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."

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Useful and Interesting Health IT Links from the Last Week – 11/05/2008

Again, in the last week, I have come across a few reports and news items which are worth passing on.

These include first:

Keeping updated at the hospital

New technology at Washington facility puts staff in touch instantly

Sunday, May 04, 2008

By Gretchen McKay, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Post-Gazette
Donna Koss-Bradish, R.N., wears a Vocera badge while filling out paperwork at a nurses station.

It happens in even in the best of hospitals. A loved one is in surgery, but you don't dare leave the waiting room for even a quick cup of coffee for fear of missing an update on how the operation is going. Or maybe you're on the other end of the health-care visit; a patient who's been waiting for what seems like forever for a doctor to answer a page so the nurse can adjust your medication or help you out of bed for a shower.

Frustrating on both accounts, to be sure. But that's the lay of the land when you're in a hospital, right?

Well, not at The Washington Hospital.

Last month, the 265-bed community hospital started using an innovative science fiction-like wireless voice communications system that allows doctors, nurses and other healthcare professionals to instantly connect to one other with a simple tap of a button. And unlike other new technologies that typically take time to be accepted, it was an immediate hit.

More here:

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/08125/878328-58.stm

As a fan of ‘Star Trek’ since forever I just love how this idea has worked and seems to be so easily adopted.

Second we have:

Kaiser Outpatient EHR Rollout Complete

HDM Breaking News, May 5, 2008

Oakland, Calif.-based Kaiser Permanente has completed the implementation of an outpatient electronic health records system for its 8.7 million members.

The payer and provider organization began the HealthConnect initiative in 2004 to integrate electronic records across all of its regions. Now its 13,000 physicians have access to patient records across 421 medical offices. Kaiser used a number of applications, including clinical software from Epic Systems, Verona, Wis., to build the records.

So far, the records system has enabled the organization to increase its efficiency of outpatient care, company executives say. For example, an internal survey revealed medication administration times and doses are now 85% more legible and correct. Additionally, after the 2007 wildfires in San Diego prompted the organization to temporarily close some of its facilities, it used the system to contact patients to direct them to other facilities, which also could access their records through the application.

More here:

http://www.healthdatamanagement.com/news/EHR_integrated26226-1.html?ET=healthdatamanagement:e392:100325a:&st=email&portal=group_practices

This is an amazing achievement. It shows that it is possible to provide really advanced computing, that we know can make a difference, at very considerable scale. Sure it is maybe slightly more expensive than a traditional view may recommend – but if this is what it takes we need to work out how to fund such initiatives.

Already 1/3 of their 30 hospitals are also operational with all to be implemented by the end of 2009. The benefits that are achieved will be fascinating to follow over the next couple of years. Fortunately Kaiser Permanente have a strong record in the analysis of such issues.

Extra details are found here: Healthcare IT News

Third we have:

Hospital ICT deathly ill

Doug Travis
May 6, 2008
Next

There are myriad problems in the delivery of much-needed infrastructure.

Picture an average Australian office in the 1970s. There were typewriters and card indexes but most of our work was done with a pen and paper or on the phone.

In the 21st century we can't survive without technology. Email allows us to communicate instantly with people around the world and the internet offers endless information. For most of us, this networked, computer-assisted workplace is the norm. Except in our public hospitals.

We spend billions of dollars a year on public hospitals, yet the infrastructure is so poor, some computers at a Victorian hospital still operate on MS-DOS and can't even support the use of a mouse.

Two recently-released reports have revealed serious problems with information systems and support in our public hospitals.

In releasing a report on HealthSMART, Victoria's whole-of-health ICT strategy, the state auditor-general found that the six-year, $323 million plan was running two years late and that the most beneficial clinical applications had yet to be delivered.

The delay in implementing HealthSMART is in part due to the lack of basic IT infrastructure in our public hospitals. In order to build high-quality ICT systems, we need a solid IT base. Other IT problems are outlined in the ministerial review of Victorian public health medical staff, which found: "Clerical workload, poor information systems, absence of clinical support and decision-making systems, poor access to computers and computers being slow and obsolete were a common complaint and a major source of frustration of medical staff at all levels."

More here:

http://www.smh.com.au/news/case-studies--profiles/hospital-ict-deathly-ill/2008/05/05/1209839551682.html

Dr Doug Travis is president of the Australian Medical Association (Victorian Branch).

