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."

Showing posts sorted by date for query opt-out trials. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query opt-out trials. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Sunday, July 30, 2023

It Looks Like Digital ID Is Really Coming To Australia This Time.

 This appeared a few days ago.

Eight things businesses and customers need to know about digital ID in Australia

Tegan Jones

July 28, 2023

This week has seen a resurgence in discussions around the roll out of a national digital ID in Australia, after Finance Minister Katy Gallagher spoke on the subject at the Australian Financial Review Government Services Summit. This has sparked a fresh round of questions and concerns around digital IDs, including how they would work and if they would be secure.

It’s a big subject that has been kicking around for around a decade. And it’s an important one because a digital ID proposes a great deal of benefits when it comes to convenience and privacy. But with that comes valid concerns around how it would work, availability for people who aren’t digital natives, and security, considering the Australian government’s track record with digital ‘solutions’ such as My Health Record and Robodebt.

With that in mind, we have pulled together answers for some of the most common and pressing questions around an Australian national digital iID.

What is an Australian national ID?

The national digital identity scheme will allow Australians to condense all of their official licenses and forms of identification on a single platform that is regulated by the government.

From there, government departments and third-party organisations — such as a bank, insurance company or even a retailer — could access it to verify your identity

An ideal version of this platform would allow this verification without the need for the third-party to capture personal information, such as your birthdate, address or signature.

Doesn’t the MyGov app already do this?

The MyGov app does already let you store digital versions of Medicare, Centrelink concession and health care cards and your international COVID-19 vaccination certificate in its ‘wallet’.

It also allows you to link up a number of government-related services.

However, not all cards and ID are captured by this service (for example, a digital passport). The government itself says on the MyGov website that there is still a way to go.

“It may take some time before all providers are ready to accept digital cards from the myGov app. It’s a good idea to carry your physical cards with you.”

There’s also the issue of being able to use these digital cards widely and consistently with services outside of the government ecosystem.

“From the everyday person’s point of view, we’ve got the system; it’s just not regulated and not in a shape I think that will allow us to drive it forward and give the interoperability and the economy-wide benefits that come from having a national system, but we’re very committed to it,” Gallagher said this week.

“We want to see an economy-wide system, and in a sense we’ve got that operating now, without regulation. We’ve got some private digital ID providers and then you’ve got myGov.”

Could a national digital ID mean sharing less personal information with businesses?

That’s a strong potential possibility, and one that is being advocated for by the former NSW minister for customer service and digital government, Victor Dominello.

For years he has been pushing for a form of digital identification that doesn’t force Australians to hand over personal information, like birth dates.

Let’s say you are signing for a package, the idea is that you could show your digital ID (which has been verified by the government) to a delivery driver and have it verified without the need for your signature. Or perhaps you want to prove you’re over 18 at a pub. In this case, a national digital ID would prove you are the age you say you are, without revealing your actual birth date.

What possibilities would a national digital ID have for businesses?

There are plenty of ways in which a digital identity could affect businesses.

For example, it could be an alternative to the controversial proposals to roll out facial recognition in pubs and clubs to identify people who have been banned.

There are also arguments for it improving user experience for customers when logins are simpler and removing time-consuming manual labour.

And as there is a push for stricter privacy laws around how long businesses hold onto customer records, a digital identity could mitigate this issue. Businesses won’t need to spend the time or storage on holding onto records that they don’t need.

Deloitte also states that it could mean increased customers and revenue for businesses, especially those that adopt early, due to the ease of use, efficiency, and how it will position a brand as one that values the privacy of its customers.

Would I have more control over my digital ID than the government?

That’s certainly the theory, and one that has been pushed for by Dominello.

“You hold the golden keys,” he said at a Tech Council of Australia event in March.

“So the customer genuinely – not just in language – informs the centre of [this] rather than rather than governments and banks.”

While we don’t yet know exactly how a nationwide digital identity would play out in practice, Katy Gallagher did reflect a similar perspective when questioned about it this week.

“It’s really about you having control as citizens; control of their information that allows them to access government systems in a very easy, secure, voluntary and efficient way. But you know, I’m going in with my eyes open that there’s a fair bit of work to do on this, and hopefully bipartisan support.”

While some states in Australia already offer digital driver’s licenses (as well as trials around digital work credentials), they’re more of a stepping stone towards an eventual national digital ID.

Some scenarios still don’t allow for digital drivers licenses to be used as ID, and at the present time they’re all state-based. The digital ID of the future would be nation-wide, meaning it would work and be accepted across all of Australia — and hopefully overseas as well.

As an example, on a recent trip to the US, a colleague found that bars would not accept a New South Wales digital license as a form of ID but would accept a physical one.

From Dominello’s perspective, digital drivers licenses are a “crude defacto” and reveal too much information.

“Fit for purpose digital ID would give more control to the individual on what information they share and for how long,” Dominello said on LinkedIn.

Are there privacy and security concerns around a national digital ID?

Absolutely.

The ethos behind digital IDs is improved privacy and security for individuals through minimising how many companies and institutions have access to their information.

This has become of particular concern over the last 12 months in the wake of major breaches from Optus, Medibank and Latitude, especially because Australia lacks specific data privacy laws.

These are all great arguments for a national digital ID.

However, the federal government has an extremely poor record when it comes to implementing digital systems. The two biggest in recent years have been the catastrophic results of Robodebt, as well as the rushed rollout of My Health Record despite glaring privacy concerns. This included the inability of many Australians to opt out after discovering records had already been automatically made for them.

Australians can’t be blamed for being wary of government infrastructure being relied upon for something as important as a central point of digital identification.

Just this week it was revealed that scammers have gotten away with over $500 million in an ATO fraud due to a flaw in the MyGov system.

So the fact that Gallagher has pencilled in mid-2024 as a possibility for roll out is understandably concerning for some.

When will national digital ID launch in Australia?

There is no firm timeline right now, but at the AFR‘s summit this week, finance minister Katy Gallagher said the government has cabinet approval to release an exposure draft “hopefully by September”, which she hopes to then get into Parliament by the end of the year.

More here:

https://www.smartcompany.com.au/startupsmart/startupsmart-technology/what-businesses-customers-digital-id-australia/

It is true to say there have been more than more that one false dawn on this and also that it is a complex implementation to get right with many, many stake-holders.

That said many other nations have succeeded so it is about time we wound up with a simpler and more trusted system in OZ. The time has well and truly passed for success to be achieved, given the benefits that are possible and the ultimate simplicity and security that can be achieved.

The health sector can be made both safer and more efficient with a national ID I believe.

David.

 

Monday, November 21, 2022

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 21 November, 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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Quite an interesting week with ACT Health going live and sending out many thousands of random e-mails and texts with confused many. Seems to have settled down now.

Elon and Twitter and having a bit of a moment and it is not clear Twitter will survive – which I would miss!

Also seems the ADHA has missed some app deadlines. And these are meant to be the pros!

Have a fun read and be amazed at the ADHA salaries on offer

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https://www.canberratimes.com.au/story/7980932/messages-mistakenly-sent-on-acts-new-digital-health-record/?cs=14329

People receive incorrect messages through ACT digital health record

By Lucy Bladen

Updated November 14 2022 - 5:56pm, first published 2:45pm

1 Comment

Canberrans signed up to the new ACT government's digital health record have mistakenly been sent messages about appointments and test results being available.

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The Canberra Times says: "Canberrans signed up to the new ACT government's digital health record have mistakenly been sent messages about appointments and test results being available."

It should more accurately say: Canberrans who had no idea their health information had been compulsorily loaded into an Epic digital health record were alarmed to receive emails out of the blue informing them about appointments and test results being available, with a request to click on a link, FFS.

Here's the story for those who subscribe: https://www.canberratimes.com.au/story/7980932/messages-mistakenly-sent-on-acts-new-digital-health-record/?cs=14329

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https://the-riotact.com/union-issues-told-you-so-as-new-health-record-rollout-gets-off-to-a-bumpy-start/612897

Union issues 'told you so' as new health record rollout gets off to a bumpy start

15 November 2022 | Lottie Twyford

Despite the transition taking more than a year, the Territory-wide Digital Health Record has gotten off to a somewhat bumpy start.

