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, May 10, 2022

Commentators and Journalists Weigh In On Digital Health And Related Privacy, Safety, Social Media And Security Matters. Lots Of Interesting Perspectives - May 10, 2022.

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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! It’s 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.innovationaus.com/mygov-is-a-huge-disappointment-key-architect-despairs/

myGov is a ‘huge disappointment,’ key architect despairs


Denham Sadler
National Affairs Editor

5 May 2022

A key architect of myGov says he “despairs” at the lack of progress on the platform and that the outsourcing of the development of a new version to private consultants was a “huge mistake”.

Labor last weekend promised to launch an audit of the myGov program if it wins the looming federal election, saying the platform is “not up to scratch”. Former Australian Government chief information officer Glenn Archer, who played a lead role in the launch of myGov nearly ten years ago, agrees.

Mr Archer, a visiting fellow at the Australian National University, was the inaugural national manager for e-government at Centrelink in the early 2000s, and was responsible for putting the first four transactions online, the first time services had ever been delivered via the internet by the Australian government.

Ten years later in 2012, Mr Archer drove a government proposal to undertake a significant upgrade of Centrelink’s online services, in what would become the birth of the myGov platform as it is known today.

Mr Archer was the Australian government CIO in the early 2010s, and was a member of the myGov steering committee, advising Cabinet on the 2013 upgrades to the myGov platform.

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https://digitalhealth.org.au/blog/nominate-a-brilliant-woman-in-digital-health/

Nominate a brilliant woman in digital health

May 5, 2022 | Community Chats, Member news, Surveys

Nominations are open until 13 June for Telstra Health’s 2022 Brilliant Women in Digital Health Awards.

Now in its second year, the awards recognise and celebrate the achievements of 25 women across Australia for achievements in health and aged care.

Nominate yourself or someone you know by completing the online nomination form by Monday 13 June, 5pm AEST.

AIDH CEO Dr Louise Schaper is a member of the judging panel to select Australia’s most brilliant women in digital health, based on the following broad criteria which recognises:

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https://digitalhealth.org.au/blog/aidh-lists-priorities-for-2022-federal-election/

AIDH lists priorities for 2022 Federal Election

May 2, 2022 | Advocacy, AIDH ACT, AIDH news, Featured

MEDIA RELEASE

Monday 2 May 2022

The Australasian Institute of Digital Health is calling on political parties and candidates in the federal election to demonstrate their support for continued investment in the digital enablement of healthcare.

AIDH CEO Dr Louise Schaper said the Institute prioritised the development of a fully funded national virtual care strategy, commitment to a digitally enabled health workforce and investment in the infrastructure needed for a 21st century healthcare system.

The Institute released its Federal Election Statement today “Shifting the dial on Australia’s transition to a digital health future”.

“We want to see all candidates committed to supporting investment in the digital enablement of healthcare, and in the capability required for our health system to be responsive in an increasingly interdependent health and aged care landscape,” Dr Schaper said.

“It is imperative that we preserve the momentum gained from the rapid scaling of consumer-centric, digitally enabled health solutions in response to COVID-19,” she said.

“Australia needs a co-designed, accessible, and fully funded national virtual care strategy; investment in a digitally equipped and trained workforce; and investment in the infrastructure that underpins the delivery of healthcare in the 21st century.”

The Institute’s 2022 Federal Election statement outlines our priorities and makes a series of recommendations to address these areas and shift the dial on Australia’s transition to a digital health future, she said.

ELECTION STATEMENT

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https://www.economist.com/leaders/2022/05/05/wearable-technology-promises-to-revolutionise-health-care

Wearable technology promises to revolutionise health care

Do not let bureaucracy delay matters

May 5th 2022

IT IS A stealthy killer. When the heart’s chambers beat out of sync, blood pools and clots may form. Atrial fibrillation causes a quarter of more than 100,000 strokes in Britain each year. Most of those would never happen if the heart arrhythmia were treated, but first it has to be found. Tests are costly and inaccurate, but Apple Watches, and soon Fitbits, can detect it, are far cheaper and can save those whose lives are in danger.

This is just one example of the revolution about to transform medicine. Smartwatches and -rings, fitness trackers and a rapidly growing array of electronically enhanced straps, patches and other “wearables” can record over 7,500 physiological and behavioural variables. Some of them are more useful than others, obviously, but, as our Technology Quarterly in this issue explains, machine learning can filter a torrent of data to reveal a continuous, quantified picture of you and your health.

These are early days for the quantified self, and for investors in digital health it is still a wild ride. Witness the recent collapse in the share price of Teladoc, which provides online consultations, a worrying sign for other would-be disrupters. But for patients the innovation in wearable devices has just begun. Individual firms may come and go, but wearables and artificial intelligence look set to reshape health care in three big ways: early diagnosis, personalised treatment and the management of chronic disease. Each promises to lower costs and save lives.

Start with early diagnosis. Wearables can detect subtle changes that otherwise go unnoticed, leading to less severe disease and cheaper treatment. Sensors will reveal if an older person’s balance is starting to weaken. People’s gait and arm-swing change in early-stage Parkinson’s. Strength exercise can help prevent falls and broken limbs. Psychiatric diagnosis may be enhanced by tracking patterns of smartphone use—without monitoring what people see or type. A smart ring can help a woman conceive, by predicting her menstrual cycle. It can also detect pregnancy less than a week after conception (many women continue to drink or smoke for weeks before they realise they are pregnant).

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https://developer.digitalhealth.gov.au/resources/news/health-api-gateway-transition

Health API Gateway transition

March 30, 2022

The Australian Digital Health Agency is upgrading Australia’s digital health platform to ensure it continues to meet the needs of Australians into the future. The first key upgrade is a new Health API Gateway that will provide a secure and scalable digital platform for exchanging and accessing health information.

The Australian Digital Health Agency is upgrading Australia’s digital health platform to ensure it continues to meet the needs of Australians into the future.

The first key upgrade is a new Health API Gateway that will provide a secure and scalable digital platform for exchanging and accessing health information. It will be a key enabler of the Agency’s work to create a collaborative environment to accelerate adoption and use of innovative digital services and technologies. It’s the first step in achieving a future where digital health is in broad use.

The current gateway (Oracle API gateway) is being decommissioned and the new Health API Gateway Services will constitute a standalone, contemporary capability to provide services for the My Health Record system that can be extended to support the infrastructure in the national digital health infrastructure and broader future state concept.