It seems pretty clear that not only is HealthSMART moving a little too slowly but the provision of even the most basic IT infrastructure is not up to scratch. As I said a week or two ago – a mid project review could be a very good idea to get the balance right.

It is good to see that in last week’s budget some extra funding was made available

http://www.businessspectator.com.au/bs.nsf/Article/Victoria-injects-104m-into-troubled-health-project-EDT8Z?OpenDocument

Victoria injects $104m into troubled health project

Source - The Australian Financial Review

Fourthly we have:

Private files put on street for all to read

Matthew Moore Freedom of Information Editor
May 6, 2008

PLASTIC wheelie bins full of confidential documents were left outside Rozelle Hospital in a last-minute rush to move the hospital to its new site at Concord.

Staff records, including details of criminal convictions and personal medical histories, were jammed into the bins along with minutes of meetings and disciplinary proceedings.

A letter lying at the top of one of the bins details an altercation in January 1991 between a cleaner and his supervisor, who had asked him to clean some windows.

"Mr A [name deleted] … threw a garbage tin of rubbish on the ground and also said he would kill Mr S … [name deleted]," an exasperated manager notes.

Other documents detail the property staff members have failed to return over decades.

Records from the Child Support Agency detailing maintenance deductions the hospital was required to make for individual employees are also included in the thousand of pages of personal documents.

More here:

http://www.smh.com.au/news/national/private-files-put-on-street-for-all-to-read/2008/05/05/1209839554244.html

Oh dear! Yet again paper records get a bit lost. Electronic records sceptics really need to be reminded from time to time just how insecure paper records can be.

Fifth we have:

FAQ: What you should know before installing Windows XP SP3

Microsoft finally gives everyone a shot at XP's final service pack

Gregg Keizer 08/05/2008 08:28:21

After a week-long delay to take care of a last-minute compatibility bug, Microsoft Tuesday gave the green light to Windows XP Service Pack 3 (SP3).

The service pack, undoubtedly the last for the aged operating system, was released Tuesday to Windows Update as an optional upgrade, and standalone executables were added to Microsoft's download servers.

To paraphrase -- and, at the same time, contradict -- Winston Churchill, although this isn't the end of Windows XP, it's certainly the beginning of the end. But we come not to bury XP, but to praise it -- and to answer a few last-minute questions now that it's really, truly, yes-indeed available to anyone who wants it.

More here:

http://www.computerworld.com.au/index.php/id;225579528;fp;;fpid;;pf;1

Given that the vast majority of Windows users are currently using Win XP it seemed worthwhile to alert readers to the new service pack and provide a reference to what is planned.

Sixth we have:

http://www.euractiv.com/en/health/denz-eu-ehealth-strategies-connected-reality/article-172170

Denz: EU eHealth strategies 'not connected to reality'

Published: Tuesday 6 May 2008

The EU's top-down agenda setting on eHealth strategy is not connected to reality, argues the European Health Telematics Association (EHTEL) in an interview with EurActiv.

Dr. Martin Denz is the president of the European Health Telematics Association.

What is telemedicine and what is its relation to eHealth, as we generally just hear about eHealth? Is telemedicine about the delivery of health care whereas eHealth is more the overall infrastructure?

eHealth is as much about policy framework as it is about a large scale infrastructure and a precondition to apply health care with modern tools. Telemedicine or telehealth is about implementing health care on the ground by using modern tools.

The vast majority of EU countries have eHealth strategies but they are absolutely not connected to the healthcare delivery reality.

The UK National Health Service's (NHS) multi-billion - officially £9 billion but more than £20 billion in real terms - project on the informatisation of health care, for example, is great but completely driven by politicians and business engineers and now, as they want to spread it out to health professionals, they have a very turbulent landing phase.

Telemedicine is just about reconnecting the top-down process with the bottom-up. The whole eHealth activity is on track. We have done the right activities, we have accomplished a marvellous agenda setting but results show that we now urgently need to reconnect health care. Because health care is healthcare delivery and activities between healthcare professionals and patients.

Continue reading here:

http://www.euractiv.com/en/health/denz-eu-ehealth-strategies-connected-reality/article-172170

Dr Denz makes some interesting points and the full article is well worth a read.