Some patients have reported having to deal with stressed staff members, while others received incorrect messages about appointments and test results which some believed to be a scam.

ACT Health on Monday (14 November) confirmed via social media some users had received a text message or email about test results being available but said it was due to an update.

“Users are advised this message is not a scam and was sent from the Digital Health Record,” the Facebook post read.

“Anyone who has received this message is advised you do not need to take any action.”

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/nsw-passes-state-based-mandatory-data-breach-notification-587959

NSW passes state-based mandatory data breach notification

By Staff Writer on Nov 18, 2022 6:45AM

Without amendment.

Both houses of NSW parliament have passed mandatory data breach notification rules that will apply to state agencies and departments, statutory authorities, local councils and some universities.

The Privacy and Personal Information Protection Amendment Bill passed the upper house on Wednesday, having cleared the lower house the previous day.

The bill is now marked as “awaiting assent”. It is due to come into force a year after assent.

The leader of the opposition in the Legislative Council, Penny Sharpe, said state Labor “has been asking for these changes for quite some time.”

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https://wildhealth.net.au/lung-cancer-data-plan-could-fix-outcome-disparity/

17 November 2022

Lung cancer data plan could fix outcome disparity

Big Data

By Mariella Attard

Australia’s massive variation in lung cancer treatment can be fixed with a national clinical quality registry, experts say.

A protocol for a lung cancer registry to collect and report performance data and highlight variation in care was published recently in BMJ Open.

It aims to address the dearth of information needed by cancer patients, practitioners and governing bodies to improve cancer care outcomes in Australia and New Zealand.

“Regional reports identify substantial evidence-practice gaps, unwarranted variation from best practice, and variation in processes and outcomes of care between treating centres,” the authors wrote.

“The Australia and New Zealand Lung Cancer Registry (ANZLCR) will be developed as a Clinical Quality Registry to monitor the safety, quality and effectiveness of lung cancer care in Australia and New Zealand.”

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https://www.innovationaus.com/new-delays-strike-my-health-record-app/

New delays strike My Health Record app

Justin Hendry
Editor

15 November 2022

A consumer-facing My Health Record smartphone app built for the federal government has hit further delays and is now not expected to be publicly released until early 2023, a year later than first planned.

The Australian Digital Health Agency (ADHA) revealed plans for the ‘my health’ app back in July 2021 to improve access to the electronic health record and complement other digital channels that connect to the system, including myGov and several third-party apps.

Accessibility has been an ongoing issue for the system, with just 1.2 million unique My Health Records accessed in 2020-21, a figure that climbed to 3.2 million last financial year with the help of COVID-19. Total active records currently sit at 23.4 million.

In November 2021, the agency contracted Adelaide-based IT solutions firm Chamonix to build the app at a cost of $2.1 million and said a bare-bones version would be ready for download in early 2022.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/adha-seeking-chief-digital-officer-587722

ADHA seeking chief digital officer

By Richard Chirgwin on Nov 15, 2022 7:00AM

Will be tasked with launching Android, iOS MyHealthRecord app.

The Australian Digital Health Agency has commenced public recruitment for a chief digital officer (CDO) role, which has been vacant since August.

The agency’s CTO Dr Malcolm described the job as a “a rare opportunity to shape the national digital health agenda”.

In its job ad, the agency said it seeks a leader for the “the creative, multi-disciplinary digital solutions division”, drawing on its “collaborative capabilities to shape digital health for Australia.”

The job reports to the CEO and is part of the senior executive committee.

ADHA's former CDO Steven Issa was there for almost four years before resigning. Holger Kaufmann has been acting in the CDO role since Issa’s departure.

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https://www.digitalhealth.gov.au/careers/senior-policy-advisor-27112022

Senior Policy Advisor

EL1 ($125,047 - $142,618)
Policy Programs and Engagement Division > Policy
Brisbane, Canberra, Sydney

Closing - 27 Nov 2022

Division Overview

Policy, Programs and Engagement – responsible for informing policies, managing external stakeholder relationships, and being the place of excellence for driving program delivery, reporting and outcomes.

Primary Purpose of Position

The EL1 Senior Policy Advisor is accountable, under broad direction, to provide specialist policy advice to inform the development and implementation of digital health policies, work collaboratively to support the progress of Agency initiatives and projects, and shape strategic thinking.

The EL1 Senior Policy Advisor is responsible for providing specialised policy knowledge in relation to relevant legislation. They will successfully engage with a wide variety of stakeholders to deliver effective solutions to challenging problems and opportunities and develop well informed policy advice on complex matters in tight timeframes that meets the needs of the Agency and the government.

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https://www.seek.com.au/job/59225921?type=standout

Director, Business Services

Australian Digital Health Agency

Sydney NSW

Government - Federal (Government & Defence)

$149,194 - $176,637 TRP incl superannuation

Full time 16 Nov, 2022

About the Agency 

The Australian Digital Health Agency (the Agency) is responsible for national digital health services and systems, with a focus on engagement, innovation and clinical quality and safety. Our focus is on putting data and technology safely to work for patients, consumers and the healthcare professionals who look after them. 

The Australian Digital Health Agency has an exciting opportunity to lead its corporate IT capability as it evolves its internal processes and systems, working closely with senior stakeholders to deliver diverse technology needs.

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https://www.seek.com.au/job/59227254?type=standout

Manager - Business Engagement & Systems Manager

Australian Digital Health Agency

Sydney NSW

Management (Information & Communication Technology)

$125,047 - $142,618 TRP incl superannuation

Full time

17 Nov, 2022

About the Agency 

The Australian Digital Health Agency (the Agency) is responsible for national digital health services and systems, with a focus on engagement, innovation and clinical quality and safety. Our focus is on putting data and technology safely to work for patients, consumers and the healthcare professionals who look after them. 

The Australian Digital Health Agency has a great opportunity for a qualified IT professional to play a key leadership role in our new developed IT Business Services Section.  

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/nsw-ready-to-pilot-decentralised-digital-id-587834

NSW ready to pilot decentralised digital ID

By Richard Chirgwin on Nov 16, 2022 12:15PM

Opt-in credential stored on users’ own phones.

The NSW government’s decentralised digital ID strategy is moving to a pilot phase.

For the pilot, the locally-stored ID will be created by the Service NSW app, allowing users to renew their Working with Children Check remotely, and offer the ID as a proof-of-age for alcohol purchases.

Outgoing minister for customer service and digital government Victor Dominello discussed the decentralised ID in an interview with iTnews in Novermber 2021, saying citizens’ control over their information is “important to our democratic future”.

In a statement today, Dominello emphasised the need for citizens to control their information.

“Recent cyber breaches have underlined the need to keep the control of our private  information in the hands of the customer, and stop the need for the continual  oversharing of our personal details,” Dominello said. 

“We have put privacy, security and customer control at the heart of the NSW Digital Identity and its pilots.

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Special Announcement: 15 November 2022

 

ANDHealth+ Second Cohort Announced at
HLTH in Las Vegas

Today we announced the five companies selected to take part in the second cohort of our ANDHealth+ program, funded by the Australian Government’s Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF).

Announced by ANDHealth Managing Director and CEO Bronwyn Le Grice at HLTH 2022 in Las Vegas, the five companies selected for the 2022 ANDHealth+ cohort are:

Baymatob: Tackling the leading cause of preventable maternal death, this AI-powered wearable called ‘Oli PPH’ predicts post-partum haemorrhage before birth, enabling intervention to improve the health of mums and babies.
 

BioEye: Identifies and monitors mild traumatic brain injuries (including concussion) through smartphone camera eye-tracking technology, putting a validated neurological assessment in everyone’s hand.
 

Macuject: Aiming to save the sight of patients, Macuject uses AI-driven decision support to enable faster, better and more consistent decisions for clinicians, personalising the treatment of macular degeneration patients under their care.

Neurotologix: Pioneering the remote diagnosis of dizziness and vertigo, ROMI is a portable, durable and accurate solution powered by a fully integrated internet-of-things enabled system.
 

WeGuide: Driving simplicity and speed, WeGuide allows rapid, easy creation of personalised patient engagement tools for research trials and healthcare needs through their regulatory-approved no-code platform.