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https://www.health.gov.au/resources/videos/video-recording-digital-transformation-tech-talk-webinar-8-april-2022

Video recording – Digital Transformation Tech Talk webinar – 8 April 2022

At this webinar, our presenters Michael Lye and Fay Flevaras spoke to aged care and IT professionals about our work to create a better-connected, sustainable and modern aged care IT network in the aged care sector. This is the first webinar in a series of Digital Transformation Tech Talks.

Date published:  6 May 2022

Video type:  Presentation

Description:  On Friday, 8 April 2022 we held the first of our Digital Transformation Tech Talk webinars. 

Moderator Janine Bennett, Engagement Lead, Digital Transformation and Delivery Division, Department of Health

Panellists Michael Lye, Deputy Secretary, Ageing and Aged Care Group, Department of Health

Fay Flevaras, First Assistant Secretary, Digital Transformation and Delivery Branch, Department of Health

Laura Toyne, Acting Branch Manager, Program and Project Delivery, Digital Programs and Engagement Division, Australian Digital Health Agency

Greg Keen, Acting First Assistant Secretary, Reform Implementation Division, Department of Health

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/technology/facebook-deliberately-banned-charities-health-groups/news-story/1d6793c8665725d7a84dba8ef6f15dfe

Facebook ‘knowingly put lives at risk’

David Swan

May 6, 2022

Tech giant Facebook deliberately took down the Facebook pages of emergency services, hospitals and charities as part of a negotiating tactic against the Australian government, despite claiming the take downs were accidental, according to a leak from internal company whistleblowers.

Facebook last year banned news in Australia as part of a negotiating tactic with the federal government, which was considering legislation to force tech giants to pay for news. Hundreds of other pages were caught up in the ban including critical health organisations and charities like Oxfam Australia, a move Facebook said was ‘inadvertent’.

As The Australian reported at the time, Facebook’s five-day ban hit a swath a large and seemingly random array of community groups, charities and government agencies, many of whom provide crucial health advice and support to people in need.

The whisleblowers’ disclosure shows how Facebook blocked access to essential services including the Department of Fire and Emergency Services, the Council on Homeless Persons, the Australian Medical Association, Suicide Prevention Australia, the Tasmanian Government, SA Health, Fire and Rescue New South Wales, Safe Steps Family Violence Response Center, 1800Respect, First Nations Media Australia, and a wide range of other cultural, government and health agencies.

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https://www.smh.com.au/world/north-america/facebook-deliberately-blocked-australian-government-and-health-care-sites-last-year-report-20220506-p5aj0u.html

Facebook deliberately blocked Australian government and health care pages last year: report

By Chris Zappone and Nick Bonyhady

May 6, 2022 — 6.46am

The social media platform Facebook deliberately blocked pages of Australian government and health care services accounts last year as part of its effort to fight the passage of the media bargaining code, the Wall Street Journal has reported, citing whistleblowers and internal documents.

Based on Facebook documents as well as testimony filed to US and Australian authorities, whistleblowers claim that the platform, owned by Meta, “deliberately created an overly broad and sloppy process to take down pages”.

Senior executives including chief executive Mark Zukerberg then praised the effort, according to documents obtained by the Journal, with chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg saying it had set a new standard of “thoughtfulness” and “precision of execution”.

Legislation for the world-first media bargaining code, which requires platforms to reimburse Australian media companies for news content they share, was opposed by the US tech giants Facebook and Google.

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https://www.afr.com/technology/which-industry-protects-your-privacy-best-20220503-p5ai7u

Which industry protects your privacy best?

John Davidson Columnist

May 6, 2022 – 9.24am

Australian companies are falling behind their international competitors when it comes to protecting the online privacy of their customers and users, a study has found.

The Privacy By Design research, conducted by the Australian cybersecurity consultancy CyberCX, analysed the online privacy practices of hundreds of popular domestic and international businesses operating in Australia on an industry-by-industry basis.

It found that the retail industry was the worst performing sector, in part due to its widespread use of hidden trackers and third-party cookies, that follows the movement of customers as they move from site to site, often without their knowledge.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/big-tech-data-harvesting-comes-under-fire-by-world-central-bank-group-579645

'Big tech' data harvesting comes under fire by world central bank group

By Marc Jones on May 6, 2022 6:32AM

Customers should get more control over personal info.

A paper published by the world's main central bank umbrella group, the BIS, has called for individuals and firms to be given more control over the data collected on them by social media and other Big Tech firms and banks.

The boom in internet-enabled mobile phones, apps and other high-tech gadgets in recent decades has led to an explosion of personal data that firms now harvest, process and sell.

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) paper published on Thursday said while most countries already have some laws around data use, most individuals still were not aware of what was at stake, or their rights over their data.

Authorities should therefore adopt new data governance systems to "level the playing field between data subjects and data controllers," the paper said.

They should require firms to get clearer consent to collect data, better explain how it was being used and make it easier to be accessed by those from whom it was harvested.

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https://medicalrepublic.com.au/patient-data-sold-to-ice-cream-companies/68352

4 May 2022

Patient data sold to ice-cream companies

Humoural Theory

By Dr Kevin Hinkley

Spörken-Vasz explains that harvesting diabetics’ information from the PHN data lake is all for their benefit.


Ice-cream companies have bought patient data from PHNs and are using it to target advertising at the most vulnerable, The Medical Republic has learnt.

TMR spoke to a representative from Spörken-Vasz.

TMR: Patients are understandably upset that their confidential medical information has been sold on to third parties. What would you like to say to patients who are anxious about what’s happened?

SV: I understand their concerns. But given the huge amount of data that’s being extracted from GP databases all over the country it was inevitable that some of it would either leak out or be sold on to private companies. What I would say is this: Spörken-Vasz is a brand that patients can trust, we’ve been making ice-cream like no other since 1961.

TMR: … Ok … What kind of data were you able to get hold of?

SV: We had access to all kinds of information including patient demographics, treatment history, referrals, medications, mental health history, prescriptions, you name it. I didn’t want to bore you with the details today so instead I brought along a sample of salted caramel ice-cream for you to try! Once you start exploring the caramel ribbons and crunchy biscuit you won’t be able to resist. Would you like some?

TMR: Errr ….

SV: … Nom nom nom …

TMR: Maybe later. What patients and GPs want to know is what exactly did you do with all of this information?

SV: Well, we started off by searching for the type of patient who can’t stop gobbling up delicious mouthfuls of heavenly ice-cream and so we trawled through the data using key terms like obesity, type 2 diabetes, MI, depression, fatty liver and ankle oedema. We then targeted those patients with ads, promotional material and special offers. And by refining our searches we were able to match one of  Spörken-Vasz’s forty-seven extraordinary flavours of ice-cream with the right patient.

