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, July 05, 2022

Commentators and Journalists Weigh In On Digital Health And Related Privacy, Safety, Social Media And Security Matters. Lots Of Interesting Perspectives - July 05, 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/bunnings-kmart-dig-in-on-facial-recognition-as-scrutiny-grows/

Bunnings, Kmart dig in on facial recognition as scrutiny grows


Joseph Brookes
Senior Reporter

30 June 2022

The Good Guys will “pause” its use of facial recognition technology following an investigation and subsequent complaint to the privacy regulator by a consumer group. But Bunnings and Kmart are digging in on their use of the controversial technology.

The three retailers have been using facial recognition to identify customers as part of security systems, which they say reduce theft and aggressive behaviour in stores.

Consumer group Choice exposed the practice as part of a wider investigation of Australian retailers’ use of the technology. Choice has alleged it was a breach of Australian privacy law in a complaint to the regulator.

The regulator, the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC), is now obliged to investigate the matter, and has already found against another retailer in a separate case privacy experts say is similar.

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https://www.innovationaus.com/wa-future-health-fund-seeks-new-research-initiatives/

WA future health fund seeks new research initiatives


Brandon How
Reporter

27 June 2022

The latest program under the Western Australian government’s Future Health Research and Innovation fund calls on members of the community to propose their own research and innovation initiative.

Through the Co-Funding Partnership Program, organisations can propose the establishment of new health and medical research and innovation initiatives. If approved, between $500,000 and $1 million will be committed by the state government to set up the initiative, so long as the funding is matched by a partner.

Some examples of initiatives highlighted by the state government include the co-design of new grant programs, research or innovation fellowships, and infrastructure support for medical research or innovation. The Co-FPP also permits the proposal for ‘untied partner funding’, with the design of any resulting co-funded program left to the Research and Innovation Office within WA Health.

Research translation is key

Proposals must be from an eligible funding partner, such as a non-government organisation, a charitable organisation or the private sector. Expressions of interest can be submitted at any time with the Co-FPP currently expected to be open on a continuous basis. Assessments of the expressions of interest will be undertaken throughout the year.

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https://www.croakey.org/post-roe-women-in-america-are-right-to-be-concerned-about-digital-surveillance-and-its-not-just-period-tracking-apps/

Post Roe, women in America are right to be concerned about digital surveillance – and it’s not just period-tracking apps

·         Melissa Sweet

·         Uri Gal

·         Wednesday, June 29, 2022

Digital surveillance is a threat to public health in many ways, and the United States ruling against abortion rights is a powerful reminder of an urgent need for legislative reform to better protect the community, according to Uri Gal, Professor in Business Information Systems at the University of Sydney.

This article was first published at The Conversation.


Uri Gal writes:

The reversal of Roe v. Wade by the American Supreme court last week is a watershed moment in American politics. The ruling withdraws constitutional protections for abortion rights and sends the issue to the states, around half of which are expected to ban abortions.

Unlike the last time abortion was illegal in the United States, almost half a century ago, we now live in an era of pervasive digital surveillance enabled by the internet and mobile phones. Digital data may well be used to identify, track, and incriminate women who seek abortion.

Over the past 20 years or so, large tech companies, mobile app operators, data brokers, and online ad companies have built a comprehensive system to collect, analyse, and share huge amounts of data. Companies can follow our every movement, profile our behaviour, and snoop on our emotions.

Until now, this system has mostly been used to sell us things. But following last week’s ruling, many are concerned that personal data could be used to surveil pregnancies, shared with law enforcement agencies, or sold to vigilantes.

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https://digitalhealth.org.au/blog/co-design-what-does-it-really-look-like-in-practice/

Co-design: What does it really look like in practice?

Jun 30, 2022 | AIDH NSW, Co-design, Community Chats

People often have an image in their minds of what co-design is and what it looks like. That visual is often of a creative setting with whiteboards, or perhaps in the minds of the more tech-savvy, touch screens, with silicon-valley-styled professionals debating ideas and moving objects around a mind map or user interface design on the screen. Perhaps even a small buffet of drinks and snacks somewhere in the corner of that setting. In essence, that general image is closer to something you might see around the offices of the high-flying giants of Apple, Google, or Microsoft.

Firstly, what is Co-design?

Co-design actively involves multiple stakeholders (internal and external) in the planning to improve systems and services (Alberta Health Services, 2020). It is a participatory, reflective, and adaptive process centring on participants as experts. It decentralises decision-making and power to facilitate more transformative change (Sahagun & Holley, 2018). The approach creates environments and develops solutions that are more responsive and appropriate to the needs of all stakeholders. In “true co-design” stakeholders (Alberta Health Services, 2020):

  • participate, as equals, in decision-making
  • are involved in all stages of the co-design process

The concept of co-design is not new. It has been around for decades, albeit in different shapes and forms, and its methodologies have evolved and even multiplied over time. It has been tried and tested in clinical settings in Australia to varying degrees of uptake and success, but has often battled the rigidity, complexity, and bureaucratic nature of the healthcare industry, not to mention resource scarcity.

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https://digitalhealth.org.au/blog/documentation-within-electronic-records/

Documentation within electronic records

Jun 30, 2022 | Community Chats, Community of Practice, Data, Digital Health, eHealth, Innovation, Nursing & Midwifery Informatics

The implementation of digital records into healthcare settings has led to significant changes in the way patient information is recorded, stored and used. The result of this can have a wide variety of implications for healthcare professionals, predominantly on what and how information is documented. Nurses and midwives represent the largest health workforce in Australia, with responsibility for collection, entry, and consumption of clinical information (Australian Digital Health Agency [ADHA], 2020), and therefore should have significant input in the design and implementation of electronic records. It is also important for nurses and midwives to understand the processes required for appropriate data and information quality, as set out in the National Nursing and Midwifery Digital Health Capability Framework (ADHA, 2020).