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https://itwire.com/business-it-news/security/medibank-attackers-based-in-russia,-claims-afp-chief.html

Friday, 11 November 2022 17:08

Medibank attackers based in Russia, claims AFP chief

By Sam Varghese

The attackers behind the ransomware heist on medical insurer Medibank Group are believed to be in Russia, the Australian Federal Police claims, without naming any of those involved.

Commissioner Reece Kershaw told the media in Canberra on Friday afternoon that the intelligence collected thus far pointed to "a group of loosely affiliated cyber criminals, who are likely responsible for past significant breaches in countries across the world".

"These cyber criminals are operating like a business with affiliates and associates, who are supporting the business," he said. "We also believe some affiliates may be in other countries."

In a statement issued on Friday, the Russian embassy in Australia said Kershaw's statement had been "made before the AFP even contacted the Russian side through the existing professional channels of communication.


"We encourage the AFP to duly get in touch with the respective Russian law enforcement agencies.

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https://itwire.com/business-it-news/security/govt-announces-100-strong-force-to-hunt-down-online-attackers.html

Sunday, 13 November 2022 17:59

Govt announces 100-strong force to hunt down online attackers

By Sam Varghese

A 100-person strong task force, formed jointly by the Australian Federal Police and the Australian Signals Directorate, will be given the job of hunting down those who commit crimes online.

Home Affairs Minister Clare O'Neil and Federal Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus made the announcement jointly on Saturday, a day after the AFP commissioner Reece Kershaw claimed that those behind the ransomware attack on medical insurance provider Medibank Group were based in Russia. Ransomware generally attacks only systems running Microsoft's Windows operating system. 

O'Neil, who is also responsible for online security, said: "This is the formalisation of a partnership, a standing body in the Australian Government, which will day in, day out, hunt down the scumbags who are responsible for these malicious crimes against innocent people.

"Around 100 officers across these two organisations will be a part of this permanent Joint Standing Operation. They will show up to work every day with the goal of bringing down these gangs and thugs.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/australia-sets-up-100-strong-permanent-operation-to-target-hackers-587691

Australia sets up 100-strong permanent 'operation' to target hackers

By Ry Crozier on Nov 12, 2022 11:26AM

With a global remit.

Australia will set up a permanent operation comprising around 100 police and defence personnel to “hack the hackers”, with an immediate priority to target ransomware groups.

The personnel come together from the Australian Federal Police and Australian Signals Directorate under what is being termed a “joint standing operation”.

“This operation will collect intelligence and identify ring-leaders, networks and infrastructure in order to disrupt and stop their operations – regardless of where they are,” Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus and Minister for Cyber Security Clare O’Neil said on Saturday morning.

The operation will aim to “stop… incidents before they start”; in addition, “where incidents do take place… cyber criminals will be hunted down and their networks disrupted.”

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https://www.afr.com/companies/financial-services/useless-medibank-customers-rage-as-more-health-records-revealed-20221114-p5bxzx

‘Useless’: Medibank customers rage as more health records revealed

Ayesha de Kretser Senior Reporter

Nov 14, 2022 – 6.48pm

Another 500 Medibank health records have been posted online, this time related to mental health and other illnesses, as more customers express anger at the insurer’s handling of the most invasive data breach in Australia’s history.

The latest file takes the number of health records released online to 1243 and the hackers said they would pause for Medibank’s annual meeting on Wednesday and resume posting on Friday.

“We’ll announce that next portion of data we’ll publish at [sic] Friday, bypassing this week completely in a hope something meaningful happened on Wednesday,” the criminals said online.

The company said it was now “in the process of contacting customers” including those 500 record holders caught up in the latest data dump, related to a range of different mental health concerns and other illnesses.

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https://www.smh.com.au/business/companies/medibank-faces-new-headaches-as-it-finds-staff-data-has-also-been-hacked-20221115-p5byap.html

Medibank faces new headaches as it finds staff data has also been hacked

By Colin Kruger

November 15, 2022 — 10.08am

Medibank Private has told employees that their data, including mobile and work device numbers, was stolen by the hackers, which potentially opens up new vulnerabilities for its computer systems.

The theft was part of the same hack which acquired data on all 9.7 million current and former customers, including sensitive health information on around 500,000 policyholders. These details were posted on a blog that has been linked to REvil, a ransomware gang with strong Russian links, but the information is now being hosted on other dark websites, according reports.

The email Medibank sent to employees on Monday evening said hackers have accessed data on roughly 900 current and former employees – including their names, email addresses, their mobile phone numbers and work device information - and posted it on the dark web on Wednesday, November 9.

“Our security team have advised that the information above may be used for increased spam such as spear fishing and social engineering,” Medibank said in the email.

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https://itwire.com/business-it-news/security/medibank-data-linked-off-same-forum-on-which-optus-data-was-leaked.html

Tuesday, 15 November 2022 07:17

Medibank data linked off same forum on which Optus data was leaked

By Sam Varghese

Data published by the individual(s), who attacked the medical insurer Medibank Group using ransomware, has now been linked to from a forum on the clear Web, the same forum where the data from telco Singtel Optus was released. Ransomware generally attacks only systems running Microsoft's Windows operating system.

Security researcher Brett Callow posted a tweet about the appearance of the links. The person on this forum has posted links to the first, second and third lots of data that were posted on the attacker(s) site on the dark web.

In the case of Optus, a first lot of data was advertised on 17 September, five days before the company said it had been attacked. Two days after Optus made the announcement, a second lot of data was put up for sale.

On 27 September, the attacker released a link to the data of 10,000 Optus users and threatened to release more. But later the same day, the attacker appeared to have developed cold feet, announcing that all the Optus in his/her possession had been deleted from the Web.

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/anz/tasmania-transforming-outpatient-services-online-booking-ereferral-system

Tasmania transforming outpatient services with online booking, eReferral system

These projects are part of its broader strategy to shorten wait times while building the capacity to cater to future health demands.

By Adam Ang

November 13, 2022 11:23 PM

The Tasmanian government has recently released a four-year strategy to transform outpatient services across its public health system.

Tasmania's Transforming Outpatient Services Strategy seeks to shorten wait times, improve communication, and modernise processes.

One focus of the strategy is ICT and virtual care capability under which a Digital Outpatient Management System and eReferral system will be delivered to "modernise and streamline service delivery processes."

"They will help resolve current business process inefficiencies, improve communications channels between consumers, referring practitioners, clinicians, and clinic staff, and enable the implementation of new models of outpatient care," the Tasmanian Department of Health said.

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/anz/roundup-episofts-online-ifc-payments-process-goes-live-st-john-god-health-care-and-more

Roundup: EpiSoft's online IFC, payments process goes live in St John of God Health Care and more briefs

Also, the ADHA begins its transition to a new health information gateway.

By Adam Ang

November 18, 2022 12:53 AM

St John of God Health Care adopts online IFC, payments process by EpiSoft

St John of God Health Care has implemented EpiSoft's online Informed Financial Consent and payments process for patients.

These features are the latest addition to its epi-me online patient admissions portal, also by EpiSoft. It has also been integrated with the hospital group's web-based PAS.

These additions provide "significant efficiency improvement" for hospitals. It allows staff to prepare a patient's estimate of fees from the webPAS, which is then automatically exported to epi-me where it is presented alongside a National Claim Form. 

After capturing their online IFC, a patient can choose to securely pay any out-of-hospital pocket costs, including credit card pre-authorisation for any incidentals they might incur during their admission. The electronically signed documents and payment receipt are then returned to the webPAS to automatically update the patient’s account as paid.

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https://www.health.gov.au/resources/webinars/digital-transformation-tech-talk-6-december-2022

Digital Transformation Tech Talk – 6 December 2022

Join us for our last Tech Talk for 2022 to preview the Aged Care Transformation Program’s upcoming policy roadmap demo the new Star Ratings solution, and to hear an update from our partners in the Australia Digital Health Agency (ADHA).

Date published: 

17 November 2022

Type: Webinar

Audience: Health sector

Webinar date : Tuesday, December 6 2022 2:00 pm to 3:30 pm AEDT

Webinar link: Register

Presenters

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

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https://swsphn.com.au/news/digital-health-november-update/

Digital health resources and events update

17 November 2022

The Australian Digital Health Agency has provided a resources and events update.