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https://www.hospitalhealth.com.au/content/technology/article/opinion-how-do-we-do-no-harm-with-ai-in-health-care--818218934

Opinion: How do we do no harm with AI in health care?


By Professor Enrico Coiera*
Wednesday, 04 May, 2022


AI has the possibility to not only enhance many of our existing services, such as the interpretation of imaging and pathology, but also to open the door to new opportunities. Research is already underway for instance using AI to improve treatment of rare brain tumours1. AI can also be used to support and educate consumers in self-care and prevention and to optimise hospital processes.

It may come as a surprise to many then that Australia lags behind other nations in investing in the development of AI for health care. The US leads with industry investment in AI for health care estimated to exceed US$6 billion in 2021, driving potential savings of US$150 billion by 2026. In the UK, the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (AI Lab), established by the NHS, is part of a GBP 1 billion investment in AI. Former UK health minister and renowned surgeon Professor Lord Ara Darzi’s review2 of the NHS identified productivity improvement from smart automation of £12.5 billion a year, 9.9% of the NHS England budget. Specifically, the review found that AI enhanced breast cancer3 image interpretation could reduce the time UK radiologists spend reviewing images by 20% (890,000 hours annually).

While Australia is ideally positioned to become a global powerhouse in the real-world application of AI, we have only now achieved a clear plan for how this will be done — safely, ethically and sustainably. Through a consortium of universities, healthcare bodies and industry, the AI in Healthcare Roadmap4 has been developed.

The AI in Healthcare Roadmap shows the path that Australia should take to embrace the opportunities that AI brings. The roadmap identifies the current gaps in Australia’s capability to translate AI into effective and safe clinical services and provides guidance on key issues such as workforce, industry capability, implementation, regulation and cybersecurity. It also acknowledges the extensive work already undertaken nationally and internationally and builds on this work.

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https://www.smh.com.au/money/banking/algorithms-giving-financial-advice-better-get-used-to-it-20220429-p5ah9r.html

Algorithms giving financial advice? Better get used to it

Clancy Yeates

Banking reporter

May 4, 2022 — 8.00am

Here’s a long-running and tricky problem facing our superannuation system: many people would benefit from getting financial advice, but they simply cannot afford it.

This dilemma is growing more acute, as the cost of full-service financial advice continues to climb, while more baby boomers are retiring with a pot of super money, and need good advice on what to do with it.

Super funds face growing pressure to respond, including from an upcoming “retirement income covenant,” which from July will require funds to prepare a retirement income strategy on behalf of members.

However, providing thousands of retiring members with affordable advice about their super is a big challenge.

Could part of the solution be a form of digital advice from a computer program, rather than a human adviser?

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Billionaire Bryan Johnson excites neurons and investors

By Danny Fortson

The Times

10:04PM May 2, 2022

A lab technician turns a knob near the back of my neck, tightening on to my skull a helmet packed with enough lasers to make a Storm Trooper jealous. “How’s that feel?” he says.

Honestly, kind of strange. Atop my cranium is the Kernel Flow, a bulky array of modules that is about to bombard my brain with photons. The strange-looking ­device took five years and more than $US50m of the personal cash of tech tycoon Bryan Johnson to ­develop.

Think of it as an MRI machine – those coffin-like monstrosities you see in medical dramas where patients lay perfectly still while it images their insides – shrunk down to a helmet that provides a live video of what is happening in your brain by analysing blood flow and oxygenation.

Johnson made his fortune when he sold his payments start-up, Braintree, for $1.15bn to PayPal in 2013. Online payments make life easier. But Kernel? He reckons that it could, quite literally, change the world. “This really is about the future of being human,” Johnson said.

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https://thenewdaily.com.au/life/2022/05/02/accc-consumers-online-data/

10:00pm, May 2, 2022 Updated: 10:51pm, May 2

ACCC says consumers need more choices about what online marketplaces do with their data

Katharine Kemp

Consumers using online retail marketplaces such as eBay and Amazon “have little effective choice in the amount of data they share”, according to the latest report of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission Digital Platform Services Inquiry.

Consumers may benefit from personalisation and recommendations in these marketplaces based on their data, but many are in the dark about how much personal information these companies collect and share for other purposes.

ACCC chair Gina Cass-Gottlieb said:

We believe consumers should be given more information about, and control over, how online marketplaces collect and use their data.

The report reiterates the ACCC’s earlier calls for amendments to the Australian Consumer Law to address unfair data terms and practices.

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https://www.mwhpn.com.au/event/the-future-of-digital-health/

The future of digital health

23 May @ 1:00 pm - 1:30 pm

The use of digital health technologies has rapidly increased over the past two years of the pandemic. General practice responded promptly to implement technologies so they could continue to care for their patents remotely and practices and patients have become more familiar with using digital health tools to complement their care.

What can we expect for the future of digital health? In this session, delivered in partnership with the Australian Digital Health Agency, we will discuss the RACGP’s vision for a digital health future, targeted, proactive and preventative care personalised to the patient, artificial intelligence and clinical decision support technologies. Participants will also have the opportunity to ask questions.

This session is part of the Digital health live Q&A series running across May.

FREE REGISTRATION 

+ Google Calendar+ Add to iCalendar

Details

Date:  23 May  Time:  1:00 pm - 1:30 pm

Event Category: Health

Website: https://www.racgp.org.au/racgp-digital-events-calendar/online-event-items/webinars/the-future-of-digital-health

Organiser RACGP

Venue Webinar 

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https://www.hospitalhealth.com.au/content/technology/article/four-steps-to-robust-clinical-cybersecurity-1344467521

Four steps to robust clinical cybersecurity

By Samuel Hill, Medigate
Friday, 29 April, 2022

Australia’s healthcare system has been plagued by cyber attacks in the last few years.

In April 2021, a cyber attack on Uniting Care Queensland left four hospitals and several aged-care homes without any access to patient records. Just one month prior, a cyber attack on Eastern Health forced four hospitals in Melbourne to take their IT systems offline and postpone elective surgeries.

Hospitals in particular are attractive targets for attackers due to the critical nature of their operations and the opportunity to cause massive disruption. A major contributing factor to the success of these attacks is poor cyber hygiene.

The lack of a strong security culture and need for increased security training in Australia’s healthcare system is well-documented. For example, in 2019 Victoria’s Auditor-General sought to prove a point by successfully hacking and accessing sensitive patient data in some of the state’s biggest hospitals using basic hacking tools. The audit revealed that several hospitals made basic cybersecurity errors, such as using default account names and passwords set by manufacturers that can be easily located online.