Medical records are designed to create efficiencies within the healthcare setting, by improving access to relevant and centralised information, quality of communication, understanding of instructions (as electronic documentation is easier to read), and improving patient safety using inbuilt algorithms for identifying potential errors or observational deviations (Jedwab et al., 2019). Secondary use of patient data has also been identified to indirectly impact patient outcomes and provide valuable amounts of data to non-direct care staff (Vuokko et al., 2017). To achieve the efficiencies desired, there are many factors that need consideration when implementing or enhancing an electronic medical record (EMR). While EMR processes and structures have improved on paper-based records, some clinicians can lack the knowledge and skill in its application (Akhu-Zaheya et.al., 2018). Due to the increased availability of data, nurses and midwives need to recognise the pivotal role they play in data management and lifecycle of patient data within EMRs.

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https://www.news.com.au/breaking-news/google-to-delete-user-location-history-on-us-abortion-clinic-visits/news-story/0fac6d2c5bcd7d5b60ff7047ff5f4c3a

Google to delete user location history on US abortion clinic visits

Google has faced calls to limit smartphone data collection in the wake of anti-abortion laws passed in the United States

July 2, 2022 - 11:14AM AFP

Google announced Friday it would delete users' location history when they visit abortion clinics, domestic violence shelters and other places where privacy is sought.

"If our systems identify that someone has visited one of these places, we will delete these entries from Location History soon after they visit," Jen Fitzpatrick, a senior vice president at Google, wrote in a blog post. "This change will take effect in the coming weeks." 

The announcement comes a week after the US Supreme Court made the tectonic decision to strip American women of constitutional rights to abortion, leading a dozen states to ban or severely restrict the procedure and prompting mass protests across the country.

Fitzpatrick also sought to reassure users that the company takes data privacy seriously.

"We take into account the privacy and security expectations of people using our products, and we notify people when we comply with government demands."

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https://www.hospitalhealth.com.au/content/technology/sponsored/where-does-real-interoperability-start--487702510

Where does real interoperability start?

GS1 Australia
By Catherine Koetz, Industry Manager – Healthcare, GS1 Australia
Friday, 01 July, 2022

Sponsored


Interoperability is about data and information having a consistent meaning enabling it to move and be used meaningfully between people, organisations and systems. Digitisation of healthcare that focuses on the patient and enables ready access to the relevant care information for those who have a legitimate need means that data and information must be interoperable — for the patient, this is a critical element.

How do data standards play a role in this vision of interoperability?

It is easy to focus on the infrastructure pieces, the large systems and solutions, or even the small edge technology that does amazing things or ‘goes ping’ because you can see and touch them. But underpinning their workings sits data. Whilst brilliant minds across technology have often developed data formats, schemas and proprietary solutions to problems and have implemented them within technology platforms. Whilst these home-grown solutions might work perfectly well in isolation, once data needs to be shared across technology platforms, between organisations, into centralised records or even across borders the necessity to be able to interpret it in a commonly defined way throughout the process means that these innovative ideas often fail to scale. Enter then data standards.

The data standards we need are already available

Not only are the data standards already available for many of the foundations, but in many cases, the implementations have already begun — at least elsewhere around the world. The issue is not whether the standards exist, it is ensuring that we are implementing them within Australian healthcare and the solutions we are deploying as we ‘digitalise’ our healthcare ecosystem. It is sometimes hard to understand why the progress has not been faster. To be fair it is not always the fault of the solutions, the issue is often that we are not clear on what standards should or in some cases must be implemented for the various areas within the health system, and with an absence of clarity we stick to the status quo and wait. While we wait, the digitising using non-scalable proprietary solutions continues, meaning that we will need to likely find funding across the various organisations to make changes to systems and processes — adding costs that Australian healthcare can ill afford and needing resources that are often in limited supply.

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https://www.afr.com/companies/financial-services/volt-healthmatch-bad-news-keeps-rolling-in-for-start-ups-20220629-p5axot

Volt, HealthMatch: bad news keeps rolling in for start-ups

Karen Maley Columnist

Jun 29, 2022 – 4.14pm

Local start-upstart are feeling the pinch as increasingly anxious investors pull back from businesses which require large dollops of extra capital to achieve their growth ambitions.

Volt Bank on Wednesday announced plans to return more than $100 million in deposits to customers and to hand back its banking licence after its efforts to raise additional funding from large, global institutional investors, fell short.

“In this raise, we needed to bring in new, larger investors and for us, the timing just didn’t work”, Volt’s boss Steve Weston told The Australian Financial Review. “We just couldn’t raise the level of capital we needed to.”

HealthMatch is also feeling the funding squeeze. The health tech start-up, which has received backing from Malcolm and Lucy Turnbull, and the venture capital firm Square Peg, has been forced to lay off half of its staff, and explore other cost-cutting initiatives.

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https://www.afr.com/technology/why-this-software-founder-wants-to-slow-down-growth-and-enjoy-life-20220605-p5ar8p

Why this software founder wants to slow down growth and enjoy life

Yolanda Redrup Reporter

Jun 27, 2022 – 3.00pm

There’s a reason allied health software company Cliniko has had just two staff members leave in 11 years, says founder Joel Friedlaender: Cliniko puts people over profits, and that includes himself.

Spurning the fast-growth mentality that has come to characterise the start-up experience, Mr Friedlaender said he set out to do things differently from day one.

The bootstrapped company was founded when Mr Friedlaender quit his software development job at a large, “old-fashioned” company and used the $100,000 loan he had taken out with his wife to fund a renovation on their home to instead start his own business building operating software for allied health companies.

Offering unlimited annual leave, 30-hour weeks, and a fully remote workplace with free trips to visit the team in Australia, and no hierarchy, Mr Friedlaender says he knows how good he’s got it, and he doesn’t want that to change by the company getting too big.

“I am thinking about whether we want to grow less and if I want to cap the team sizes,” he told The Australian Financial Review from his home in the Victorian town of Healesville, about50 kilometres north-east of the Melbourne CBD.

