is the case in NSW at the moment.

The NSW Premier insisted yesterday that the state would start to reopen once vaccination rates hit 70 per cent, even if hundreds of cases were in the community.

Professor McVernon told Sky News this morning that further modelling into whether NSW could ease restrictions, given the current large number of daily cases, was being led by UNSW professor James Wood for NSW Health.

“I think it’s important to differentiate between what our [National Cabinet] report is discussing which is making a transition from a state of no or very few cases to a more immunised environment and then thinking about how transmission might be managed there as opposed to coming off a high caseload,” McVernon said.

“We were set up for a situation where caseloads would be small, that any outbreak would be managed, obviously we were not envisaging shifting from phase A to phase B from a situation of lockdown, which is where we are now.

“This ongoing piece to understand how moving from a high caseload environment through vaccination and how that can help to support the easing of public health measures is a really important parallel piece of work and we are working closely with our colleague James Wood at University of NSW who’s leading that body of work.”

“Modelling is one piece of evidence, we don’t tell anyone what to do...it’s one element that can feed into decision-making.”

“What our modelling found was as vaccination coverage increases, vaccination does much more of the heavy lifting of the public health response.”

Asked what she thought about the comments of state leaders such as Western Australia Premier Mark McGowan, who has insisted on a policy to eliminate the virus, she said such a strategy would a challenging.

“I think that will be a very challenging strategy to pursue into the future. We have seen how contagious this virus, how difficult it is to keep out,” she said.

“I think it is really important for the population to understand what we’re dealing with and to be realistic.”

Professor McVernon said children should be part of vaccination plans “as we move from this phase to the next one”, conceding “we are aware we are seeing more infections in schools”.

Same link:

https://www.afr.com/politics/federal/nsw-sticks-to-reopening-plan-despite-delta-surge-20210822-p58kt1

Basically the PM, Treasurer and Gladys are off their heads if they think the public will be happy with 700 deaths and 5800+ admissions per week as we are seeing with a highly vaccinated UK last week (say 300 / 2500 on a population adjusted basis) – with all the figures actually rising!

Here is a link:

https://coronavirus.data.gov.uk/

(see the graphs especially)

To my mind we need to get to 90%+ of the entire population (+ age 1) fully vaccinated, better control of the current outbreak(s) and some medications that really work to treat the disease and we need to also know the dreaded “Long Covid” can be prevented by vaccination or whatever! We also don’t know how long the vaccinations last – it could be a short as 4-5 months.

Without all this the overall economic / productivity outcome will be pretty disastrous and we will take years to recover.

This also gives real pause for thought!

Highly Vaccinated Israel Is Seeing A Dramatic Surge In New COVID Cases. Here's Why

https://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2021/08/20/1029628471/highly-vaccinated-israel-is-seeing-a-dramatic-surge-in-new-covid-cases-heres-why

There are a lot of serious points made here! (Thanks Bernard – good find!) Note the average deaths is about 20 per day on a rising curve - JH says 269 in the last 28 days) (On a population basis that is about 45 per day.)

Cries of ‘freedom’ are one thing but a real plan is a good deal harder and needs to progress carefully. Like everyone else I wish this was all over, but sadly it won’t be till it actually is!

What do you think?

David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 593 – Results – 22nd August, 2021.

 Here are the results of the poll.

Should The ADHA Ever Be Conducting Closed / Selective Tenders In Secret Rather Than Being Transparent And Always Conducting Open Public Tenders

No - They Should Be Open 97% (74)

Yes - They Can Be Secretive If They Want 3% (2)

I Have No Idea 0% (0)

Total votes: 76

Pretty clear cut outcome – The ADHA should not be using closed secret tender!

Any insights on the poll are welcome, as a comment, as usual!

A great number of votes with a very clear outcome! 

It must also have been an easy question as 0/76 (0%) readers were not sure how to respond.

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

David.