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https://happeningnext.com/event/my-health-record-in-specialist-practice-eid4snvmea1dw1

My Health Record in Specialist Practice

Schedule

Tue May 10 2022 at 08:00 am to 09:00 am

UTC+10:00

Location

Join us for a breakfast session to highlight the benefits of use of the My Health Record system for specialist practitioners.
About this Event

Join Katrina Pyle, My Health Record Specialist Champion, and a representative from the Australian Digital Health Agency (ADHA) for a breakfast session to highlight the benefits of use of the My Health Record system for specialist practitioners.

Topics covered include:

• Benefits of accessing My Health Record information to specialist practice

• What is new in My Health Record?

• Pathology and Diagnostic Imaging connections

• Patient privacy and consent to access My Health Record

• Q & A

Participants will also learn how to address patient privacy and consent requirements, and how to facilitate a discussion of how My Health Record can add value to specialist practices.

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https://medicalrepublic.com.au/app-helps-patients-control-gout/68220

2 May 2022

App helps patients control gout

Clinical Technology

By Karina Bray

Gout is relatively easy to treat, but with notoriously low medication adherence, treating physicians face an uphill battle getting patients to control serum urate levels.

But now researchers have developed a mobile phone app that appears to help gout patients self-manage their condition, in conjunction with a serum urate test kit and health professional input.

The randomised controlled feasibility study, published in Lancet Rheumatology, found that three in four participants who used the app hit the 0.30mmol/L urate target. In contrast, only one in six participants who had standard care did.

“Supporting patients to manage their own gout can transform clinical outcomes, and the approach we have developed offers a way of doing this without putting more pressure on an already stretched healthcare service,” said lead author Dr Philip Riches, consultant rheumatologist at the University of Edinburgh.

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https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/my-health-record-in-specialist-practice-tickets-322932579037?aff=ebdssbdestsearch

May  10 2022

My Health Record in Specialist Practice

by Central Queensland, Wide Bay, Sunshine Coast PHN

Actions and Detail Panel

Event Information

Join us for a breakfast session to highlight the benefits of use of the My Health Record system for specialist practitioners.

About this event

Join Katrina Pyle, My Health Record Specialist Champion, and a representative from the Australian Digital Health Agency (ADHA) for a breakfast session to highlight the benefits of use of the My Health Record system for specialist practitioners.

Topics covered include:

• Benefits of accessing My Health Record information to specialist practice

• What is new in My Health Record?

• Pathology and Diagnostic Imaging connections

• Patient privacy and consent to access My Health Record

• Q & A

Participants will also learn how to address patient privacy and consent requirements, and how to facilitate a discussion of how My Health Record can add value to specialist practices.

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David.

 

Monday, May 09, 2022

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 9 May, 2022.

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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Another quite busy week and lots of different things happening. Enjoy the browse.

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/anz/leidos-led-consortium-wins-3296-million-australian-defence-force-digital-health-platform

Leidos-led consortium wins $329.6 million Australian Defence Force digital health platform contract

Telehealth company Coviu and clinical and practice management software provider MediRecords join Leidos in the ambitious project.

By Lynne Minion

May 05, 2022 09:24 PM

A consortium led by systems integrator Leidos has secured a $329.65 million contract to roll out a comprehensive new digital health capability for the Australian Defence Force by July 2028.

Leidos and Australian companies MediRecords, Coviu and Nous Group joined in the consortium bid to ​​deliver the ambitious technologies, including an EMR, telehealth, ePrescribing, practice management, eReferrals, clinical decision support, artificial intelligence and data analytics.

The platform will work across primary, occupational, emergency and hospital care, and integrate with the ADF's IT infrastructure and My Health Record.

ADF expects it to reach at least Stage 5 on the HIMSS Outpatient Electronic Medical Record Adoption Model.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/leidos-led-consortium-scores-329m-defence-e-health-records-deal-579392

Leidos-led consortium scores $329m Defence e-health records deal

By Justin Hendry on May 3, 2022 6:40AM

Solution to replace infamous EMIS-based Defence eHealth System.

A Leidos-led consortium has won a $329 million deal to deliver a new e-health records platform for the 80,000 deployed and non-deployed personnel in the Australia Defence Force (ADF).

iTnews can reveal the systems integrator, together with partners MediRecords, Coviu and Nous Group, secured the contract for the system, which is officially known as the Health Knowledge Management (HKM) solution, at the end of last year.

The significant deal was recently made public through the federal government’s procurement website AusTender, without an accompanying announcement from the Department of Defence.

A spokesperson told iTnews the contract followed first pass approval for the HKM solution, which represents the final component of a multi-year, billion-dollar JP2060 deployed health capability project.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/labor-promises-audit-to-improve-mygov-579444

Labor promises audit to improve myGov

By Justin Hendry on May 2, 2022 12:09PM

Online services platform "not up to scratch".

Labor has pledged to audit the government’s myGov online services platform and use it to roll out reliability and usability improvements for users.

Opposition leader Anthony Albanese and shadow government services minister Bill Shorten announced the “user audit” over the weekend, as the election campaign enters its final three weeks.

The audit will look at “how well myGov is performing for its most important stakeholders – the Australian public – when it comes to reliability and functionality for a user-friendly experience”.

Reliability and usability have been a bugbear for myGov since the one-stop shop for online services was introduced in 2013, particularly in its first two years.

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https://www.ausdoc.com.au/news/texting-patients-preconsult-would-boost-preventive-care-says-gp

Texting patients pre-consult would boost preventive care, says GP

Dr Oliver Frank is calling for an overhaul of practice software to stop patients missing out on screening

4th May 2022

By Heather Saxena

A prominent GP has taken aim at "simplistic" general practice software that he claims is leading patients to miss out on preventive care.

Dr Oliver Frank says current electronic clinical record systems need updating to send patients automated texts before consults to let them know about screening and other preventative healthcare activities.

Currently most on-screen prompts for GPs are a simple ‘X is due now’ and do not include reminders about national priority and important health programs, Dr Frank says.

“On-screen reminders to GPs are simplistic and easily overlooked, and no reminders are sent automatically to patients,” he writes in the Australian Journal of Primary Health.

These new messages would go straight to patients, inviting them to view a comprehensive overview of their preventive care status — ideally before a consultation or the creation or review of a GP management plan.