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https://www.afr.com/technology/turnbull-backed-health-tech-start-up-cuts-50pc-of-staff-20220624-p5awas

Turnbull-backed health tech start-up cuts 50pc of staff

Tess Bennett Technology reporter

Jun 29, 2022 – 11.14am

HealthMatch, a health tech start-up backed by Malcolm and Lucy Turnbull, has laid off half of its staff this week and is exploring options to further reduce its cost base to ride out the challenging fundraising environment that the sector is currently facing.

Founded in 2017 by then-final year University of Sydney medical student Manuri Gunawardena, the start-up built a digital platform to connect patients with upcoming clinical trials and raised $18 million in December 2020 led by venture capital fund Square Peg.

The 29 year-old founder said cutting 18 roles, the large majority of which were made redundant, was “an incredibly hard decision to make that we worked tirelessly to avoid”.

“There are several factors at play that have created downward pressure on tech stocks and the broader market that have had a very significant effect on capital raising, especially for growth stage companies,” Ms Gunawardena said.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/the-good-guys-pauses-facial-recognition-trial-581959

The Good Guys pauses facial recognition trial

By Byron Kaye on Jun 29, 2022 6:35AM

Over privacy complaint.

The Good Guys, Australia's second-biggest appliances chain, is pausing a trial of facial recognition technology in stores after a consumer group referred it to the privacy regulator for possible enforcement action.

Use of the technology by The Good Guys, owned by JB Hi-Fi, and two other retail chains was "unreasonably intrusive" and potentially in breach of privacy laws, the consumer group CHOICE told the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) in a complaint published on Monday.

The Good Guys said it would "pause the trial of the upgraded security system with the optional facial recognition technology being conducted in two of its Melbourne stores". 

The company took confidentiality of personal information seriously and was confident it had complied with relevant laws, but decided "to pause the trial at this time pending any clarification from the OAIC regarding the use of this technology", it added.

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https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/jun/27/even-if-theyre-not-actually-intelligent-ais-may-shift-the-nature-of-human-expression-itself

Even if they’re not actually intelligent, AIs may shift the nature of human expression itself

JR Hennessy

Impressive pattern-matching machines like DALL-E 2 and GPT-3 may not understand meaning, but that doesn’t mean they aren’t radically disruptive

Tue 28 Jun 2022 03.30 AESTLast modified on Tue 28 Jun 2022 07.08 AEST

Did you hear that Donald Trump recently attacked the popular Netflix show Stranger Things at a rally? “Have you seen that garbage on Netflix?” Trump asked the crowd in Pennsylvania. “It’s a disgrace. I mean, really, really bad. It’s a complete and total ripoff of my life story. I was the one who first discovered the power of the Upside Down. But instead of using it to do evil, I used it to make America great again.”

OK, full disclosure: that did not happen. The quote was generated by GPT-3, an autoregressive language model developed by San Francisco artificial intelligence outfit OpenAI which can produce convincing, humanlike text in response to prompts.

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https://wildhealth.net.au/interoperability-or-integration-that-is-the-question/

28 June 2022

Interoperability or integration – that is the question

By Amanda Sheppeard

Health was in the hot seat at the first National Cabinet meeting to be chaired by new prime minister Anthony Albanese this month. 

The big headline from the meeting of the cabinet – made up of the prime minister and state and territory premiers and chief ministers – was the federal government’s decision to extend extra health funding to hospitals until 30 December. 

The Commonwealth introduced the emergency funding, which is a 50/50 split between the states and territories and the government, in response to the covid pandemic. 

The program was due to finish in September and the three-month extension will cost the federal government an additional $760 million. 

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https://wildhealth.net.au/interoperability-in-practice-in-the-us-qa-with-paul-wilder/

28 June 2022

Interoperability in practice in the US: Q&A with Paul Wilder

By Harriet Grayson

In this Q&A session at the at Inaugural Australasian CXO Cloud Healthcare Summit, Jeremy Knibbs sat down with Paul Wilder to discuss how interoperability currently operates in the American healthcare system. 

Paul spent ten years as Chief Information Officer to one of the largest health information exchange networks, the New York ehealth collaborative. He is currently executive director of CommonWell Health Alliance. 

The two discuss how hospitals in the United States have taken up interoperability, and how CommonWell is reinventing the transfer of patient data and primary care by enabling a patient’s medical history to travel with them across the country. 

Below is a snapshot of the interview and audience questions. Watch the full recording:  

Jeremy: For context, can you give us a quick history lesson in interoperability in the United States over the last 20 years, including the 21st century cures act which now mandates standards for providers and vendors? 

Paul: When CommonWell started in 2013, it was during a phase in the United States called meaningful use, where the government was funding the conversion from analogue to digital records by paying providers and hospitals to prove they’re meaningfully using something digital.  

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https://www.ausdoc.com.au/opinion/mindfulness-effective-treating-mental-illness-and-what-about-apps

Is mindfulness effective for treating mental illness? And what about the apps?

Associate Professor Nicholas Van Dam

Dr Van Dam is associate professor in the Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences, University of Melbourne

27th June 2022

Mindfulness forms part of the trillion-dollar wellness industry, representing 1.5–6% of yearly spending around the world (estimated to be more than US$200 million) on wellness products and services.

Smartphone apps, in particular, have skyrocketed in popularity offering incredible promise for mental health with wide reach, and scalability at low cost. Mental ill-health was on the rise before the pandemic but reached new heights during it. Correspondingly, COVID created previously unseen demand for mindfulness apps and online courses.

It’s no surprise people have turned to mindfulness in the wake of the past few stressful years, and their considerable promotion. And while there may be some benefit, it cannot treat mental ill-health on its own, and should not be relied upon to do so.

What does research say about mindfulness for treating mental health?

In-person mindfulness-based programs such as those for stress reduction, which often include health information and guided meditation practice, show moderate benefits among healthy individuals and those with mental ill-health.