Second last we have a MicroSoft announcement about their Microsoft Health Common User Interface (MSCUI)

Version 1.3 of Microsoft Health Common User Interface (MSCUI) announced.

I am very pleased to announce that release V1.3 of the Microsoft Health Common User Interface (MSCUI) has been released to the web on www.mscui.net and http://www.codeplex.com/mscui.

MSCUI provides User Interface Design Guidance and Toolkit controls that address a wide range of patient safety concerns for healthcare organizations worldwide, allowing a new generation of safer, more usable and compelling health applications to be quickly and easily created.

This offering is aimed at user interface designers, application developers and patient safety experts who want to find out more about the benefits of a standardized approach to user interface design.

This is the third release of MSCUI since we launched in July 2007. In that time we have seen over 115,000 unique visitors to the site, 11,000 downloads of the Design Guidance and 7,000 downloads of the Toolkit. In March 2008, following HIMSS08, we averaged 61 toolkit downloads a day and in April we averaged 17 downloads a day. With the new features launched in V1.3 we expect to see further growth.

There are 5 key elements to this new release:

We are announcing a new Technology Strategy moving to Silverlight 2 and Windows Presentation Foundation for all future controls, samples and demonstrators.

Publication of an interactive Delivery Roadmap outlining what guidance and controls we will be developing, when and how the community can engage.

Publication of new and updated Design Guidelines.

Publication of a new Medications Listview control for Silverlight 2 and WPF.

Launch of a new Patient Journey Demonstrator which showcases CUI design guidelines, controls and future UI concepts in a Silverlight 2 application

The Microsoft Health Common User Interface: Patient Journey Demonstrator is a rich internet application demonstrating a health care scenario across primary and secondary care settings. We have used Silverlight to create an application that shows our vision of how we see clinical systems working in the near future, providing scalable, transformable, rich views on patient data. The demonstrator also implements design guidance and controls from www.mscui.net, ensuring that patient safety and clinical effectiveness is at the heart of the design.

Some of the things we have used from Silverlight include...

· Deep zoom to view complex ECG (electrocardiogram) data

· Intelligent, scaling layout

· Data-binding everywhere

· Animation and media

· Vector graphics enabling real time manipulation of chart data

----- End Release.

This is important work to try and provide user interfaces that really assist in patient safety and ease of use. The UK NHS is a key partner in the work.

Last we have:

Pan-European SOS project about local interoperability

07 May 2008

Ambitious plans to develop the e-health services to create an interoperable cross-European patient record summary and e-prescribing record were revealed yesterday as a Trojan horse to drive local interoperability, by one of the leaders of the project.

The Smart Open Source (SOS) project, which so far involves 12 European member states and 31 suppliers, is a complex European Commission project designed to create the services to support cross-border interoperable records across Europe.

SOS, details of which are still under wraps while negotiations continue, is the largest multi-national e-health project ever attempted in Europe.

The three year project is designed to create open source-based e-health services that can be used to create a pan-European patient record summary including e-prescribing and medication details. Once created benefits would include a patient from Sweden on holiday in Spain if prescribed a new drug would automatically have their family doctor notified.

More here:

http://ehealtheurope.net/news/3727/pan-european_sos_project_about_local_interoperability

This seems like an interesting initiative. Maybe NEHTA could review the project and its plans to see what value it could add to the Australian e-Health scene.

More next week.

David.

Thursday, May 08, 2008

The US Starts to Really Build its National Health Information Network.

Two items appeared in the last few days showing that we are starting to really see some substantive progress with the National Health Information Network (NHIN).

First we have just had the following conference:

HIN-HISPC-SLHIE Joint Conference: Fostering Partnerships to Advance Health Information Exchange

The Joint Conference includes participants from three Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) led contracts: the Nationwide Health Information Network (NHIN), the Health Information Security and Privacy Collaboration (HISPC), and the State Level Health Information Exchange Consensus Project (SLHIE). For three days representatives from each of these contracts will share the stage, their knowledge, and expertise.

  • NHIN – As a key element of the national health information technology strategy, the advancement of the NHIN initiative will provide the foundation for interoperable, secure and standards-based health information exchange nationally.
  • HISPC – As a collaborative effort of more than 40 states and territories, the HISPC is focused on developing common, replicable multi-state solutions to the privacy and security challenges states and territories face nationwide with respect to electronic health information exchange.
  • SLHIE – Lead by a steering committee of thirteen state HIE leaders and supported by a broader forum of states, the SLHIE project is developing guiding principles for state-level HIE organizations in the areas of policy, sustainability and accountability.