Highlights in this edition include:

  • Digital health – test your knowledge of electronic prescriptions
  • New My Health Record in Community Health eLearning module
  • New education sessions on:
    • Community Health Digital Health Foundations Series
    • Digital Health Foundations Series
    • Emergency Access
    • My Health Record for Health Workers – Series 1
    • Pharmacy Technicians and Assistants – getting to know Electronic Prescriptions and the Active Script List
    • Practice Managers – getting to know Electronic Prescriptions and the Active Script List
    • What you need to know about Assisted Registration

Download the update

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https://itwire.com/government-tech-news/technology-regulation/accc-fines-the-three-largest-internet-service-providers-for-$33-5-million-for-misrepresenting-internet-speed-connection.html

Monday, 14 November 2022 20:11

ACCC fines the three largest internet service providers for $33.5 million for misrepresenting internet speed connection

By Kenn Anthony Mendoza

The Federal Court has ordered that the largest internet service providers—Telstra, Optus, and TPG Telecom—need to pay penalties amounting to $33.5 million after each companies admitted false and misleading representations when promoting certain NBN internet plans, according to the ACCC.

The ACCC has directed Telstra, Optus, and TPG Telecom to pay $15 million, $13.5 million, and $5 million respectively for breaching the Australian Consumer Law.

The three largest telecoms made misleading statements in relation to their 50Mbps or 100Mbps fibre to the node (FTTN) plans.

Telstra, Optus, and TPG Telecom promised to respond within a reasonable timeframe to consumers if the speeds they were paying for was not achieved. The telcos offered consumers options including a move to a cheaper plan with a refund if they were not enjoying their current internet speed.

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/technology/tpg-moves-to-woo-customers-away-from-nbn/news-story/1643b20b42e42d17fba7fe34982eb728

TPG moves to woo customers away from NBN

David Swan

11:01PM November 16, 2022

Australia’s third-largest telecom provider, TPG, is launching a blitz for new 4G and 5G fixed wireless customers, offering half-price access across all of its brands for six months in a bid to entice users away from the NBN and on to its network.

The deal – timed to coincide with Black Friday online sales – means new customers can gain access to 5G fixed wireless for $30 a month, which is less than the wholesale cost to access the NBN for similar tier plans.

In TPG’s half-year results, the company announced it had signed up 113,00 customers nationally and is on track to reach its full-year target of 160,000.

As The Australian previously reported, the NBN is facing a slide in demand as retailers ramp up the sales pitch on cheaper, faster 5G offerings.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/nbn-trials-first-poi-on-wheels-network-disaster-recovery-unit-587798

NBN trials first PoI-on-Wheels network disaster recovery unit

By Kate Weber on Nov 15, 2022 12:00PM

Trialling in the Victorian town of Traralgon.

NBN Co is testing its first transportable point-of-interconnect (PoI), which can be deployed during emergency situations in the Victorian town of Traralgon.

The semitrailer has been since late October, to test its capacity to restore critical broadband connections during natural disasters.

NBN Co executive general manager, network management Darren Mills said “this is the first trial of this type we have done in Australia”, and forms part of its national emergency and disaster preparedness plans.

There are a total of 121 PoI’s serving 8.5 million customers, providing customer traffic concentration for retail service provider networks.

Mills said the trial is testing the equipment's performance, and whether it can operate at the rest of the NBN PoI sites.

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Enjoy!

David.

Monday, October 31, 2022

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 31 October, 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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Basically it Leaks first and daylight second. Amazing mess to say the least!

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https://www.hospitalhealth.com.au/content/facility-admin/news/federal-budget-2022-23-health-highlights-214486868

Federal Budget 2022–23 health highlights

Wednesday, 26 October, 2022


The Albanese government has delivered its first budget, with $104.1bn overall spending committed to health and $30.6 billion on aged care.

A $2.9 billion package will drive a revamp of Australia’s primary healthcare system. “Medicare will be strengthened, reaffirming its integrity and intent as a cornerstone of the health system,” said Mark Butler MP, Minister for Health and Aged Care, in a statement.

The government will set up 50 Medicare Urgent Care Clinics with an aim to reduce the pressure on the hospital system.

“A $235m funding from 2022–23 will support the commencement of the rollout, including $100m over 2 years from 2022–23 to co-develop and pilot innovative models with states and territories to improve care pathways and inform the urgent care program rollout. “A new GP grants program will provide a much-needed boost to local GP practices and improve care ($229.7m).”

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/aged-care-lands-312m-for-it-modernisation-586951

Aged care lands $312m for IT modernisation

By Ry Crozier on Oct 25, 2022 10:13PM

Budget commits to improvements sought by Royal Commission.

Australia’s aged care administration has emerged as a major winner in the first Labor government budget, with $312.6 million over four years to be spent on IT modernisation.

The funding is the single largest chunk of a four-year, $540.3 million commitment “to improve the delivery of aged care services” and respond to the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety’s findings.

The commission, which handed down its findings in March 2021, recommended sweeping changes to IT systems in the sector, as well as a focus on adopting digital technology to improve resident care and wellbeing.

“The new aged care system will need to be supported by an information and communications system that is vastly evolved from the systems that exist now,” the final report stated. [pdf]

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/it-modernisation-dominates-tech-spend-in-budget-2022-23-586963

IT modernisation dominates tech spend in Budget 2022-23

By Ry Crozier on Oct 26, 2022 6:42AM

All the winners.

The Labor government’s first budget was billed around “building a better future” and included sizable investments for IT modernisation in aged care, education, and veterans’ affairs.

Aged care represents one of the largest slices of funding, with $312 million flowing to much-needed IT modernisation in the sector, an issue raised in 2021’s Royal Commission.

Modernisation is also on the cards at the Department of Veterans’ Affairs, with $87 million over two years to be spent on improving “the administration of the claims processing system and improving veterans’ services.”

“This measure will enhance ICT systems, including MyService and myGov to better support veterans and their families,” the government stated.

“This measure also supports the development of business cases to replace and modernise at risk legacy ICT systems.”

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/anz/australia-modernise-aged-care-it-new-budget

Australia to 'modernise' aged care IT with new budget

It is delivering on reform promises made following the recommendations of the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission.

By Adam Ang

October 26, 2022 01:37 AM

The Australian government is investing A$312.6 million (around $200 million) over four years to improve the ICT systems in the aged care sector.

It is part of the A$3.9 billion ($2.5 billion) 2022-2023 October budget for implementing aged care reforms to "improve safety, dignity, quality and humanity." 

WHY IT MATTERS

According to Health Minister Mark Butler, the ICT modernisation budget will help reduce the administrative burden for over 2,000 providers and sustain the existing operations of the My Aged Care system, which helps connect senior folks to government-funded aged care services.

THE LARGER CONTEXT

An industry survey conducted in June by the Aged Care Technology Consortium revealed a lack of digital system implementations across the aged care sector.

The Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety also noted in its 2021 report that the aged care sector is "deeply analogue" and "well behind" other sectors in the use and application of technology. Of the 148 recommendations forwarded to the federal government, 126 were accepted, including 30 that are ICT-related. The October budget is delivering on some of these accepted recommendations.

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https://www.ama.com.au/ama-rounds/28-october-2022/articles/plan-released-help-healthcare-workers-skill-digital-world

Plan released to help healthcare workers up-skill for a digital world

Published 27 October 2022

The ADHA and AIDH released a new plan to deliver digital health capability across the health workforce.

The Australian Digital Health Agency (ADHA) and the Australasian Institute of Digital Health (AIDH) have released the Capability Action Plan, which is designed to support Australia’s health workforce to continue to develop the skills they need to deliver the best care for Australians in an increasingly digital world.

The plan identifies the priority actions that are needed to ensure the workforce can respond to the needs of consumers, now and in the future. It includes frameworks, guidelines, resources and tools identified through previous work and details ongoing sector consultation to equip Australia’s health workforce for a connected, digitally enabled future.

Read the National Digital Health Capability Action Plan.

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https://www1.racgp.org.au/newsgp/professional/data-changes-flagged-for-hundreds-of-general-pract

Data changes flagged for hundreds of general practices

Significant changes to the way MedicineInsight data from almost 700 general practices is overseen lie ahead, with an opt-out deadline next week.