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/technology/australia-urgently-needs-wise-cryptocurrency-regulation-despite-bitcoins-fall/news-story/6b34adb4c585c9496f44c926d94d186e

Australia urgently needs wise cryptocurrency regulation despite bitcoin’s fall

ANDREW BRAGG

5:08PM June 26, 2022

It would be a severe misreading of current events to put crypto regulation on the back burner because of the collapse of certain virtual assets or because the price of bitcoin has fallen. The fundamental strength and disruptive capacity of the technology remains sound, the utility remains and therefore popularity will be maintained.

In Australia, 25 per cent of the population has accessed digital assets. The need to regulate these issues should remain a high priority for governments. We must set governance standards to protect consumers and prevent damage, as seen in recent times with the collapse of stablecoins.

The result will be that markets and custody systems will be licensed like traditional financial services. This is highly desirable. This is a real opportunity for Australia to make a historical departure from having peculiar and parochial financial regulation which has damaged our export prospects for generations.

As the World Economic Forum meeting in San Francisco debates cryptocurrency and the policy and regulation required to protect consumers and promote investment, I offer two thoughts.

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https://insightplus.mja.com.au/2022/24/smishing-cyber-scams-reach-a-whole-new-level/

Smishing: cyber scams reach a whole new level

Authored by  Jane McCredie

Issue 24 / 27 June 2022

Medicare: You have been in close contact with someone who has Omicron. Please follow the link below to order your PCR kit…

WHEN I received this text last week, there was a microsecond of anxiety.

“Oh no, here we go again” was my first thought, swiftly followed by the realisation that Medicare could not possibly know who I’d been in contact with and wouldn’t be sending me a link to order a PCR kit even if they did.

With around a million new cases of COVID-19 a month across Australia, contact tracing in the general community is no longer even a possibility. It just isn’t happening anymore.

I pasted the text into a search engine and, sure enough, it was the latest in a long line of scams inspired by the COVID-19 pandemic.

As this government site explains, the recent spate of messages are impersonating government agencies to steal personal and banking details and, ultimately, money.

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https://www.news.com.au/technology/online/security/privacy-experts-recommend-deleting-period-tracking-apps-as-roe-v-wade-abortion-decision-overturned/news-story/eaa1f3e34a1b994adf64aeb34e45afa9

Privacy experts recommend deleting period tracking apps as Roe v Wade abortion decision overturned

A chilling warning has gone out across the United States about exactly what authorities could do with personal data stored on womens’ phones.

Alex Turner-Cohen

June 26, 2022 - 2:35PM

Women in the US are concerned about how far authorities will go to stop abortions after a historic decision ended their legal right to terminate a pregnancy in their first two trimesters.

Advocates are concerned that a woman’s search history, location data and period tracking apps could be used by authorities to find out if she is pregnant, if she is considering abortion and if she goes through with the abortion.

On Saturday morning AEST, millions of American women lost the legal right to have an abortion after the US Supreme Court overturned a landmark ruling which for nearly half a century had protected women.

Roe v Wade, which in 1973 provided the constitutional right to abortions up until foetal viability, was overturned on Friday local time.

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David.

Monday, July 04, 2022

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 04 July, 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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An interesting week with lots of material on personal data tracking and its potential use against women seeking healthcare in the USA. Lessons for us here I suspect.

Also telehealth and NBN news etc.

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https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2022/jul/02/vulnerable-australians-filled-with-dread-over-telehealth-cuts

Vulnerable Australians ‘filled with dread’ over telehealth cuts

Decision to end a range of services on 30 June will lead to ‘avoidable suffering and distress’, medical practitioners say

Caitlin Cassidy

Sat 2 Jul 2022 06.00 AEST Last modified on Sat 2 Jul 2022 06.01 AEST

Living through Covid-19 with inflammatory arthritis, telehealth has been the only way for Eliza Sorensen to safely access her routine medical appointments.

Sorensen is considered severely immunocompromised due to the medication she takes to control her chronic disease. She also lives with asthma.

Sorensen says the government’s decision not to extend pandemic-related telehealth services will be “devastating” for her and people in similar situations.

“I can’t drive due to the medication I’m on, and without mask mandates being in place it’s incredibly risky for me to leave the house, let alone catch public transport to my appointments,” she said.

“I’ve experienced being kicked out of an Uber for wanting to leave the window down because the driver refused to wear a mask. It’s not without risk or issues.”

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https://www.ausdoc.com.au/news/govt-confirms-end-rebates-longer-telephone-consults

Govt confirms end of rebates for longer telephone consults

But the Minister for Health has put off plans for a '30/20' compliance regime

1st July 2022

By Antony Scholefield

The new Minister for Health has rejected last-minute appeals to save the MBS item for GPs to do longer telephone consults, instead deferring a new compliance regime that aims to deter abuse of the remaining phone items.

All the main GP groups had called for the $75.75 item for telephone consults lasting 20 minutes or more to be retained, stressing it was needed to ensure those without access to video — elderly and marginalised patients — could still access care in the context of rising COVID-19 cases.

In May, the item was claimed 109,000 times.

Items for longer and extended video consults were only claimed 26,000 times.

The Minister for Health Mark Butler defended his decision on Friday.

"There are very clear cases for a better clinical outcome if you can actually see your doctor over FaceTime or whatever,” he told ABC radio.

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https://medicalrepublic.com.au/telehealth-30-20-rule-kicked-down-the-road-again/72271

1 July 2022

Telehealth 30/20 rule kicked down the road again

MBS Political Telehealth

By Holly Payne

Longer phone consults are dead, but the new compliance rule won’t come into effect for another three months.

Telehealth compliance rules will be delayed again until October, Health Minister Mark Butler confirmed late yesterday, literally hours before they were set to come into effect.

There are two rule changes: the new 30/20 rule will flag doctors who deliver more than 30 phone services per day more than 20 times in one calendar year and the existing 80/20 rule will be expanded to include phone and video telehealth items in its count.