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https://www1.racgp.org.au/newsgp/professional/spotlight-on-privacy-as-health-sector-reports-most

Spotlight on privacy as health sector reports most data breaches

To mark Privacy Awareness Week, the RACGP is reminding practices to review policies and procedures to ensure health information is secure.


Morgan Liotta


03 May 2022

The health sector remains the highest-reporting industry for data breaches, with health service providers notifying 83 data breaches during the period for July–Dec 2021 – making up 18% of the 464 total breaches.
 
This information comes from the latest Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) Notifiable Data Breaches (NDB) report. It confirms that health service providers and the finance industry have consistently reported the most data breaches of all industry sectors since the NDB scheme began in 2018.
 
For this year’s Privacy Awareness Week (2–8 May), the RACGP is again supporting the OAIC to raise awareness off and remind general practices how to minimise risks of data breaches and information security attacks.
 
According to the college, maintaining privacy is one of the key principles of delivering safe, quality healthcare, and practices are advised to have robust policies and procedures in place.
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https://www1.racgp.org.au/newsgp/racgp/in-practice-how-did-telehealth-services-rate-durin

In Practice: Last call for GP22 submissions

GPs still have the chance to share the unique contribution they make to patients, the profession and healthcare in Australia.

Morgan Liotta


05 May 2022

This week’s round up also includes upcoming CPD webinars, last calls for GP22 submissions, and member benefits from the college.
 
Member feedback on COVID-19 telehealth services
The Australian National Audit Office is undertaking an audit to assess whether the Department of Health has effectively managed the expansion of telehealth services during and post the COVID‐19 pandemic.
 
In response, the RACGP is seeking feedback from members on telehealth services in general practice during the COVID-19 pandemic.
 
Telehealth was first introduced in March 2020 and a number of changes have been made to Medicare Benefits Schedule items in response to the evolving pandemic situation.
 
GPs and GPs in training can provide their feedback until 8 June.
 
Information about how to provide feedback is available on the RACGP website.
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Announcement from HiNZ Board Chair

Kim Mundell, chief executive of Health Informatics New Zealand (HiNZ) has resigned, effective 31 May 2022.  

The board has appointed Kylie Williams, HiNZ sales and marketing general manager, as acting chief executive from 1 June 2022.

Williams says Mundell leaves big shoes to fill. "We are delighted Kim (Mundell) will continue to provide advisory services to HiNZ as a part-time consultant after she exits the CE role”.

Williams brings a wealth of expertise to the role: her CV includes senior marketing roles at Microsoft, World Vision, and the BBC.

Mundell says, "HiNZ will be in very capable hands with Williams at the helm. She is well known to most of our sponsors as an excellent media strategist and she has the full support of the HiNZ team and board."  
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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/anz/perth-private-hospital-expand-rollout-home-care-platform-surgery-patients-post-discharge

Perth private hospital to expand rollout of home care platform for surgery patients post-discharge

Following the success of the Personify Care platform in minimising readmissions after general surgeries, St John of God Murdoch Hospital is rolling it out to the specialist surgery wards.

By Lynne Minion

May 03, 2022 09:52 PM

St John of God Murdoch Hospital in Perth is rolling out its "Healthcare at Home" platform to surgical specialty wards including urology and gynaecology following its success in reducing preventable patient readmissions in the general surgical wards.

In 2021, Australian digital health company Personify Care delivered a platform at the 530-bed private hospital, enabling post-surgery home care for patients with community-based clinical support.

WHY IT MATTERS

As part of St John of God Healthcare's digital transformation program, the system has been highly effective in managing patients' after discharge and detecting emerging care needs through the collection of patient reported outcome measures (PROMs).

"The technology has been shown to be successfully adopted across patient cohorts, including older and high-risk patients. This supports the change in community expectations as it leans ever closer to the widespread use of technology in our day-to-day interactions," Simone Scales, the project manager at St John of God Healthcare, said.

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https://www.afr.com/companies/professional-services/nsw-government-official-joins-ey-as-partner-20220502-p5ahpq

NSW government official joins EY as partner

Edmund Tadros Professional services editor

May 2, 2022 – 11.31am

……

Terry Sweeney, 52, is now an Adelaide-based partner in EY’s consulting division. Dr Sweeney is also a part-time professor in the University of Adelaide’s school of health and medical sciences and a special advisor on technology and innovation to the G20. He is the former chief executive of the Digital Health Cooperative Research Centre and a former managing director at IBM. He worked as an analyst for MI6 where he spent time embedded with an active British military unit in the former Yugoslavia.

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https://smallcaps.com.au/respiri-raises-fast-track-wheezo-commercialisation-multi-billion-dollar-us-market/

Respiri raises $1.5m to fast-track wheezo commercialisation in multi-billion-dollar US market

By Lorna Nicholas

-May 2, 2022

Health technology company Respiri (ASX: RSH) has unveiled a $1.5 million capital raising as it fast-tracks its expansion through the US respiratory health market, which is forecast to be worth US$85 billion by 2026.

The funds will be used to accelerate Respiri’s roll-out strategy of its Food and Drug Administration approved wheezo device and software as a service (SaaS) in the US, where the company says there is “strong interest”.

Respiri’s wheezo device and software records breath sounds, which are then analysed in the app for wheeze presence.

The technology allows users to log symptoms, triggers, medication and environmental factors, with data collected to build a personalised profile, which can be shared with healthcare professionals on demand.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/bupa-cio-takes-health-services-md-chair-for-now-579500

Bupa CIO takes health services MD chair for now

By Richard Chirgwin on May 3, 2022 12:09PM

Executive search in train.

Bupa's A/NZ chief information officer Sami Yalavac has been given the role of interim managing director of Bupa Australia's health services portfolio.

A Bupa spokesperson told iTnews that previous incumbent Dwayne Crombie has “returned to New Zealand as managing director of our aged care business”.

Yalavac has been Bupa’s A/NZ CIO since January 2016, with responsibility across all Bupa private health insurance, care homes, optometry, dental, telehealth and “all other Bupa business in the region”.

His appointment to the acting managing director role became public by way of a low-key edit to his LinkedIn profile

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https://www.hinz.org.nz/news/604415/Regional-Radiology-Information-System-live-at-Capital-and-Coast-DHB.htm

Regional Radiology Information System live at Capital and Coast DHB

Wednesday, 4 May 2022  

NEWS - eHealthNews.nz editor Rebecca McBeth

Capital and Coast DHB (CCDHB) has gone live with the regional Radiology Information System and PACS reporting solution on the Philips Vue imaging platform.

