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."

Saturday, October 15, 2022

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links – 15th October, 2022.

Here are a few I came across last week.

Note: Each link is followed by a title and 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

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https://ehrintelligence.com/news/drummond-group-releases-pediatrics-health-it-certification-program

Drummond Group Releases Pediatrics Health IT Certification Program

The Pediatrics Health IT Certification Program allows EHR vendors to earn 'advanced badges' in data security and pediatrics medication management.

By Hannah Nelson

October 07, 2022 - Drummond Group LLC, the leading certifying body for ONC's Health IT Certification Program, has announced its new Pediatrics Health IT Certification Program to support ONC's recommendations for the voluntary certification of health IT for pediatric care.

The program includes test interpretations of the recommendations, giving an independent and objective method for evaluating EHR vendor support.

Drummond Group completed a recent pilot of the program with three leading health IT vendors and an additional program review project with Arkansas Children's Hospital.

"As the leading testing and certification body for the ONC Health IT Certification Program, Drummond is pleased to be able to leverage our experience, reputation, and market position to innovate in industry-led testing and certification programs," Ryan Patano, Drummond's president, noted in a press release.

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https://mhealthintelligence.com/news/endocrine-society-provides-guidance-for-appropriate-use-of-telehealth

Endocrine Society Provides Guidance for Appropriate Use of Telehealth

The Endocrine Society published a policy perspective covering various factors, such as clinical and patient factors, which could help determine subjective care needs and whether telehealth use is appropriate.

By Mark Melchionna

October 07, 2022 - Aiming to enhance personalized care, the Endocrine Society created a policy perspective containing five aspects of care that can help clinicians decide when using telehealth is appropriate.

With 18,000 members spread across 122 countries, the Endocrine Society is focused on promoting efforts to treat all hormone-related conditions, including diabetes, obesity, and hormone-related cancers.

Amid the rapid growth of telehealth that resulted from the COVID-19 pandemic, healthcare stakeholders anticipate that telehealth will continue to pave its way into various aspects of clinical care.

Published in The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, the Endocrine Society policy perspective describes five aspects of care that can assist the process of determining when telehealth is appropriate.

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https://healthitsecurity.com/news/man-sentenced-to-20-years-in-prison-for-netwalker-ransomware-attacks

Man Sentenced to 20 Years in Prison For NetWalker Ransomware Attacks

A Canadian man was sentenced to 20 years in prison for executing NetWalker ransomware attacks against healthcare organizations and other industries during the pandemic.

By Jill McKeon

October 07, 2022 - A Canadian man is facing 20 years in prison for his role in a variety of NetWalker ransomware attacks, including attacks against the healthcare sector during the COVID-19 pandemic. Sebastian Vachon-Desjardins, 35, of Gatineau, Quebec, was also ordered to forfeit $21.5 million.

“NetWalker ransomware has targeted dozens of victims all over the world, including companies, municipalities, hospitals, law enforcement, emergency services, school districts, colleges, and universities,” a Department of Justice (DOJ) press release stated.

“Attacks have specifically targeted the healthcare sector during the COVID-19 pandemic, taking advantage of the global crisis to extort victims.”

Previous reports indicate that NetWalker ransomware was behind a ransomware attack on the website of Champaign-Urbana Public Health District in Illinois in March 2020.

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https://www.csoonline.com/article/3675542/8-strange-ways-employees-can-accidently-expose-data.html#tk.rss_all

8 strange ways employees can (accidently) expose data

From eyeglass reflections and new job postings to certificate transparency logs and discarded printers, employees have odd ways to unintentionally expose data..

By Michael Hill

UK Editor, CSO | 4 October 2022 20:00 AEDT

Employees are often warned about the data exposure risks associated with the likes of phishing emails, credential theft, and using weak passwords. However, they can risk leaking or exposing sensitive information about themselves, the work they do, or their organization without even realizing. This risk frequently goes unexplored in cybersecurity awareness training, leaving employees oblivious to the risks they can pose to the security of data which, if exposed, could be exploited both directly and indirectly to target workers and businesses for malicious gain.