These rules were meant to come in at the beginning of the year but were given a six-month stay of execution to allow doctors to deal with the Omicron wave.  

Announcing the further three-month extension, Mr Butler said the current high level of respiratory viruses in the community were the driving factor.

“Given the level of respiratory illness in the community, more and more people – more and more GPs for that matter – are choosing to have consults conducted virtually, and I don’t want GPs punished for that,” he said.

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https://www.hospitalhealth.com.au/content/clinical-services/news/medtronic-amra-partner-for-robotic-assisted-surgery-106937359

Medtronic, AMRA partner for robotic-assisted surgery

Medtronic Australasia Pty Ltd


Friday, 24 June, 2022

Medtronic Australasia and Australian Medical Robotics Academy (AMRA) have partnered to provide surgeons with training in robotic-assisted surgery (RAS).

A broad spectrum of training is being offered at AMRA’s facilities in Melbourne to enhance the knowledge and skill set in RAS, ranging from basic skills training to procedural training, and to more advanced and specialised areas in surgery.

Kevin Falzon, senior director for Surgical Robotics at Medtronic Asia Pacific, said, “Through this engagement, we will be collaborating closely with a network of experts that make up the faculty at AMRA, all of whom have significant experience in robotic surgery, training and education and who will be the first to deliver our educational content to trainees in Australia.”

The engagement reflects Medtronic’s continued investment in the robotic surgery space as it aims to train and enhance the skill sets of both the current and next generation of surgeons.

“We want to make RAS more accessible — to more hospitals, and more surgeons, for the benefit of patients,” Falzon added.

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/asia/himss-case-studies-collection-highlights-apac-firsts

HIMSS case studies collection highlights APAC firsts

This second edition of the quarterly series features five healthcare groups and providers that recently excelled in digital maturity assessments.

By Adam Ang

June 28, 2022 09:42 PM

HIMSS has released its latest case studies collection in Asia-Pacific which puts a spotlight on major digital health milestones in the region. 

The second edition of the quarterly Digital Excellence in Healthcare: APAC Case Studies features five healthcare groups and providers who achieved regional and global firsts in terms of maturity. 

Among them is Samsung Medical Center in South Korea, which became the first health system in the world to attain INFRAM Stage 7. 

New Zealand-based healthcare provider Tū Ora Compass Health was also featured for being the first APAC organisation to be validated for INFRAM Stage 6.

The report also features the Pondok Indah Hospital Group, the first among Indonesian health facilities to achieve EMRAM Stage 6. 

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https://www.hinz.org.nz/news/609884/Health-NZ-to-simplify-confused-technology-landscape.htm

Health NZ to simplify ‘confused’ technology landscape

Tuesday, 28 June 2022  

NEWS - eHealthNews.nz editor Rebecca McBeth

Health NZ will not be a “passive recipient of vendor solutions” and will be rigorous in defining what it needs in terms of technology, the chair of interim Health NZ says.

Rob Campbell told the MTANZ HealthTech Conference in Auckland on June 28 that New Zealand needs a single public health delivery service working towards a clear set of goals.

Health NZ will focus on equity, efficiency, effectiveness, entrepreneurship, and excellence.

He described the current technology landscape as a “confused tangle of national, district and local service networks and technologies that no one understands”, and said the multiple contracts and arrangements in place need to be simplified and clarified.

“We are not there as a passive recipient of vendor solutions. You can expect us to be much more rigorous in defining what we need,” he told the audience.
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https://www.hinz.org.nz/news/609881/NZ-to-create-world-leading-ecosystem-of-digital-health-innovation.htm

NZ to create world-leading ecosystem of digital health innovation

Tuesday, 28 June 2022  

NEWS - eHealthNews.nz editor Rebecca McBeth 

The government wants New Zealand to create a world-leading ecosystem of digital health innovation, Labour MP Sarah Pallett said at the MTANZ HealthTech Conference.

Pallett, who is a member of the health select committee, spoke at the Auckland conference on June 28, in place of Health Minister Andrew Little, who was unwell.

She said the system has been poorly served by a fragmented approach to technology - driven by multiple PHOs and DHBs - and data and digital is key to unlocking the potential of the health sector to deliver on the government’s ambition.

On Friday July 1 the new national entities Health NZ and the Māori Health Authority are established.
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http://infinity.wecabrio.com/B081VR7JTJ-digital-in-health-about-a-breathtaking-future-of.pdf

Digital in Health: About a breathtaking future of healthcare (English Edition)

Read Or Downloads Digital in Health: About a breathtaking future of healthcare (English Edition)

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Book Description:

Indicating ways to improve patient-outcome was the main driver writing this book. Two years of research, structuring, collecting, and writing around the central subject of our days: digital.Similar to other spheres of our lives, digital has the power...

Title: Digital in Health: About a breathtaking future of healthcare (English Edition).
Author: Hanno Wolfram.
File Type: PDF EPUB MOBI KINDLE.
Pages: 357 Pages.
MD5 Hash Code: 8816feba6925a0da747d5692ba4b4679.

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https://www.cesphn.org.au/news/latest-updates/5459-ansc-june-2022-update-rpa-women-and-babies-canterbury-hospital-3

ANSC June 2022 Update: RPA Women and Babies/Canterbury Hospital

Discharge summaries on MyHealthRecord

ANSC GPs are reminded that hospital discharge summaries are available via their patient’s MyHealthRecord. This includes ED presentations, EPAS admissions and well as birthing discharge summaries. These summaries are uploaded to MyHealthRecord within 24 hours of discharge.  

If you are having trouble accessing discharge summaries, please contact the GP Shared Care Midwife Melanie Tulloch on 0425 230 662 (Monday to Friday 8am-4:30pm).

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https://seniorocity.com.au/whats-on-perth/digital-literacy-mygov-and-my-health-record-wanneroo-library/

Digital Literacy – myGov and My Health Record @ Wanneroo Library

July 5 @ 9:00 am - 11:00 am

Have you heard about myGov and My Health Record but don’t know how to set them up or how to use them?