Jolyon Attwooll

27 Oct 2022

Hundreds of general practices are yet to open an email outlining significant changes affecting the management of data for MedicineInsight, a nationwide quality improvement program.
 
The program was developed and managed by NPS MedicineWise, the not-for-profit organisation currently responsible for stewarding the quality use of medicines (QUM) in Australia.
 
Around 650 general practices participate, with each providing de-identified primary care data. They all have a MedicineInsight practice agreement with NPS MedicineWise.
 
However, NPS MedicineWise will close at the end of this year and responsibilities for the data are due to transfer to the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care (ACSQHC).
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https://www.cesphn.org.au/news/latest-updates/5664-cancer-institute-of-nsw-updated-toolkit-now-available

Cancer Institute of NSW Updated Toolkit now available

The Cancer Institute of NSW is proud to launch its updated Primary Care Cancer Control Quality Improvement Toolkit. 

Enhancements include:

  • An online quality improvement toolkit - easy to navigate with consistent look and feel - we listened to your feedback
  • Manageable steps your practice can take that will - save you time, improve your cancer screening participation rates and reduce cancer risk among your patient population
  • Go directly to a specific cancer screening or prevention module, choose an area of focus, use quick reference guides to guide your approach, find QI activities and patient resources
  • Open as much or as little information as you need from the drop down menus, with four key elements across each module – patient centered, team approach, quality improvement and data and systems

CESPHN is promoting the new Tool Kit at a CPD event on 21 November at 7.30 pm. The Cancer Institute of NSW will walk us through the new Toolkit and Telstra Health will show how the National Cancer Screening Register (NCSR) can help improve cancer screening in your practice.  We also have Dana Tse, a local Practice Manager, sharing her tips on Cancer Screening and QI.

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/anz/st-john-god-health-care-turns-cloud-manage-16000-workforce

St John of God Health Care turns to cloud to manage 16,000 workforce

It will adopt the Workday HCM with an aim to enhance staff retention.

By Adam Ang

October 27, 2022 03:50 AM

St John of God Health Care seeks to simply staff experience by bringing its human resource system to the cloud.

The not-for-profit healthcare organisation runs 27 public and private health facilities across Australia and New Zealand, including 17 hospitals, disability services, mental health facilities, home nursing, and other clinical specialties.

As part of its human resource transformation, the healthcare provider will be adopting Workday Human Capital Management (HCM), which will be implemented across its organisation by its partner, KPMG. 

Through this cloud platform, St John of God Health Care will be able to manage its workforce throughout their career cycle; forecast future skills and identify gaps; track and manage diversity and inclusion; and systematically engage and connect with staff and monitor their well-being.

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https://www.afr.com/companies/financial-services/medibank-says-more-customers-hit-by-cyberattack-20221025-p5bsl9

Medibank says main brand and more AHM customers hit by cyberattack

Ayesha de Kretser Senior Reporter

Oct 25, 2022 – 8.59am

Australia’s biggest health insurer says it now has evidence that customers of its core Medibank brand health insurance have been caught up in a widening data breach and criminals have stepped up extortion demands after providing another 1000 customers’ details.

“It has become clear that the criminal has taken data that now includes Medibank customer data, in addition to that of AHM and international student customers,” it said in a statement on Tuesday.

The embarrassing admission comes after Medibank spent the last week-and-a-half telling the market it was confident the issue -- which involves the most sensitive health data and personal information -- was contained to its cheaper AHM-branded insurance and international students.

It also told the government within 48 hours of the first activity being detected on October 12 that no data had been taken from its systems, leaving big question marks over the quality of its cyber defences.

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https://www.afr.com/companies/financial-services/medibank-lashed-for-poor-communications-minister-stays-quiet-20221021-p5brwn

Medibank lashed for poor communications, minister stays quiet

Ayesha de Kretser and Paul Smith

Oct 24, 2022 – 5.00am

Medibank should have been clearer from the start that customer data could have been stolen, experts say, as pressure builds on the health insurer to reveal what it knew about the ransom attack and when, and invest more in its cyber defences.

On Friday, Medibank chief executive David Koczkar said again that the health insurer had no idea its customers’ data was sitting in the hands of criminals until it was contacted to pay a ransom.

Medibank entered a trading halt the day after discovering the cyber threat and told the market it had “no evidence to suggest that any sensitive data, including customer data, has been accessed”, leaving many customers – and the market – to conclude that everything was fine.

Mr Koczkar again defended Medibank’s handling of the matter, saying its focus had been on what it knew, rather than revealing the extent of what was unknown to its 3.8 million members.

“I guess the challenge with being transparent and timely is that there are things that you don’t know, so we’ve been very clear saying ‘this is what we do know’,” he told The Australian Financial Review on Friday.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/gov-invokes-emergency-coordination-as-medibank-breach-worsens-586965

Gov invokes emergency coordination as Medibank breach worsens

By Richard Chirgwin on Oct 26, 2022 9:15AM

Insurer now says all Medibank, ahm, international student customers breached.

The government has invoked a Covid-era response mechanism, bringing together federal, state and territory agencies to coordinate on the worsening Medibank data breach.

Minister for cyber security Clare O'Neil said the national coordination mechanism (NCM) was activated on Saturday.

The activation came as Medibank announced that the attackers who breached its ahm and international student systems had provided a file which demonstrated compromise of customer records under its main brand as well.

Since yesterday's announcement, Medibank has announced that the data breach affects personal data and "significant amounts of health claims data" of all ahm, international student, and Medibank customers.

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https://itwire.com/business-it-news/security/medibank-says-all-3-9m-customers-could-be-affected-by-data-breach.html

Wednesday, 26 October 2022 10:17

Medibank says all 3.9m customers could be affected by data breach

By Sam Varghese

Medical insurer Medibank Group says all of the 3.9 million customers of its main business could now be assumed to be affected by the theft of data, even as it prepared for a resumption of trading.

In a statement on Wednesday, the company said it expects to spend up to $35 million on non-recurring costs due to the network attack it has suffered, not including potential customer and other remediation or legal costs.

"This cyber crime event continues to evolve and at this stage, we are unable to predict with any certainty the impact of any future events on Medibank, including the quantum of any potential customer and other remediation, regulatory or litigation related costs," the company said.

When it first announced its systems had been breached, it said there was no indication of any sensitive data having leaked. Later, Medibank said the data stolen was limited to ahm and international students.

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https://itwire.com/business-it-news/security/medibank-says-my-home-hospital-also-hit,-pii-and-health-data-accessed.html

Thursday, 27 October 2022 17:11

Medibank says My Home Hospital also hit, PII and health data accessed

By Sam Varghese

The next instalment of the Medibank Group data breach has arrived, with the company confessing on Thursday that patient information from My Home Hospital had also been accessed by an attacker.

My Home Hospital is a joint venture between Calvary and Medibank implemented on behalf of Wellbeing SA and the South Australian Government.

Medibank said in a statement that personal information and some health data had been accessed. No further details were provided, but given the current trend there may be more to come on Friday.

It added that it was unsure whether the data had been stolen, but was sure it had been accessed. A spokesperson said the JV had had about 4400 patients since it began operations in 2021 and all were assumed to be affected.

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https://www.afr.com/technology/health-lab-hacked-medicare-numbers-posted-on-dark-web-20221027-p5btdk

Medicare numbers posted on dark web after health lab hack

Jessica Sier Journalist

Oct 27, 2022 – 10.14am

Australian Clinical Labs has said the health records and credit card information of about 223,000 patients and staff in its Medlab Pathology business were stolen in a cyberattack in February and then posted on the dark web.

On Thursday morning, ACL said the breach affected customers mostly across NSW and Queensland, and included more than 17,500 individual medical and health records, over 28,000 credit card numbers and individuals’ names, as well as more than 128,600 Medicare numbers.

“To date, there is no evidence of misuse of any of the information or any demand made of Medlab or ACL,” the company said, adding that the compromised Medlab server had been de-commissioned. ACL’s broader systems and databases were unaffected.

The breach is the latest in a series of attacks on Australian businesses. Medibank data was compromised last week and telecommunications giant Optus suffered a breach that saw 9.8 million customer details stolen.