Here are eight unusual, unexpected, and relatively strange ways employees can accidently expose data, along with advice for addressing and mitigating the risks associated with them.

1. Eyeglass reflections expose screen data on video conferencing calls

Video conferencing platforms such as Zoom and Microsoft Teams have become a staple of remote/hybrid working. However, new academic research has found that bespectacled video conferencing participants may be at risk of accidently exposing information via the reflection of their eyeglasses.

In a paper titled Private Eye: On the Limits of Textual Screen Peeking via Eyeglass Reflections in Video Conferencing, a group of researchers at Cornell University revealed a method of reconstructing screen text exposed via participants’ eyeglasses and other reflective objects during video conferences. Using mathematical modeling and human subject experiments, the research explored the extent to which webcams leak recognizable textual and graphical information gleaming from eyeglass.

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https://newatlas.com/health-wellbeing/ai-eye-scan-stroke-heart-disease-risk-scores/

AI-enabled eye scan delivers stroke and heart disease risk scores

Rich Haridy

October 06, 2022

A team of researchers in the UK has developed a fully automated artificial intelligence-enabled system that can scan retinal images for vascular health, helping identify those at high risk of heart disease and stroke.

The old adage "the eyes are windows to the soul" isn’t that far off when considering how much one can infer about a person’s general health by studying their eyes. Diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and hyperthyroidism can be detected in the eyes, and recent innovations suggest neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s could be diagnosable through retinal scanning.

Considering how sensitive blood vessels in the eye can be to general cardiovascular changes, researchers have long studied the relationship between retinal features and conditions such as diabetes or coronary artery disease. With the advent of computerized systems that can automatically identify minute differences in a person’s retinal vasculature researchers are now closing in on a new kind of diagnostic tool.

The AI system is dubbed QUARTZ ((QUantitative Analysis of Retinal vessels Topology and siZe) and a new study put the algorithm to the test on more than 88,000 retinal images from two large ongoing population health studies. Each person included in the study had an average of seven to nine years of follow-up data, allowing the researchers to evaluate the predictive capacity of the system.

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https://www.healio.com/news/primary-care/20221006/older-adults-satisfied-with-using-telehealth-for-primary-care-study-finds

October 06, 2022

Older adults satisfied with using telehealth for primary care, study finds

Most adults aged 65 years and older were satisfied with using telehealth for their primary care visits during the first 14 months of the COVID-19 pandemic, a recent study found.

Although most of those surveyed wanted telehealth to remain available, researchers said they still preferred in-person care.

Before the pandemic, Roma Bhatia, MD, MPH, an editorial fellow at The New England Journal of Medicine, and colleagues noted in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society that older adults were the least likely to utilize telehealth due to several factors, such as lower digital literacy.

“Pre-pandemic, telemedicine was found to be effective for monitoring chronic conditions such as hypertension, but not a substitute for in-person care of older adults with complex health issues,” they wrote.

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https://khn.org/news/article/hurricane-ian-coastal-hospitals-climate-change/

Hurricane Ian Shows That Coastal Hospitals Aren’t Ready for Climate Change

By Daniel Chang and Lauren Sausser October 7, 2022

As rapidly intensifying storms and rising sea levels threaten coastal cities from Texas to the tip of Maine, Hurricane Ian has just demonstrated what researchers have warned: Hundreds of hospitals in the U.S. are not ready for climate change.

Friday, October 14, 2022

You Can Get Yourself In Pretty Big Trouble With A Tweet If You Are Not Careful And Aware Of Risk!

This popped up last week and seemed to ba a cautionary tale…

ABC reporter deletes tweet claiming investment bank ‘on the brink’

Emma Rapaport and Tom Richardson

Oct 3, 2022 – 7.32pm

A tweet by ABC business journalist David Taylor suggesting a major international investment bank was “on the brink” was deleted on Monday afternoon – around the same time the public broadcaster said it had reminded the reporter of its social media guidelines.