Join Tim Coghill from Technologically Speaking in this workshop and we will focus on myGov and My Health Record apps.

You’ll go step-by-step through setting up a brand new myGov account, if you need to. Don’t worry, the process is simple and easy. Remember to have your email address and your mobile phone to hand, so you’re ready to go.

Your My Health Record account is a convenient way to keep all your medical information together in one place. You can work with your doctor to build a Shared Health Summary and set things up so people have all the information they need to help you in an emergency.

This workshop will introduce you to My Health Record and help you get started, as well as give you some examples for where My Health Record is useful.

Bring your own device.

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https://gcphn.org.au/influenza-test-results-now-available-to-consumers-immediately-on-upload-to-my-health-record/

Content last updated 29/06/2022

Influenza test results now available to consumers immediately on upload to My Health Record

A change has been made to My Health Record to give consumers faster access to common respiratory infection test reports, such as influenza.

Consumers who have these tests processed by a pathology lab that uploads to My Health Record can now see the reports as soon as they are uploaded. Consumers can see the reports in their Pathology Report screen. They are also available as a quick link from the COVID-19 dashboard under a renamed section Recent COVID-19 and respiratory tests.

The Australian Digital Health Agency states, “This change is an important step in supporting our frontline colleagues contending with a mounting wave of respiratory infections over winter”.

You can find out more about pathology and diagnostic imaging providers uploading to My Health Record on the Digital Health website.

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https://developer.digitalhealth.gov.au/resources/news/hips-mobile-v30-released

HIPS Mobile v3.0 Released

The Australian Digital Health Agency has announced the release of HIPS Mobile v3.0.

The Australian Digital Health Agency (the Agency) has announced a major new release of HIPS Mobile:

·         HIPS Mobile v3.0

HIPS Mobile allows clinicians in the hospital setting to have mobile device access to patient My Health Record information while engaging with patients in ward and bed-side settings or remotely off-site.

Clinicians in public and private hospitals already widely rely on mobile devices (smart phones and tablets) for accessing their patients’ clinical information, so HIPS Mobile will add My Health Record patient data access to their repertoire.

Key improvements

HIPS Mobile v3.0 is the next major release, featuring the following major improvements and defect fixes:

  • Allows connection to multiple Active Directories
  • Addition of biometric authentication
  • Login experience improvements
  • Wildcard search on patient names
  • Installation process improvements
  • Data archiving functionality

Who will this affect?

  • Healthcare provider organisations
  • System integrators
  • Software vendors

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https://www.ddwmphn.com.au/upcoming-events/my-health-record-for-specialist-practices-2

Wed 6 Jul

My Health Record for specialist practices

Join this webinar to learn about the core features of My Health Record and using your clinical software (Clinic to Cloud, Audit 4, BpVIP.net and others) to view and upload clinical information. The sessions are designed to be interactive where participants are encouraged to ask questions. Following a live demonstration during this webinar, you will understand how to:

  • Save time by accessing overview summary documents including medicines, immunisations, pathology and diagnostic imaging reports
  • Find documents relevant to your clinical practice e.g. Discharge Summaries
  • View the available Medicare information.
  • Upload a Specialist Letter.

This activity is tailored specifically for Specialists and their teams.

This activity can be counted for 1 hour of Group-1 CPD (or 1 CPD credit), suitable for inclusion in an individual’s CPD plan.

When
10:00am - 11:00am,
Wednesday 6 July 2022

Where
Online

Organiser
Australian Digital Health Agency

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https://www.digitalhealth.gov.au/careers/lead-cyber-security-awareness-and-education-officer

Lead Cyber Security Awareness and Education Officer

APS6 ($101,757 - $114,800)
Technology Services Division > Security
Brisbane, Canberra, Sydney

Closing - 17 Jul 2022

Division Overview

Technology services – responsible for the operation of high quality, trusted, reliable and secure national digital health infrastructure and health support systems

Primary purpose of position 

Are you a passionate about cyber security awareness and education? Would you be up to the task of a national role protecting vital healthcare information? Are you keen to collaborate and work with a range of stakeholders, guiding them on the latest technology developments that impact their operations? Then the Lead Cyber Security Awareness and Education Officer role is for you! Expand the range of cyber security guidance materials for the healthcare sector that are published by the Agency and providing input into campaigns designed to distribute these materials to healthcare audiences. You will need to have experience working in a Security Operations Centre, incident management & threat analysis. The Lead Cyber Security Awareness and Education Officer will be responsible for but not limited to:

  • Work collaboratively to understand the current and future requirements of the diverse group of organisations that form the Australian healthcare sector and developing appropriate security guidance materials to address these needs.
  • Expand the range of cyber security guidance materials for the healthcare sector that are published by the Agency and providing input into campaigns designed to distribute these materials to healthcare audiences.
  • Support security engagement events for stakeholder groups involved in the Australian healthcare sector.
  • Assist with activities designed to raise the security posture of the Australian healthcare sector.
  • Contribute subject matter expertise to review or provide cyber security related content for National campaigns such as those related to the My Health Record system.
  • Developing materials and campaigns to support the security culture within the Agency and awareness of strong cyber security practices that can be adopted by Agency workers.
  • Maintain and continue to develop relationships to enable the Cyber Security Centre to deliver Agency goals by working with external stakeholders, such as Federal, state and territory governments, agencies, industry bodies, and global partners.
  • Support the branch leadership team to achieve strategic outcomes and actively collaborating with other areas of the Agency, to achieve organisational goals.
  • Contribute to managing change and uncertainty in the workplace.
  • Set priorities for the work area, maintain team cohesion, and ensure quality of outputs for the work area.
  • Contribute to the development of team objectives for short term tasks and strategic planning for longer-term initiatives.