The move is part of an agreement between the six Central Region DHBs – CCDHB, Hutt Valley, Wairarapa, MidCentral, Whanganui and Hawke’s Bay – to implement shared regional ICT systems to support DHB radiology functions.

These systems are the; Regional Clinical Portal, Ordering for Radiology, Radiology Information System (RIS), and the Regional Picture Archiving and Communication System (PACS) reporting solution.

Martin Catterall, chief digital officer for Capital & Coast, Hutt Valley and Wairarapa DHBs says the RIS is used to manage the patient journey through Radiology – from the front desk to radiologists.
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https://gphn.org.au/burst/programs/health-record/fact-sheets/

My Health Record – Fact Sheets and Guides

Home » Programs & Projects » My Health Record » My Health Record – Fact Sheets and Guides

Want more information about My Health Record? Visit the My Health Record Fact Sheets and Guides area to access:

·         an overview of health directories

·         healthcare setting-specific information

·         pathology reports for clinicians

·         clinical software summary sheets

·         interview on benefits of My Health Record for pharmacists

·         identity verification code (IVC) number registration card

·         Assisting patients to register

·         shared health summaries versus event summaries

·         Australian Medicines Terminology (AMT)

·         registered and not using digital health tips

·         data quality checklist for ‘active’ patients

Show me the My Health Record fact sheets and guides

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https://wildhealth.net.au/unease-as-pbs-critic-named-to-lead-tech-review/

6 May 2022

Unease as PBS critic named to lead tech review

Government

By Amanda Sheppeard

Controversy is brewing over the federal Department of Health’s announcement of a proposed reference committee for the Health Technology Assessment review.

The announcement came on 10 April, the same day that Prime Minister Scott Morrison set the election date, meaning any activities the committee will undertake will have to wait until the new government is installed.

However, it is the government’s proposed appointment of Dr Peter Boxall – a longstanding critic of the PBS – as chair of the committee, which is shaping up as a problem.

Opposition health spokesman Mark Butler said Labor did not accept the appointments made by outgoing Health Minister Greg Hunt. He said that if Labor was elected to government on 21 May it would consult with stakeholders over Dr Boxall’s and other committee members’ “proposed appointments”.

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https://wildhealth.net.au/anonymous-mental-telehealth-reduces-stigma-for-health-professionals/

6 May 2022

Anonymous mental telehealth reduces stigma for health professionals

Telehealth

By Fran Molloy

Anonymous mental consultations by telehealth have provided welcome relief for hundreds of in-crisis healthcare professionals, who would be unlikely to seek support otherwise because of concerns about the potential impact on their employment.    

Black Dog Institute clinical psychologist Dr Peter Baldwin says digital mental health services from the group’s TEN – The Essential Network for Health Professionals platform operate outside Medicare or My Health Record, allowing health professionals to remain anonymous when seeking help for burnout, anxiety or depression. 

“Health professionals appreciate the anonymity of the service because mental health is still stigmatised in many workplaces, and people don’t want to be seen walking into a psychologist’s office,” says Dr Baldwin.  

“Digital health lets us make evidence-based tools tailored specifically to meet the needs of health professionals – freely available and completely confidential,” he says. 

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https://wildhealth.net.au/csiros-big-ticket-items-for-ehealth-research/

6 May 2022

CSIRO’s big-ticket items for e-health research

Interoperability Technology Virtual/Remote Care

By Wendy John

Australia’s largest digital health research program is on display at this month’s AEHRC e-Health Research Colloquium, hosted by the CSIRO.  

Dr David Hansen, chief executive of the Australian e-Health Research Centre at CSIRO, says the annual meeting is “part of the ecosystem in Queensland”. 

“It really reflects that we’ve had a joint venture relationship in the centre with the Queensland government for the last 18 years,” he said. 

The colloquium agenda is a list of what’s currently hot in CSIRO digital health research. The projects reflect a strategy that Dr Hansen says is created, in part, by identifying the needs of CSIRO partners and recruiting researchers with different strings to their bow.  

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https://wildhealth.net.au/aidh-announces-new-digital-health-fellowship/

6 May 2022

AIDH Announces New Digital Health Fellowship 

AIDH Technology

By Harriet Grayson

The Australasian Institute of Digital Health (AIDH) and Digital Health CRC have announced a fellowship program focused exclusively on digital health. 

AIDH CEO Dr Louise Schaper said the fellowship aims to address the glaring absence of standardisation for clinicians hoping to specialise or upskill in digital health.  

“Right now, there is no agreed national curriculum, recognised career pathways or recognition program for clinicians who are keen to become practitioners in digital health, in roles such as chief clinical information officer and chief digital health officer,” she said.  

“We need more qualified clinicians who are upskilled, confident and enabled to deliver care in a digital world. Many of our members and clinicians in the wider community are digital health leaders and experts, but there is still very limited formal training, and much of it is knowledge rather than skills based,” she said.  

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https://www.hospitalhealth.com.au/content/technology/news/new-imaging-tool-may-facilitate-mobile-medical-disease-diagnosis-1532055382

New imaging tool may facilitate mobile disease diagnosis

Tuesday, 03 May, 2022

A new microscopic imaging device small enough to fit on a smartphone camera lens could potentially make mobile medical diagnosis of diseases affordable and accessible.

Researchers from the University of Melbourne and the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Transformative Meta-Optical Systems (TMOS) are helping miniaturise phase-imaging technology using metasurfaces, which are only a few hundred nanometres thick — about 350 times thinner than the thickness of a human hair.

The detection of diseases often relies on optical microscope technology to investigate changes in biological cells. Currently, these investigation methods usually involve staining the cells with chemicals in a laboratory environment as well as using specialised ‘phase-imaging’ microscopes. These aim to make invisible aspects of a biological cell visible, so early-stage detection of disease becomes possible. However, phase-imaging microscopes are bulky and cost thousands of dollars, putting them out of reach of remote medical practices.

In addition to providing resources for remote medical practices, this new technology could one day lead to at-home disease detection, where the patient could obtain their own specimen through saliva or a pinprick of blood, and then transmit an image to a laboratory anywhere in the world. The lab could then analyse and diagnose the illness.

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https://www.phpn.com.au/event/digital-health-for-specialists-a-game-changer-transforming-how-we-share-care/

Digital health for specialists – A game changer, transforming how we share care

9 May @ 5:00 pm - 6:00 pm

Join the Australian Digital Health Agency, WA Primary Health Alliance, and our special guest Dr Hemant Kulkarni (Renal physician, Wexford Nephrology and Royal Perth Hospital) and other speakers, to hear how digital health is transforming care.

