The new Annual
Report arrived recently:
Here is the
link:
https://www.transparency.gov.au/publications/health/australian-digital-health-agency/australian-digital-health-agency-annual-report-2022-2023
Whatever is
contained in the report the front page is totally amazing claiming that “Our
work means so much to so many” Certainly they are pretty full of their own
importance!
Part 1 of
the Report has some useful facts!
Information about this Part
Part 1 provides a view of the Agency at a glance – an overview of the
Agency’s purpose, role, strategy and functions and an outline of the path
ahead.
The Agency at a glance
Purpose
Better health for all Australians enabled by connected, safe, secure and
easy-to-use digital health services.
Foundations
The Agency was established on 30 January 2016 and began operations on 1 July
2016, with a vision of improving health outcomes for Australians through the
delivery of digital innovation, health systems and services.
Enabling legislation
The Public Governance, Performance and Accountability (Establishing the
Australian Digital Health Agency) Rule 2016 (Agency Rule) 1
created the Agency and governs its operations. The Rule was made by the
Minister for Finance under Section 87 of the PGPA 2
that allows for the establishment of corporate Commonwealth entities. The
Agency was the first in the Commonwealth to be established by Section 87 of the
PGPA Act.
Products and services
The Agency has a lead role in stewarding, operating and developing the
national digital health infrastructure that underpins the delivery of digital
health in Australia. This vital infrastructure is an enabler for digital health
foundations including:
- My
Health Record system
- Healthcare
Identifiers (HI) Service
- National
Authentication Service for Health (NASH)
- Secure
messaging delivery
- National
Clinical Terminology Service (NCTS) including SNOMED CT-AU and Australian
Medicines Terminology (AMT)
- Clinical
content specifications based on Clinical Document Architecture (CDA) and
Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR®)
- Provider
Connect Australia (PCA)
- Vaccine
Clinic Connect Finder.
Governing, operating and maintaining this infrastructure is a core activity
for the Agency and ensures that Australian healthcare consumers and healthcare
providers can be confident they are using clinically safe systems to support
their health and care needs. Part
1 provides further detail on this activity.
Delivery priorities for
2022–23
Over the course of 2022–23, the Agency led the way in advancing and
expediting digital innovation as part of the broader national health agenda.
The Agency’s Corporate Plan 2022–23 championed 3 strategic areas of focus:
- Infrastructure
solutions and initiatives
- Interoperability
supporting connected health and care
- National
digital health initiatives.
Performance against each priority area is captured in Part
2 of this report.
Governance structure
The Agency is a corporate Commonwealth entity, established by a rule under
the PGPA Act. Information about our governance, management and accountability
framework is covered in Part
3 of the report.
Board as the accountable authority
A Board, chaired by Dr Elizabeth Deveny, is the Agency’s accountable
authority. As the accountable authority, the Board sets the objectives,
strategies and policies 3
for the Agency and is responsible for the proper and efficient
performance of the Agency’s functions. 4
Advisory committees
The Board is supported in the performance of its functions by advisory
committees. Four standing advisory committees are established under the Agency
Rule:
- Clinical
and Technical Advisory Committee
- Jurisdictional
Advisory Committee
- Consumer
Advisory Committee
- Privacy
and Security Advisory Committee.
The Agency also has an Audit and Risk Committee, as required under the
Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Rule 2014.
Intergovernmental
The Agency operates under an Intergovernmental Agreement between the
Commonwealth and state and territory governments. Under this agreement, the
Agency works closely with the states and territories to transform how health
information is used to deliver better healthcare and implement a world-class
digital health capability in Australia.
Portfolio and ministerial oversight
The Agency sits within the Health and Aged Care portfolio and is accountable
to the Ministers of the Health and Aged Care portfolio:
- The Hon
Mark Butler MP, Minister for Health and Aged Care
- The Hon
Anika Wells MP, Minister for Aged Care and Minister for Sport
- The Hon
Ged Kearney MP, Assistant Minister for Health and Aged Care
- The Hon
Emma McBride MP, Assistant Minister for Mental Health and Suicide
Prevention and Assistant Minister for Rural and Regional Health
- Senator
the Hon Malarndirri McCarthy, Assistant Minister for Indigenous Health.
Our people and their location
At 30 June 2023, the Agency had 412 permanent staff with offices in
Brisbane, Sydney and Canberra.
Funding
The Agency is jointly funded by the Commonwealth ($229.5 million) and
the states and territories ($32.25 million), reflecting the commitment at
all levels of government to the delivery of digital health reform.
Financial outcome
- Operating
loss: $32.8 million
- Operating
revenue: $255.9 million
- Operating
expenses: $288.7 million
The Agency’s financial performance and the Australian National Audit
Office’s (ANAO) audited financial statements are presented in Part
4 of this report.
---- End Section
The
Corporate Plan can be accessed from this link:
https://previewapi.transparency.gov.au/delivery/assets/80a82ed1-3e33-027b-b7e0-6493f97f18f8/f802dc8b-2e84-43a4-822b-ffbf7a38db4a/adha_cp_2022-23.pdf
It is 54
pages and says that the Agency is funded until June 30, 2023.
There are
pages and pages of measures as to how the ADHA is going but no results for any
of these measures.
I wonder
how anyone actually knows who is doing what for whom.
Surely with
$250M + and 400+ staff there should be progress reports and outcome measures!!!
Can someone
send me some?
David.