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https://itwire.com/it-industry-news/telecoms-and-nbn/nbn-co-offers-almost-10gbps-services-to-business-customers.html

Thursday, 30 June 2022 15:44

NBN Co offers 'almost' 10Gbps services to business customers

By Stephen Withers

NBN Enterprise Ethernet services for businesses now offer wholesale speeds "up to almost 10 gigabits per second."

NBN Enterprise Ethernet is available in selected areas, and potential customers include the approximately 900,000 businesses located in the 304 business fibre zones which are said to cover much of Australia, including regional towns and cities.

It will also be available on request at many data centres in metro and regional areas.

New plans range from 2Gbps to "close to 10Gbps" (but no more than 952 Mbps due to equipment and network limitations), which compares favourably with the previous limit of 1Gbps. Significantly, these services are symmetrical, ie the upload and download speeds are the same.

NBN Enterprise Ethernet uses dedicated fibre between the fibre access node and the premises, and have an availability target of around 99.95% (excluding faults outside the NBN network).

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/nbn-co-boosts-its-business-service-to-10gbps-582047

NBN Co boosts its business service to 10Gbps

By Richard Chirgwin on Jun 30, 2022 10:52AM

Available now for connection within 50 business days.

NBN Co has followed TPG into the 10 Gbps business service market.

The move comes as the result of enhancements to NBN Co's wholesale Enterprise Ethernet product, and will be available in 304 business fibre zones whose footprint covers a claimed 900,000 businesses.

Plans are now available to retailers in speed tiers from 2Gbps up to 10Gbps, symmetric.

The fibre-to-the-premises business product is “Ethernet standards compatible” across all retailers, NBN Co said in its announcement.

Target customers cited by NBN Co include “health professionals supporting highly data intensive imaging; schools requiring plans based on dedicated wholesale bandwidth on the NBN; and franchises running business-critical and cloud applications and small to medium businesses with high upload and download requirements”.

Around two-thirds of locations in the NBN business fibre zones are eligible to get the high speed services delivered within 50 business days.

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https://itwire.com/business-telecoms/optus-urges-accc-to-oppose-telstra-and-tpg-merger.html

Wednesday, 29 June 2022 08:22

Optus urges ACCC to oppose Telstra and TPG merger

By Kenn Anthony Mendoza

Telecommunications company Optus has once again urged The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) to oppose the merger of Telstra, stressing that the proposed transaction will lead to less competition, higher prices, and less resilient communities. The company has now made publicly available the six-page executive summary of its submission to the regulatory body.

The document details how the merger will negatively affect businesses and regional consumers alike. As Telstra is the only dominant market in these regional communities, the report pointed out there will be slower access to new technologies.

"It [the merger] creates a dependency for TPG on Telstra, imposes limitations on the basis by which TPG can compete, and ensures Telstra has control over network decisions and pricing levels. On the contrary, it will strengthen Telstra, weaken Optus and the competitive pressure that Optus imposes on Telstra, and reduce the resilience and reliability of Australia's telecommunication in regional areas, in some cases to the point where there may be no coverage in times of natural disaster," one of the points in the summary read.

The Optus summary also claimed that less competition will yield to higher prices, a loss for consumers.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/nbn-co-taking-orders-for-non-premises-connections-581699

NBN Co taking orders for 'non-premises' connections

By Richard Chirgwin on Jun 22, 2022 1:08PM

New developments get IoT connectivity service.

Nearly six years after first discussing expanding its remit beyond premises connections, NBN Co has announced it’s taking orders for what it calls Smart Places connections.

The network operator has long harboured a wish to be an IoT player. Back in 2016, principal technology officer FTTx, Daniel Willis, told a London conference NBN Co wanted to expand its reach to include connections to non-premises locations.

At the time, Willis cited IoT, traffic lights, and smart control systems as on the organisation’s radar.

That’s soon to become a reality, with NBN Co announcing today that Smart Places, currently piloting in 35 locations Australia-wide, will be available for orders for construction after 1 January 2023.

Executive general manager, new developments, Andrew Walsh, said with the “scale build” of the NBN complete, the organisation is “constantly talking to the market to understand what they need”.

“So we’re looking at creating an offering for our property developer customers,” he said.

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https://itwire.com/nbn/nbn-offers-smart-places-for-home-developers-and-buyers.html

Friday, 24 June 2022 12:20

NBN offers Smart Places for home developers and buyers

By Kenn Anthony Mendoza

Four out of five buyers already expect an NBN network connection in their newly-built homes, providing a valuable selling point for their properties, according to NBN.

Leveraging this information, NBN is offering Smart Places, featuring miniaturised, ruggedised and reverse-powered network connection devices that provide NBN connection to outdoor locations that aren’t serviceable using standard equipment.

NBN says the Smart Places pilot program is running at 35 locations across the country, delivered across in a wide range of scenarios: traffic lights, electric vehicle charging stations, public parks and skate parks, as well as in conjunction with the operation of water infrastructure.

As of June 2022, developers can now place orders for the construction of the infrastructure as part of their property development project after 1 January 2023—a proof that the trials have been a success, according to NBN.

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Enjoy!

David.

Sunday, July 03, 2022

It Seems We Are Seeing The Thrust Of Intrusive Surveillance Really Starting To Matter.

It is interesting how events on the other side of the world can suddenly bring unrecognized risks into clear focus.

This appeared last week:

Post Roe, women in America are right to be concerned about digital surveillance – and it’s not just period-tracking apps

·         Melissa Sweet

·         Uri Gal

·         Wednesday, June 29, 2022

Digital surveillance is a threat to public health in many ways, and the United States ruling against abortion rights is a powerful reminder of an urgent need for legislative reform to better protect the community, according to Uri Gal, Professor in Business Information Systems at the University of Sydney.

This article was first published at The Conversation.


Uri Gal writes:

The reversal of Roe v. Wade by the American Supreme court last week is a watershed moment in American politics. The ruling withdraws constitutional protections for abortion rights and sends the issue to the states, around half of which are expected to ban abortions.