The Joint Conference will:

  • Enable cross-project discussion of important topics pertinent to each effort including consumer permissions, HIE policies, and sustainability;
  • Advance discussions and develop clarity on how the trial implementations are addressing key aspects of standards-based, private and secure information exchanges via the NHIN;
  • Enlist public input and share experiences from state and regional health information exchanges as they implement and test trial implementations of the NHIN;
  • Discuss how the work of Healthcare Information Technology Standards Panel (HITSP) and the Certification Commission for Healthcare Information Technology (CCHIT) are being used to inform the NHIN trial implementations;
  • Showcase the privacy and security approaches states and territories are taking to protect health information that is electronically exchanged; and
  • Provide participants with a venue to share ideas and discuss solutions to electronic health information exchange challenges.

The Joint Conference will be open to the public and includes plenary and concurrent breakout sessions.

More here:

http://www.dhhs.gov/healthit/healthnetwork/forums/

Second we have more technical details becoming clear

Project Details

Leaders of the NHIN Connect project said the connection would support six core services:

  • Subject discovery, or patient identification;
  • Document query;
  • Document retrieval;
  • Retrieval of an audit log;
  • Messaging; and
  • Authorization.

David Riley, program manager of NHIN Connect, said ONC and its contractor, Harris, are solidifying service specifications, and they will implement standards endorsed by the Health IT Standards Panel.

In order to interface with a variety of legacy systems in the participating federal agencies and support the agencies' different health information needs, the gateway will use Java and XML technology and a service-oriented architecture, Craig Miller, chief architect for the project, said.

See more here:

http://www.ihealthbeat.org/articles/2008/5/1/ONC-Aims-for-Open-Flexible-Link-to-Health-Data-Network.aspx?topicID=54

and third we have further extension and funding announced.

Six more organizations join NHIN demonstration project

By Nancy Ferris

Published on May 1, 2008

The Office of the National Coordinator (ONC) of Health Information Technology has awarded six more contracts to health systems and health information exchanges for participation in this year’s work to develop a nationwide health information network.

The organizations, which together will receive about $600,000, join more than a dozen other health organizations in the trial implementation phase of NHIN. The project is scheduled to demonstrate live exchange of health records Sept. 28.

That demonstration will not use real health records because of concerns about accidental release of information. The remainder of this year will be devoted to preparations for exchange of actual records for use in health care in 2009.

The nine organizations that won ONC contracts earlier, a group of federal agencies that use health records, and the new organizations are working collaboratively to resolve the technical, security and operational issues associated with large-scale health information exchange.

Dr. John Loonsk, director of ONC’s Office of Interoperability and Standards, told a conference audience in Dallas today that the project participants represent a variety of organizations and missions. “We are embracing them all in the NHIN,” he said.

More here:

http://www.govhealthit.com/online/news/350338-1.html

It is really starting to look like the initial vision that David Brailer had, to create a 'Health Internet', and the work done by all the various participating entities might be starting to pay off.

We have reached the time when we really need to ‘watch this space’!

David.

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

Now Here is a Really Fabulous Idea!

I came upon this press release during the week. If ever there was an example of Web 2.0 in health this is it!

iGUARD.ORG ALTERS THE FACE OF E-HEALTH

NEW WEB SERVICE DRAWS 10,000 NEW PATIENTS WEEKLY

First and Only Site Allows Patients to See How Drugs Actually Work in Real People

Princeton, NJ, April 30, 2008 – Today, iGuard.org, a free, patient-driven online healthcare community, announced the launch of an innovative new tool that brings patient empowerment to a new level. With almost half of all Americans taking prescription drugs, and eight out of ten surfing the web for their healthcare information, iGuard.org now lets users see real time reports of side effects experienced by iGuard.org members who have completed a brief survey on their medication experience. This is the first web service to give patients personalized drug information – giving them the knowledge and power they need to manage their own healthcare.