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/companies/pathology-giant-australian-clinincial-labs-which-owns-medlab-hit-by-cyber-hack/news-story/02df8328345e4cae6f627c8c65ec26fd

Pathology giant Australian Clinical Labs, which owns Medlab, hit by cyber hack

Valerina Changarathil

October 27, 2022

Pathology services giant Australian Clinical Labs will only now start contacting its 223,000 staff and customers, mainly in NSW and Queensland, potentially impacted by a cyber attack at its Medlab Pathology business in February.

Shares in the $715m business are down more than 11 per cent to $3.14 in opening trade.

ACL, which bought Medlab in December, said on Thursday that the “notifiable cyber incident” involving personal information of some of Medlab’s patients and staff occurred in February.

But a thorough forensic investigation was only launched after June following repeated warnings by the Australian Cyber Security Centre, including of customer data being available on the dark web.

The disclosure follows cyber attacks at Optus, Medibank and Woolworths’ MyDeal.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/medlab-pathology-discloses-february-data-breach-587030

Medlab Pathology discloses February data breach

By Richard Chirgwin on Oct 27, 2022 11:22AM

Some 223,000 people impacted, records include credit card numbers with CVVs.

Medlab Pathology has disclosed a February data breach affecting 223,000 individuals, mostly in NSW and Queensland.

Its ASX-listed owners, Australian Clinical Labs (ACL), said [pdf] that Medlab "became aware of an unauthorised third-party access to its IT system in February 2022."

ACL said it "immediately coordinated a forensic investigation led by independent external cyber experts" into the incident but "did not find any evidence that information had been compromised.”

The Australian Cyber Security Centre (ACSC) learned of the incident - said to be ransomware - in March, and in June alerted ACL to the appearance of a "highly complex and unstructured" Medlab dataset appearing on the dark web.

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https://itwire.com/business-it-news/security/pathology-practice-medlab-reveals-data-breach-after-nine-months.html

Thursday, 27 October 2022 16:09

Pathology practice Medlab reveals data breach after nine months

By Sam Varghese

Almost nine months after it experienced what it terms a "cyber incident", private pathology practice Medlab Pathology has issued a statement about the incident in which Medicare details and credit card numbers of staff and patients were stolen.

The "cyber incident" appears to have been a Windows ransomware attack. The statement was made in the name of chief executive Melinda McGrath.

Medlab is owned by Australian Clinical Labs which acquired the former in December 2021; it has operations in NSW and Queensland. The breach occurred in February 2022.

The statement said it had begun notifying those affected on Thursday.

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https://www.ausdoc.com.au/news/major-pathology-provider-revealed-as-latest-hack-victim/

Major pathology provider revealed as latest hack victim

Australian Clinical Labs says 20,000 medical records and 130,000 Medicare numbers were stolen

Antony Scholefield

28 October 2022

Australian Clinical Labs, one of the country’s biggest private pathology companies, has revealed that 20,000 patient records from its subsidiary Medlab were leaked online earlier this year.

Another 130,000 Medicare numbers and 28,000 credit card numbers linked to patients were also revealed, although the company stressed that more than half of the credit cards were expired and just 3400 included the CVV code.  

It is the third leak of Medicare numbers in quick succession, following major breaches at Optus, which used them for identity verification; and Medibank Private.

The Federal Government is still scrambling to work out whether millions of patients should be reissued new Medicare numbers. 

Australian Clinical Labs (ACL) announced the breach in an ASX announcement on Thursday.

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/anz/data-over-200000-patients-staff-affected-medlab-hack

Data of over 200,000 patients, staff affected by Medlab hack

Their information had also been posted on the dark web.

By Adam Ang

October 28, 2022 12:17 AM

Around 223,000 patients and staff have been affected by a cyberattack on Medlab Pathology in February.

This is based on findings from a forensic investigation launched by ASX-listed private pathology services provider Australian Clinical Labs (ACL), which acquired the pathology laboratory late last year. 

The hacked data includes about 17,500 medical and health records associated with a pathology test, over 28,000 credit card numbers, and around 128,000 Medicare numbers. Affected individuals were said to be mostly confined to NSW and Queensland.

However, ACL noted that there is "no evidence of misuse" of any of the information nor is there any demand made of Medlab and ACL.

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https://www.hinz.org.nz/news/621484/Interim-Health-Plan-identifies-importance-of-digital-tools.htm

Interim Health Plan identifies importance of digital tools

Thursday, 27 October 2022  

NEWS - eHealthNews.nz editor Rebecca McBeth

New Zealand’s interim Health Plan – Te Pae Tata – says digital tools will make an important contribution to improve efficiency, outcomes and equity of outcomes in health services.

The new plan has been developed by Te Whatu Ora – Health New Zealand and Te Aka Whai Ora – Māori Health Authority and replaces 20 different district annual plans. It is designed to begin transformation while a full-scale plan is developed.

Te Pae Tata says Te Whatu Ora will grow the opportunities for people to use digital tools to access and use their health information, make appointments, receive phone and video consultations and use equipment to monitor their health at home.

“Access to health information, self and remote monitoring empowers people, whānau and communities to better manage their own health and wellbeing,” it says.
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https://www.hinz.org.nz/news/620430/Whanau-Consumer-and-Clinician-Digital-Council-EOI-released.htm

Whānau, Consumer and Clinician Digital Council EOI released

Tuesday, 25 October 2022  

NEWS - eHealthNews.nz editor Rebecca McBeth

Te Whatu Ora has released an expression of interest for the new Whānau, Consumer and Clinician Digital Council, saying it “will provide a link between the Te Whatu Ora Data and Digital executive and clinicians, consumers, whānau, hapori and communities.”

The organisation is seeking expressions of interest for members, who will ultimately “help shape data and digital technologies to improve health outcomes across Aotearoa”.

An EOI document says the group will provide advice and recommendations to the chief data and digital and report to them and other executive leadership teams and board committees.

Interim chief data and digital, Stuart Bloomfield, told attendees at the Digital Health Summit in Wellington in September that the new group will advise on and prioritise the many clinical data and digital projects being worked on nationwide, ensuring they “fit into an overall, cohesive and smarter system”.

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https://www.timeshighereducation.com/unijobs/listing/314457/research-fellow-faculty-of-medicine-health-and-human-sciences-/

Research Fellow, Faculty of Medicine, Health and Human Sciences

Recruiter  MACQUARIE UNIVERSITY - SYDNEY AUSTRALIA

Location  North Ryde, Australia

Salary  $97,621 to $104,622 (Level A step 6-8) plus 17% superannuation and annual leave loading

Posted  27 Oct 2022

End of advertisement period 18 Nov 2022

Ref  R000008897

Academic Discipline Clinical, Pre-clinical & Health, Medicine & Dentistry, Other Health & Social Care

Job Type  Academic Posts, Research Fellowships, Postdocs

Contract Type  Fixed Term

Hours  Full Time, Part Time

  • Salary Package: $97,621 to $104,622 (Level A step 6-8) plus 17% superannuation and annual leave loading
  • Appointment Type: Full or part-time fixed term, until June 2024 (possibility of extension)
  • Location: Macquarie University (North Ryde)

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/privacy-act-amendments-land-in-parliament-586975

Privacy Act amendments land in parliament

By Richard Chirgwin on Oct 26, 2022 10:18AM

Privacy breach fines could exceed $50 million.

The federal government has introduced amendments to beef up the Privacy Act.

Foreshadowed earlier this month following the Optus data breach, the amendments were introduced to the House of Representatives this morning by Attorney General Mark Dreyfus.

As promised, the amendments include higher fines for serious privacy breaches; a strengthened notifiable data breaches scheme; enhanced enforcement powers for the Australian Information Commissioner; and greater information sharing arrangements.

“The novel privacy challenges posed by the rise of digital platforms and the unprecedented volume and variety of data that these platforms collect from users underscores the importance of reforming our privacy laws,” Dreyfus said.

The current $2.2 million fines available to the Australian information commissioner are inadequate, with Dreyfus echoing statements by commissioner Angelene Falk that the fines must be more than “simply the cost of doing business”.