Healthcare professionals and practice managers from across all sectors, and especially those in specialist medical practice, are encouraged to attend, hear these success stories and be inspired to start using digital health. There will also be the opportunity for participants to ask questions.

Find out more and register here.

Details

Date:  9 May

Time:  5:00 pm - 6:00 pm

Event Category: Health

Website:  https://www.wapha.org.au/event/digital-health-for-specialists/

Organiser

WA Primary Health Alliance

Venue  Online Course

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https://marketplace.service.gov.au/2/digital-marketplace/opportunities/21271

Australian Digital Health Agency

DH4270 Data Analytics Infrastructure Privacy Impact Assessment

Opportunity Type

Professional Services and Consulting (Seek proposals and quotes)

Opportunity ID

21271

Deadline for asking questions

Friday 6 May 2022 at 6pm (in Canberra)

Application closing date

Tuesday 10 May 2022 at 6pm (in Canberra)

Published

Tuesday 3 May 2022

Panel category

Strategy and Policy

Overview

The Australian Digital Health Agency (Agency) is seeking the assistance of a suitable service provider to conduct a Privacy Impact Assessment for a data analytics infrastructure to be established as part of a proof of concept project. This is expected to involve the ingestion of health data, and preparation, de-identification and sharing with a third party. The selected PIA provider will need to work closely and efficiently with the Agency and other government agencies as required in the development of the data analytics infrastructure PIA. The Agency is seeking the PIA to be conducted by applying 2 specific use-cases around the data analytics infrastructure.

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https://marketplace.service.gov.au/2/digital-marketplace/opportunities/21307

Australian Digital Health Agency

DH4388 Service Designer services for Project Support

Opportunity Type

Professional Services and Consulting (Seek proposals and quotes)

Opportunity ID 21307

Deadline for asking questions Thursday 5 May 2022 at 6pm (in Canberra)

Application closing date Monday 9 May 2022 at 6pm (in Canberra)

Published Wednesday 4 May 2022

Panel category User research and Design

Overview

The Australian Digital Health Agency's, Experience & Service Design team seeks to engage with experienced sellers who can provide Service Designer capability to work with members of the Agency’s ESD team to deliver a priority project which requires additional expertise and delivery support. This will involve embedding into and working closely with a highly collaborative Service Design and Research team to deliver a digital health strategic project. The required skill sets, experience, and capabilities to be provided are as follows. Customer centred design activities including customer research, problem solving, stakeholder workshop facilitation and artefact creation, such as journey mapping and service blueprinting. A design thinking approach will be used to surface opportunities and ideate customer experiences, which will support the execution of digital health programs. Experience working in government and health related projects highly regarded. Over a period of 80 days Suppliers are to provide services daily rates (inclusive of GST) for nominated personnel.

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https://www.digitalhealth.gov.au/initiatives-and-programs/my-health-record/getting-started/set-up-a-record-via-a-printable-application-form

Set up a record via a printable application form

Register for My Health Record

Download and complete this form to Register for My Health Record (PDF, 436.4 KB)

Identity documents: You will need to provide 100 points of identification when you submit the form. Copies of your identity documents must be certified. The form provides details about what documents you can provide and who can certify them.

If any of these documents are not in English, you need to provide certified copies of both the original document and the English translation of the document. Copies of foreign language documents without an English translation cannot be processed.

If you need help with the form, call the Helpline on 1800 723 471.

Send your application form and certified copies of identity documents to:

My Health Record
GPO Box 9942
Sydney NSW 2000

When your application has been processed, you will receive a letter with your Identity Verification Code. You need this code to view your record.

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https://twitter.com/asa_australia/status/1522440074654277632

The Australian Society of Anaesthetists

@ASA_Australia

#Anaesthetists and Practice Managers are invited to sign up for a webinar on 'Digital health for specialists' on Monday 9 May. Hear from the Australian Digital Health Agency about how My Health Record is transforming care. Register here attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/28551

@drajm

@snouzin

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/vocus-urges-incoming-government-to-refocus-nbn-policy-579486

Vocus urges incoming government to refocus NBN policy

By Ry Crozier on May 3, 2022 10:20AM

Also starts preparing to separate its retail business.

Vocus CEO Kevin Russell has challenged the future federal government to rein in NBN Co from its constant “mission creep” into contestable markets.

Russell also told the CommsDay Summit in Sydney that NBN Co alone could not meet its own organisational purpose of “lifting Australia’s digital capability”, and that industry also needed to be able to play a part.

“For whoever governs in three weeks, please - we cannot afford another narrow, short-term, unsustainable NBN focused policy,” Russell said.

“Instead we need a balanced strategic industry policy that promotes sustainable competition, prioritises private infrastructure investment, and embraces the deployment of new technologies which can uplift our country’s digital capability.”

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Enjoy!

David.

 

Sunday, May 08, 2022

It Seems To Me We Have Lost The Plot On Managing The COVID19 Pandemic And Dropped The Ball! But Why?

For the last few weeks – since about mid-April – I have noticed we have been seen both many more cases and death than previously.

Since the end of the month we have discovered that we have had more deaths in the last 4 months than in the more than 2 years previously.

My concern is really crystallised  with the following article:

10:00pm, May 6, 2022 Updated: 11:23pm, May 6

COVID’s death toll has soared since the election was called, but nobody is talking about it

Australians seem to think COVID-19 is all wrapped up as an issue. It's not. Photo: Getty

John Elder

10:00pm, May 6

It’s just shy of a month since Scott Morrison announced the election.

Since then, as of Friday, 907 people have died from COVID-19, way more than 10 per cent of all deaths since the pandemic began. That’s a lot of heartache.

You could fill a couple of Boeing 747s with that many people. Politicians would be lining up to join a national prayer meeting if those planes went down in quick succession.

But the high COVID death rate, and the very high case numbers, are not getting a mention, particularly in the election coverage.

In the week leading up to Mr Morrison’s announcement there was an average of 54,337 new cases reported each day.

As of Friday, that daily average had dropped to about 41,000. Still very high.

Do you remember when the suggestion we might see a thousand cases a day was terrifying? Certainly, a couple of years ago we seemed to feel a little frightened every time half a dozen grandmothers passed away.

Now, aside from people directly affected by a COVID death, the issue, certainly at a political level, has seemingly become ho-hum.

Could the real numbers be higher?

Professor Adrian Esterman, Chair of Biostatistics and Epidemiology at the University of South Australia, told The New Daily that there’s evidence, as reported by the World Health Organisation, that the true death rate is three times higher than what’s being reported.