How is iGuard.org Different?

iGuard.org is now uniquely positioned to provide "live" updates on how medications are working by posting real-time reports of side effects as experienced by members. Unlike other health and drug-safety websites, which provide static content, re-written information found on package inserts, and forums for patient discussions, iGuard.org monitors how different drugs are working across its network of users by conducting random surveys on an on-going basis. Members of the community can easily access pooled, anonymous information on side-effects, safety and effectiveness so they know what to expect when starting a new treatment.

"iGuard.org was created for patients to share information in a simple, structured way. No other site out there has a balanced information exchange that "demystifies" the process, can give our users a level of comfort and arm them with the information they need to get informed and stay informed about their healthcare," said Dr. Hugo Stephenson, founder and creator of iGuard.org with a specialty in epidemiology and drug safety. "Since inception, the FDA has given us feedback and direction on how to improve our value to those patients. The release of this new data arms our patients with far more information than they've ever had before."

The site, which went online in October last year, has taken off with more than 10,000 new users signing up every week. Patients rely on the feedback they find on the site and often communicate that information to their personal doctors. "iGuard.org has been among the most valuable sites I've come across," said patient Mary Lou Sakosky of Troy, Ohio, who was diagnosed with several conditions including heart disease, bipolar disorder, Bell's palsy and thyroid disorders. "Without the site, I wouldn't have known about many of the side effects for the prescriptions I'm taking and everything I need is in one place. Thank God for iGuard.org."

Demystifying the Clinical Process

If patients want to learn about treatment options for their diagnosis, they can see at a glance the average effectiveness and satisfaction scores, the likelihood of side effects, and what additional information others wish they were told before starting the medication. According to feedback of iGuard.org patients taking a common pain medication to treat shingles and fibromyalgia, 70% experience side effects, including drowsiness, weight gain, grogginess and dizziness, and 45% wish they were told more about the potential side effects before starting the medicine. And among users of a new smoking cessation medication, 69% say they experience side effects, especially nausea and vivid dreams, and 28% wish they were told more about the potential side effects and potential drug interactions, prior to taking the medicine. Most physicians don't have this type of information readily available for their patients.

"It's crucial that patients receive accurate drug safety information, and iGuard.org is an outstanding source for that information," according to Joe and Terry Graedon, co-authors of the nationally syndicated The People's Pharmacy® newspaper column, and co-hosts of the award-winning health talk adio show, The People's Pharmacy®, that airs weekly throughout the ountry. "The site is easy to use and it takes complex information and makes it available to consumers. The combination of patient feedback and side effect analysis is hard to find anywhere else."

Helping the Scientific Community

Feedback obtained from the website extends beyond the patient to the scientific community. Rather than accept advertising or sell data, iGuard.org generates revenue by conducting surveys among the iGuard.org membership. Pooled results from these surveys allow companies to learn about improving drug research and development, as well as patient attitudes towards drugs already on the market. Patients must first consent to participate in a survey and are compensated for their time. "We feel very strongly that connecting real patients in the real world with drug researchers will allow us to learn about medicines much faster," stated Dr. Stephenson. "And in the end, isn't that what we all want?"

About iGuard.org

iGuard.org, headquartered in Princeton, NJ, is a free and secure source of information for registered users who want to get informed, stay informed and share feedback about their medications. It offers balanced and timely content to help patients manage their healthcare for themselves or loved ones. Registration is free online at iGuard.org.

The press release is found here:

http://www.iguard.org/help/news/preleases.html

I have nothing but admiration for the guys doing this – what a great idea! I hope they really can make enough money to make the service viable and sustainable.

As a test – and being ‘an old man on drugs’ I have registered and told it all about my drugs – the whole thing worked well and gave sensible and pragmatic advice. Nicely done indeed!

David.

Tuesday, May 06, 2008

What the Hell is Wrong with DoHA?

Just a very short blog.

Why – after almost six months – can’t the Commonwealth Department of Health sort out its web-site?

Seems to me if they can’t do this – and we keep being referred to the archive site something serious is wrong!

This banner has become just embarrassing!

“Material on the Department of Health and Ageing web site is being reviewed following the federal election on 24 November 2007. The department’s previous web site and its essential health and ageing information have been archived, but remain accessible here. This revised web site will reflect the new government's policies, programs and priorities for the health and ageing portfolio.”