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https://wildhealth.net.au/werribee-mercy-implements-mybeepr-to-enhance-clinical-communication

12 October 2022

Werribee Mercy implements myBeepr to enhance clinical communication

Hospital Sponsored

Werribee Mercy implemented myBeepr to support clinical staff in their day-day workflow and chose the platform following its successful implementation at Western Health.

myBeepr is a cloud-hosted, enterprise, bespoke clinical collaboration platform. It has become a standout performer in the clinical collaboration space with 16 hospitals implementing myBeepr in the past 18 months. The platform has consistently achieved >90% uptake and engagement amongst doctors across all implementations, with hospitals choosing myBeepr to be a core part of their long-term digital strategy.

myBeepr is backed by Avant Mutual, Australia’s largest medical indemnity provider for doctors, and allows clinical staff to conduct role-based messaging, transmit secure clinical photos and can be used as a LAN-paging replacement. It can be integrated with hospital systems such as EMR, PAS and Radiology. The platform also allows hospitals to connect with GPs and specialists in the community, connecting acute and primary care.

Werribee Mercy Hospital implemented myBeepr organisation wide with the medical, surgical, anaesthetics, emergency, O&G and pharmacy departments going live first. The organisation formed a dedicated working group led by myBeepr’s customer success team and the main objectives of the rollout were to mitigate social media use at work, reduce the reliance on LAN-paging for non-urgent communication and provide a unified method of communicating and sending clinical photos. In the first 6 weeks of go-live, there was a >90% uptake, with >23,000 messages read, 50 care team groups created and 4,700 clinical photos shared.

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https://www.hospitalhealth.com.au/content/facility-admin/news/evolt-360-strengthens-health-data-security-956942000

Evolt 360 strengthens health data security

Wednesday, 26 October, 2022


In the wake of recent high-profile cyber attacks, health monitoring technology company Evolt 360 has undertaken extensive auditing and documentation of processes to ensure best practices are followed to prevent, detect and repair any threats and vulnerabilities to data security.

The health-tech organisation has also completed the ISO/IEC 27001 certification as part of an ongoing commitment to meeting the highest global information security standards.

The audit activities included verifying the effectiveness of the company’s hardware, software, networks and physical facilities, testing processes and controls in place to manage incidents and ensuring staff are adequately vetted and trained on delivering services securely.

In announcing the new status, Kelly Weideman, Chief Innovation Officer of Evolt, said, “As recent high-profile cyber incidents have demonstrated, all companies large and small are susceptible to data breaches.

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https://itwire.com/business-it-news/security/claroty-strengthens-cabrini%e2%80%99s-medical-security-capabilities.html

Wednesday, 26 October 2022 12:24

Claroty strengthens Cabrini’s medical security capabilities

By Kenn Anthony Mendoza

Medical technology service provider Cabrini has picked healthcare clinical device data security and integration platform Medigate by Claroty to enhance its specialised biomedical managed services portfolio and add critical medical device cybersecurity capabilities to address the growing threats within healthcare environments.

The partnership between Medigate and Cabrini addresses device safety and security, threat detection and remediation, and device efficiency optimisation, marrying industry expertise across technology, people, and process.

Medigate collaborates with device manufacturers and delivers insights that provide visibility into the manufacturers’ remediation process directly within the platform.

As a result, biomedical teams can plan and optimise resource allocation and maintenance windows well in advance.Medigate by Claroty is a modular, SaaS-powered healthcare cybersecurity platform that scales to protect the extended internet of things (XIoT) across healthcare environments, which includes all IoMT, OT, IoT and IT systems.

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https://www.hospitalhealth.com.au/content/technology/news/mixed-reality-3d-hologram-technology-used-in-surgery-248397864

Mixed reality 3D hologram technology used in surgery

Wednesday, 26 October, 2022


Digital holograms are an emerging tool in operating rooms across the globe. Dr Travis Falconer, a specialist shoulder and elbow surgeon at Hollywood Private Hospital, WA, used a HoloLens mixed reality headset during surgery.

Mixed reality is the merger of real and virtual worlds with enhanced immersion and interaction.

Falconer was able to see a 3D hologram of the surgical plan over the patient’s anatomy in real time, which allowed him to use the planning software and refer to data analysis during surgery. By using hand gestures and voice commands, he was able to interact with the holographic objects.

The aim of using mixed reality techniques is to enhance precision and simplify complex surgeries. Being able to refer to the surgical plan during surgery provides another layer of checks and balances for surgeons.

Falconer said he was proud to be selected by medical technology company Stryker to trial the new medical technology in WA.

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MEDIA RELEASE Monday 24 October 2022

Dr Elizabeth Deveny confirmed as CHF CEO

Consumers Health Forum of Australia (CHF) is pleased to announce that Dr Elizabeth Deveny has been appointed to the role of Chief Executive Officer.

Dr Deveny was appointed Interim CEO on 22 August and has impressed CHF’s board of directors with her deep understanding of, and networks within, the health sector.

“It is clear that Elizabeth has the drive, vision and skills to raise CHF’s profile in the health sector and amplify the voice of the consumer at all levels,” Board Chair Tony Lawson said.

“We are delighted that she has accepted the role of CEO on a permanent basis. She has already made great strides towards engaging our key stakeholders and beginning the conversation about how we ‘hard wire’ the voice of consumers in all policy and healthcare decisions,” he said.

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OAIC publishes digital health report

The OAIC has published the Annual report of the Australian Information Commissioner’s activities in relation to digital health 2021-22.

The report provides information about digital health activities led by the OAIC, including our assessment program, handling of My Health Record data breach notifications, development of guidance material, provision of advice and liaison with key stakeholders.

This was the 10th year of operation of the My Health Record system and the 12th year of the Healthcare Identifiers Service, a critical enabler for the My Health Record system and digital health generally.

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Telehealth video psychiatry return a step in the right direction, still more to be done

Lived Experience Australia

Lived Experience Australia (LEA) welcomes the Government’s announcement of restoring bulk billed Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) psychiatry services delivered by video telehealth to rural and regional Australians.

This decision will benefit the 28% of Australians who live outside metropolitan cities, who have experienced many challenges in accessing even basic health care and mental health care for decades. These challenges have contributed greatly to poorer health outcomes across multiple areas of concern for people living in rural areas. 

However, it doesn't address the need for those in metropolitan areas who experience similar affordability and access issues, by virtue of their circumstances at home (for example, family violence, isolation, social exclusion, stigma and discrimination when seeking service support). These people would benefit greatly from the same level of telehealth access and support.

In August 2022, LEA partnered with the National Association of Practising Psychiatrists (NAPP) in a joint submission to the Health Ministers, raising our concerns from a lived experience perspective about the cessation of the Medicare item 91840 – a longer consultation delivered by telephone. In that submission, LEA provided several testimonials from those with lived experience of mental ill-health describing how this telephone consultation was not only vital in averting further crisis and potential hospital admission, but was for some the only practical way of connecting with safety and reliability.

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https://www.innovationaus.com/wa-launches-5m-regional-health-innovation-challenge/

WA launches $5m regional health innovation challenge

Brandon How
Reporter

26 October 2022

To bolster innovation in regional health solutions, the Western Australian government has launched a $5 million global competition to innovate on healthcare delivery in the Pilbara.

And on the other side of the country, Victoria’s startup agency, LaunchVic, has invested $3.1 million across three commercialisation programs. These are run by digital health incubator ANDHealth, global venture capital firm Antler, and ClimateTech community Climate Salad.

Western Australian Minister for Emergency Services, Innovation and ICT, and Medical Research Stephen Dawson launched ‘The Challenge’ at the opening of the AusBiotech conference on Wednesday. The prize money is being jointly funded through the state’s Future Health Research and Innovation Fund alongside mining conglomerates BHP and Rio Tinto.

Participants from across the world are invited to participate, although expressions of interest will only open from February 1 next year. A shortlist of successful applicants will be given a $100,000 grant and progress to the 12-month proof of concept stage, which requires a demonstration of early-stage impact.

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Special Announcement: 26 October 2022

ANDHealth and LaunchVic Partner on new $1.4M Digital Health Accelerator

ANDHealth, Australia’s leading digital health commercialisation organisation, has successfully secured $1.4M in funding from LaunchVic to establish a novel accelerator program for high-growth potential digital health startups.

The ANDHealth Activate program, backed exclusively by LaunchVic, will provide a nine-month curriculum-based program to support Victorian digital health companies to become investment and enterprise-customer-ready.