Taylor’s October 1 tweet fed a social media frenzy of rumours, misinformation and unverified claims that European investment banks Credit Suisse or Deutsche Bank could be set to collapse and spark the biggest financial crisis since 2009.

The tweet had attracted more than 6400 retweets and 28,000 likes by Monday lunchtime as other journalists, financial newswires, business commentators, and social media users speculated about the identity of the investment bank and consequences of a major default for global financial markets.

Taylor did not immediately respond to a request for comment over the tweet that claimed a “credible source” had warned of an investment bank being on the brink.

An ABC spokesperson said the journalist made the comment after an exchange with a financial analyst. “His managers have discussed the matter with him and have reminded him of the ABC social media guidelines,” the spokesperson said.

The ABC also said any reports that it published an article on the tweet’s subject were incorrect.

Social trading

In Zurich on the Swiss stock exchange, Credit Suisse stock tumbled 6 per cent at Monday’s open to CHF3.73 ($5.87)before losing more ground to CHF3.52.

On Friday, its chief new chief executive Ulrich Koerner moved to publicly assure investors that the bank had a “strong capital base and liquidity position”, partly as a result of Basel III rules demanding it maintain minimum capital reserves in the event of a downturn.

Credit Suisse shares are down 60 per cent in 2022 amid turmoil in Europe and after the bank admitted to a $US5.5 billion credit loss to Bill Hwang’s Archegos hedge fund in 2021.

Here is the link with lots more:

https://www.afr.com/markets/equity-markets/abc-reporter-deletes-tweet-claiming-investment-bank-on-the-brink-20221003-p5bmvy

There is more coverage here:

‘Price sensitive tweet’ by journalist should never have been sent

Edmund Tadros Media and marketing reporter

Oct 4, 2022 – 6.46pm

A tweet by an ABC journalist suggesting a major international investment bank, taken to be Credit Suisse, was “on the brink” set off a social media frenzy partly because readers assume business reporters will vet sensitive information about a company before sharing it with the public.

That’s the view of Angel Zhong, an associate professor at RMIT University who studies how media coverage affects the markets, who added that the extra weight given to a business journalist’s comments on social media meant the “price-sensitive tweet” should never have been sent.

Dr Zhong said the difference between finance influencers – known as finfluencers – and business reporters is the expectation reporters will fact-check their information with multiple sources before publishing or broadcasting.

“My response is most [reporters] do fact-checking before they report and journalists typically tend to feature multiple facts and voices in every article. So there’s typically rigorous fact checking,” she said.

“However, that’s referring to news articles or broadcasts, not tweets. This tweet is a little bit different from what we normally see in business and finance news.

“My response to this tweet is, it is what I’d call a price-sensitive tweet. I’d say that unless there is rigorous fact-checking before sending the tweet I’m personally strongly against the idea of sending such a tweet.”

Tweet and re-tweet

ABC business journalist David Taylor’s Saturday evening tweet, which was deleted on Monday, kicked off a round of rumours and unverified claims that European investment banks Credit Suisse or Deutsche Bank could be set to collapse.

Adding to the confusion is the tweet, from Taylor’s personal Twitter account, was paraphrased erroneously by Investing.com as being a report from “ABC Australia”, while other tweeters identified the bank in question as Credit Suisse. The Investing.com tweet remained live as of Tuesday afternoon.

Lots more here:

https://www.afr.com/companies/media-and-marketing/price-sensitive-tweet-by-journalist-should-never-have-been-sent-20221004-p5bn4k

There are a few things wrong with this tweet.

Firstly is appeared to come from a globally recognized source – ABC Australia – and appeared to communicate some serious news.

Second it was vague enough to raise uncertainty about a global bank.

Third it suggested that the source knew more and was concerned.

To me the lesson is clear – stick within the guard rails and do not pass on rumours when tweeting from a recognised authorised source! It is pretty hard to take this sort of thing back once tweeted!

What a mess – I hope David keeps his job, and be careful out there!

David.