He said this was because there are people who get sick at home and die at home and they don’t get picked up in the statistics.

“There’ll be a lot of people who never report that they’re sick and they end up dying and don’t get reported as dying from COVID-19,” he said.

“Those deaths are the tip of the iceberg.”

Regarding the high number of reported deaths, Professor Esterman said: “Nobody seems to care about it or worry about it apart from the families involved.”

He said it was “partly the fault of governments, but really, the vast majority of Australians are sick of COVID. They want it to be over and I can completely understand that. The problem is, it isn’t over”.

Professor Esterman noted that since the beginning of this year, “there have been more deaths than the previous two years combined – it’s now our second-biggest cause of death”.

Meanwhile, governments have largely abandoned high-profile public messaging and advice. Public health officers advocating the wearing of masks in crowded spaces are simply not being heard.

“The message from different state governments and territories is it’s up to you to work out what your risk is and protect yourself,” said Professor Esterman.

What do these numbers mean?

Professor Catherine Bennett, Chair in Epidemiology at Deakin University, said “it’s a really difficult time to assess what’s really going on”.

Case numbers appear to be coming down nationally, whereas the average number of deaths has moved upward.

Professor Bennett said: “When you look at the deaths data, there is a delay. People often survive the initial infection. It can take them a week or two to get really unwell and pass away.

“So we’re still seeing the deaths associated with the peak in case numbers.”

There’s also the likelihood that case numbers are being undercounted because “we’re probably not fastidious in getting tested”.

Plus, there’s the grim reality that the more cases of COVID-19 will lead to a higher number of deaths.

But compared with where we were in October last year, before vaccination took off, the proportion of people dying from COVID-19 is much lower.

“Our infection rate has gone from 2750 a day to 40,000 or more a day, but a smaller proportion are ending up in hospital,” she said.

More here:

https://thenewdaily.com.au/life/wellbeing/2022/05/06/covid-deaths-2022/?breaking_live_scroll=1

In the last few days we have also seen the following just to top it up!

6:00am, May 2, 2022 Updated:

Michael Pascoe: COVID quietly jumps to become our second-biggest killer

Michael Pascoe.

A third of the way into our year of letting it rip, COVID has jumped to become our second-biggest killer.

And, no, it’s not killing people “just like the flu used to”. COVID is killing at more than three times the rate of flu and pneumonia combined.

And it’s killing people at a younger age than those who typically die from flu or pneumonia.

No, the plague hasn’t faded away.

It’s continued to spread and have its way with people, from the asymptomatic to the fatal.

We’ve just collectively decided it is what it is and downgraded our attempts to further limit the fatalities, accepting that thousands of Australians will die prematurely from it.

https://thenewdaily.com.au/finance/finance-news/2022/05/02/michael-pascoe-covid-quietly-jumps-to-become-our-second-biggest-killer/

And finally this worry:

Covid’s true death toll close to 15m, says WHO

By Rhys Blakely

The Times

6:22PM May 6, 2022

Governments around the world have massively under-reported the number of deaths caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, an analysis suggests, with nearly 15 million people estimated to have died.

A report published on Friday AEST by the World Health ­Organisation gave a jarring new perspective of the toll taken by two years of disease and disruption.

The report calculates that ­between January 2020 and the end of last year, about 14.9 million more people died than would have been expected in a world without the coronavirus. Governments officially reported about 5.4 million Covid-19 deaths during the same period.

WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus called the numbers “sobering”, and said they pointed “to the need for all countries to invest in more resilient health systems that can sustain essential services during crises”.

The analysis aimed to include deaths that were directly caused by Covid-19 infections, and also those that came about indirectly, because of the pandemic’s broader impacts on health systems and society. Indirect deaths will have included people denied care for other conditions because of overburdened doctors and hospitals. The figures should also reflect deaths that were avoided during the pandemic because of the lower risk of events such as traffic accidents during lockdowns.

Some countries appear to have acknowledged only a small proportion of their Covid-19 deaths. Nearly a third of the excess deaths globally, almost 5 million, took place in India, according to the WHO report, fuelled by a huge surge of infections last May and June.

The Indian government has said that fewer than 500,000 ­people have died. India has claimed that the WHO’s methodology is flawed and it had sought to delay the release of its estimates.

Russia had reported about 310,000 Covid-19 deaths by the end of last year. The WHO has ­estimated more than a million ­excess deaths.

Twenty countries, representing about 50 per cent of the global population, account for more than 80 per cent of the estimated global excess mortality. They were Britain, the US, Brazil, ­Colombia, Egypt, Germany, India, Indonesia, Iran, Italy, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Peru, The Philippines, Poland, Russia, South Africa, Turkey and Ukraine.

The official figures reported by Britain matched the WHO estimate, which said that about 149,000 more people had died during the pandemic than would have normally.

Jeremy Farrar, director of medical research charity Wellcome, said a lack of urgency from governments had contributed to the number of deaths.

“There can be no hiding from the fact this devastating death toll was not inevitable, or that there have been too many times in the past two years when world leaders have failed to act at the level needed to save lives. Even now a third of the world’s population ­remains unvaccinated,” he said.

Sir Jeremy warned that Covid-19 would not be the last disease to pose a global threat.

More here:

https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/the-times/covids-true-death-toll-close-to-15m-says-who/news-story/b1a56b09417708051dc2edbfaa2a7fde

So where are we?

I seems, that with almost zero public discussion, we have dropped pretty much all efforts – even simple ones like masks – to limit transmission of the virus and are prepared to accept the resulting 2-300 deaths a week for who knows how long.

It seems the pollies have decided we all need to get over it, run the election not mentioning COVID19, and just live with the outcome! Interestingly we seem to see the same thing happening in the US and UK.

I find this totally bizarre, and don't understand, that there is not even some real debate about the way forward! This seems to be a period of joint uncaring insanity to me! What is going to wake us up?

What do you think?

David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 630– Results – 8th May, 2022.

Here are the results of the poll.

Are You Aware Of the Digital Health Policies Of The Major Political Policies For The Upcoming Election

Yes – Only The LNP Policy                               0 (0%)

Yes – Only The Labor Policy                             1 (2%)

Both Policies                                                      15 (28%)

Neither Policy                                                    33 (62%)

I Have No Idea                                                   4 (8%)

Voters: 53

Sadly a rather confused poll – my bad – but it does seem specific Digital Health policies are pretty thin on the ground!

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

A fair number of votes. and a very unclear outcome. 

4 of 53 who answered the poll admitted to not being sure about the answer to the question!

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

David.