The program will be run out of the Victorian Connected Health Innovation and Commercialisation Centre (CHICC) in Melbourne, which ANDHealth received $2.4M from the Victorian Government in September to establish. ANDHealth Activate and other programs run out of CHICC will see ANDHealth support over 600 participants, create 100 new jobs, initiate more than 50 new clinical studies, and give over 400,000 patients access to emerging health technologies over the next five years.

ANDHealth CEO and Managing Director, Bronwyn Le Grice, welcomed the investment, “The combined $3.8M investment by LaunchVic and the Victorian Government’s Australian Medtech Manufacturing Centre and Biotechnology Fund is one of the most significant investments into the commercialisation of Victoria’s digital health sector to date.

“We are excited to be able to offer the ANDHealth Activate program, which will support high-growth digital health companies to navigate the complex commercialisation pathway in evidence-based digital health. Participants will benefit from a dedicated training and co-working facility, and access to the expertise of national and international executives in residence.”
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Special Announcement: 28 October 2022

ANDHealth Establishes Beachhead to Grow and Scale WA Digital Health Companies

ANDHealth, Australia’s leading digital health commercialisation organisation, has today launched the WA Connected Health Commercialisation Initiative, in collaboration with the WA Life Sciences Innovation Hub, a partnership with MTPConnect, the WA Government Department of Jobs, Tourism, Science and Industry, and the University of Western Australia.

Announced at Australia’s national life sciences conference, AusBiotech, by Minister for Emergency Services; Innovation & ICT; Medical Research; Volunteering, the Hon Stephen Dawson MLC, the Initiative is designed to build the capability of WA digital health companies and continue WA’s trajectory to become a global destination for digital health innovation and commercialisation. 

Under the Initiative, ANDHealth will deliver a “turbocharged” pilot of its targeted commercialisation programs to the WA digital health sector. Companies will have access to global and national digital health expertise through ANDHealth’s BRIGHT Ideate & Innovate programs, a series of expert workshops and one-on-one coaching sessions, alongside the establishment of a dedicated ANDHealth program office in WA.
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https://www.digitalhealth.gov.au/careers/it-support-analyst-aps4aps5-multiple-roles

IT Support Analyst APS4/APS5 Multiple Roles

APS4 ($84,807 - $89,609), APS5 ($90,901 - $98,303)
Technology Services Division > Info/Comm Tech (ICT)
Brisbane, Canberra, Sydney

Closing - 6 Nov 2022

Division Overview 

Technical Services Branch – responsible for the evolution and operation of Agency’s business applications/systems and information technology; the engineering of external-facing and internal-facing products and systems across web, mobile, api, data and analytics technologies, and associated cloud and on-premises infrastructure and networking; and the build and reliability processes and technologies to ensure the quality, trust, reliability, and security in our products and systems.

Primary Purpose of Position

The Agency is seeking suitability qualified IT Support Analysts, who are passionate about delivering consistent excellence and who are client focused, agile and solutions-based thinkers, to join our Technology Services Division.  

Seeking APS level 4 and APS Level 5 workers, these roles provide fantastic opportunities for candidates at all levels of their career; from just graduated and seeking to grow their experience, to seasoned IT Support Analyst who are looking for career progression, or just a new work home to showcase their skills. 

As an IT Support Analyst, you will be required to work as part of a high performing Division within a complex environment. The major responsibilities of these roles will include organising activity workflow, conduct investigations, and undertake procedural, administrative support or operational tasks. You will also be accountable for the IT Service Desk, User Support and Basic Administration for the Agency’s Business Applications/Systems, End User Computing, and other related technology.

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https://itwire.com/it-industry-news/telecoms-and-nbn/nbn-co-deploys-fibersense%e2%80%99s-solution-to-detect-and-prevent-accidental-damage-to-its-fibre-cable-network.html

Thursday, 27 October 2022 09:18

NBN Co deploys FiberSense’s solution to detect and prevent accidental damage to its fibre cable network

By Kenn Anthony Mendoza

FiberSense is supplying its sensing solution in a joint initiative with NBN Co to discover new ways to monitor and prevent accidental damage to the NBN fibre cable network.

NBN Co is deploying the FiberSense DigitalAsset sensing services in a three-month trial to detect certain vibrational frequencies on fibre along with artificial intelligence to determine whether the activities causing vibrations are likely to cause accidental damage.

“The demonstration will apply our patented software-based sensing portfolio to provide early warning and incident detection notifications that might impact critical infrastructure like the nbn from third party deliberate or accidental damage. Our DigitalAsset sensing service helps mitigate the impact of these all too-common events—especially cable cuts,” said FiberSense founder and CEO Dr Mark Englund.

“We are excited to understand how advanced optical monitoring and diagnostic technologies like those offered by FiberSense can provide additional levels of insight into the types of field activities that might be detected and how the response process could work when these activities get dangerously close to NBN network assets. It could mean fewer unplanned outages due to accidental damage and help ensure we are keeping homes, communities and businesses connected,” commented NBN Co chief technology officer Ray Owen.

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/budget-2022-cash-injection-reboots-nbn-restores-fullfibre-version/news-story/dd7e2b886a37a080fd16fa1e4fc9651b

Budget 2022: Cash injection reboots NBN, restores full-fibre version

David Swan

7:11PM October 25, 2022

The National Broadband Network will receive a $2.4bn equity injection to deliver full-fibre access to 1.5 million premises, with the government set to roll out ultra-fast internet to regional and outer-suburban homes and businesses across the country.

The network, which faced ­ballooning demand during the pandemic as Australians worked and studied from home, will deliver speeds of up to one gigabyte per second to at least 10 million premises – about 90 per cent of Australia’s population – by 2025.

The project has served as a political football for virtually its entire existence. The NBN’s original blueprint under then-Labor prime minister Kevin Rudd more than a decade ago was to deliver a fibre connection to every premise, a plan later nixed by the Liberal government, which moved to a ­cheaper multi-technology mix that could be rolled out more quickly.

The new Labor government has moved to restore its original full-fibre vision for the NBN, and has ruled out privatising the network for the foreseeable future.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/nbn-co-tests-service-to-detect-accidental-fibre-damage-586885

NBN Co tests service to detect accidental fibre damage

By Richard Chirgwin on Oct 25, 2022 11:39AM

Senses vibrations near cables.

NBN Co is conducting lab trials of a system designed to raise an alarm before third-party damage to fibre can occur, which could lead to fewer unplanned outages.

The network operator is conducting a three-month trial of a service called DigitalAsset from FiberSense.

The system detects vibrations at particular frequencies along the fibre, and uses AI to decide whether there are nearby activities that might cause accidental damage to a fibre.

It is being tested at an NBN Co test facility and on a fibre path in Melbourne.

“We are excited to understand how advanced optical monitoring and diagnostic technologies like those offered by FiberSense can provide additional levels of insight into the types of field activities that might be detected and how the response process could work when these activities get dangerously close to NBN network assets," NBN Co CTO Ray Owen said.

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/the-times/mystery-deepens-over-the-universe-expanding-too-fast/news-story/8bba816fd112025ac3468067f47e925c

Mystery deepens over the universe expanding too fast

By Kaya Burgess

The Times

October 24, 2022

The fabric of space in the universe is expanding at more than 160,000 miles per hour, according to the most precise study ever of the composition and evolution of the cosmos.

The measurement has deepened one of the biggest mysteries in astrophysics because it is faster than the expansion rate predicted by scientific models, suggesting that scientists may need to rewrite their understanding of how the universe has evolved since the big bang.

Scientists leading the Pantheon+ analysis observed super-bright supernovae dotted round the universe. Just as a police car’s siren appears to drop in pitch as it moves away from you, the light from distant stars and galaxies becomes redder as they speed away. By analysing the extent of this “redshift”, astronomers can calculate how fast they are moving away and therefore how quickly the universe is expanding.

In our region of the universe, this rate of expansion – the Hubble constant – has been measured at 73.4 km/sec per megaparsec, a term denoting 3.26 million light years, or 19 billion billion miles. Put another way, if two points in space are 19 billion billion miles apart, the distance between them is growing by 160,000 miles per hour.

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Enjoy!

David.