Unlike the last time abortion was illegal in the United States, almost half a century ago, we now live in an era of pervasive digital surveillance enabled by the internet and mobile phones. Digital data may well be used to identify, track, and incriminate women who seek abortion.

Over the past 20 years or so, large tech companies, mobile app operators, data brokers, and online ad companies have built a comprehensive system to collect, analyse, and share huge amounts of data. Companies can follow our every movement, profile our behaviour, and snoop on our emotions.

Until now, this system has mostly been used to sell us things. But following last week’s ruling, many are concerned that personal data could be used to surveil pregnancies, shared with law enforcement agencies, or sold to vigilantes.

Data everywhere

There are various sources of data that could be used to identify, track, and prosecute women who are suspected of seeking an abortion.

Google routinely shares private user information with law enforcement agencies, even without a warrant. This includes search terms, which could be used as evidence by law enforcement agencies investigating or prosecuting abortion-related cases.

Online surveillance can also include location data. American police already use location data from mobile devices to collect evidence against suspected criminals.

What’s more, many mobile apps track your location and share it with data brokers. The brokers then sell the data on to a myriad of unknown third parties, including law enforcement agencies. This happens even when people have opted out of location data collection.

The same technology could be used to track women’s movements, and report when they went near an abortion facility or travelled to a different state where abortions are legal.

Social media

Social media activity, and data collected by social media platforms, can also be used to infer whether someone may be pregnant or is interested in getting an abortion.

A recent investigation showed hundreds of “crisis pregnancy centres” – quasi-healthcare clinics that aim to dissuade women from having abortions – around the US shared website visitor information with Facebook. In some cases, this revealed people’s names and addresses, as well as whether a woman was considering an abortion.

The investigation also showed anti-abortion organisations were able to get access to some of this information. If abortion is made a crime, this information could be used against women in legal proceedings.

Period trackers

Data from fertility and health apps could also be used to identify and track women who are suspected of seeking abortion. These apps record highly private information including menstruation cycles, sexual activity, and hormonal treatments.

However, many of these apps share unencrypted sensitive information with data brokers and ad companies without users’ knowledge or consent.

With the end of institutional protections for abortions, many worry that data from such applications could be used as evidence against women in legal proceedings.

More on the implications here:

https://www.croakey.org/post-roe-women-in-america-are-right-to-be-concerned-about-digital-surveillance-and-its-not-just-period-tracking-apps/

There is a discussion of why it matters here:

Privacy experts recommend deleting period tracking apps as Roe v Wade abortion decision overturned

A chilling warning has gone out across the United States about exactly what authorities could do with personal data stored on womens’ phones.

Alex Turner-Cohen

June 26, 2022 - 2:35PM

Women in the US are concerned about how far authorities will go to stop abortions after a historic decision ended their legal right to terminate a pregnancy in their first two trimesters.

Advocates are concerned that a woman’s search history, location data and period tracking apps could be used by authorities to find out if she is pregnant, if she is considering abortion and if she goes through with the abortion.

On Saturday morning AEST, millions of American women lost the legal right to have an abortion after the US Supreme Court overturned a landmark ruling which for nearly half a century had protected women.

Roe v Wade, which in 1973 provided the constitutional right to abortions up until foetal viability, was overturned on Friday local time.

It is now up to each state to determine whether women can have legal abortions.

However, 26 states are either"certain or likely" to ban abortions, according to a research group.

If abortion is criminalised, period-tracking apps could have no choice but to share their customers’ most personal data. .

In a now-viral Twitter post, US author Jessica Khoury warned her followers. “Delete your period tracking apps today,” she wrote.

Lots more here:

https://www.news.com.au/technology/online/security/privacy-experts-recommend-deleting-period-tracking-apps-as-roe-v-wade-abortion-decision-overturned/news-story/eaa1f3e34a1b994adf64aeb34e45afa9

In a better bit of news we had this:

Google to delete user location history on US abortion clinic visits

Google has faced calls to limit smartphone data collection in the wake of anti-abortion laws passed in the United States

July 2, 2022 - 11:14AM AFP

Google announced Friday it would delete users' location history when they visit abortion clinics, domestic violence shelters and other places where privacy is sought.

"If our systems identify that someone has visited one of these places, we will delete these entries from Location History soon after they visit," Jen Fitzpatrick, a senior vice president at Google, wrote in a blog post. "This change will take effect in the coming weeks." 

The announcement comes a week after the US Supreme Court made the tectonic decision to strip American women of constitutional rights to abortion, leading a dozen states to ban or severely restrict the procedure and prompting mass protests across the country.

Fitzpatrick also sought to reassure users that the company takes data privacy seriously.

"We take into account the privacy and security expectations of people using our products, and we notify people when we comply with government demands."

More here:

https://www.news.com.au/breaking-news/google-to-delete-user-location-history-on-us-abortion-clinic-visits/news-story/0fac6d2c5bcd7d5b60ff7047ff5f4c3a

It seems to me that what this all adds up to is the surveillance state that US women now live in that law enforcement can track to down and charge you for seeking what is really just healthcare- controversial this may be for some. Worse hiding from this surveillance is very, very difficult!

And remember pretty much the same arrangements for surveillance are in place in OZ.

We really either give up freely or have collected so much data that can be used against us in all sorts of ways maybe we need to re-think how we go about life.

Awareness of what we are giving away and simple moves like using more secure browsers and more encryption may help!

What do readers think are the best approaches to keeping as lower profile as possible or is it a lost cause?

David.

 

AusHealthIT Poll Number 638– Results – 3rd July, 2022.

Here are the results of the poll.

Does anyone believe that ADHA is capable of achieving its mission "To create a collaborative environment to accelerate adoption and use of innovative digital services and technologies"

Yes                                           3 (5%)

No                                          56 (95%)

I Have No Idea                        0 (0%)

Voters: 59

Very clear cut vote suggesting that very few see much chance of the ADHA achieving it mission.

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

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

0 of 59 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.