See http://www.health.gov.au/ (as of March 6, 2008)

I fear this reflects a ministerial team that simply does not want to properly communicate with the public and has a very bad attitude to e-Health.

The public is entitled to an easy to use and navigate web site with all the relevant information!

How hard can it be to sort this out, and why has it not happened by now?

Inquiring minds would really like to know. It is getting to be annoying!

David.

Monday, May 05, 2008

NEHTA Needs to Follow This Example – Or Something Like It!

Canadian Infoway released this a few days ago.

Industry leaders form task force to align on electronic health record standards

May 1, 2008 - Focused on the acceleration of electronic health records, industry leaders from Canada Health Infoway (Infoway), Canadian Healthcare Information Technology Trade Association (CHITTA, the Health Division of Information Technology Association of Canada (ITAC)), and the Association of Health Technology Industry (AITS) announced today they have formed a task force to accelerate and promote the transition to a new set of pan-Canadian health information technology standards.

The task force will collaboratively work to promote the adoption of pan-Canadian standards, especially with point of service systems, by engaging clinicians, health care providers and vendors. Involving these stakeholders will support the planning required to ensure the interoperable electronic health record (iEHR) is leveraged and the adoption of pan-Canadian standards is accelerated.

"Time and again, we have seen the success of industries like the financial and consumer sectors drive faster end-user adoption through the implementation of standards," said Dennis Giokas, Chief Technology Officer, Canada Health Infoway. "With the aligned direction of our industry partners we can now work collaboratively to accelerate the deployment and use of these interoperability standards for the benefit of Canadians and the Canadian health care system."

Common standards are an integral element of, and a key requirement for, the establishment of a pan-Canadian interoperable electronic health record. Significant cost savings and quality improvements are achieved when custom integration is eliminated. Patients, clinicians and health service delivery organizations all benefit when data can be reliably shared across health care systems.

"We have been building health care systems using industry standards for over 20 years. Achieving full adoption of the pan-Canadian standards, and realizing the benefit of Canada's health infrastructure investments, is a multi-year journey until new products emerge and legacy systems are retired," said Brendan Seaton, President, CHITTA, the Health Division of Information Technology Association of Canada (ITAC). "Health information systems tend to be stable, so we will see a period where both existing and new standards are supported. We look forward to collaborating with health providers and Canada Health Infoway on developing solutions for this transition."

To enable the successful deployment of interoperable electronic health record solutions, the organizations support the use of: HL7 and DICOM for messaging, LOINC® and SNOMED CT® for terminologies, HL7's Clinical Document Architecture (CDA) for documents, HL7's Clinical Context Object Workgroup (CCOW) specification for clinical context management, as well as the pan-Canadian interoperability profiles.

"The transition to common, pan-Canadian standards allows us to achieve the highest quality in an interoperable electronic health record system. As an industry we are starting to see market demand for these new standards, and our members are making commitments to meet that demand. Success will come when we work together on this very complex challenge," said Daniel Laplante, Executive Director, AITS.

Canada is a strong contributor to the global acceleration of EHR standards through its unique collaboration model. Launched in 2006, the Standards Collaborative provides coordination, implementation, support, education, conformance and maintenance of electronic health record standards in Canada. One third of its members are representatives from health information technology companies.

About Infoway

Infoway is an independent, not-for-profit organization funded by the Federal government. Infoway jointly invests with every province and territory to accelerate the development and adoption of electronic health record projects in Canada. Fully respecting patient confidentiality, these secure systems will provide clinicians and patients with the information they need to better support safe care decisions and manage their own health. Accessing this vital information quickly will help foster a more modern and sustainable health care system for all Canadians.

About CHITTA

CHITTA, the Canadian Health Information Technology Trade Association, is the Health Division of ITAC, the Information Technology Association of Canada. CHITTA represents more than 120 companies across Canada that provide information and communications technology (ICT) products and services to the health sector. CHITTA represents the Industry to governments and health care decision-makers for the purposes of building a strong and sustainable health ICT industry in Canada, promoting investment in health ICT, and ensuring the interoperability of health ICT systems.

About AITS

Created in 1987 and representing over 100 members, the Association of health technologies industry's (AITS) mission is to stimulate the development of the health technologies industry and to promote its economic and social value. AITS is a meeting place for exchanges between partners on domestic and foreign markets.

The press release is found here.

http://www.infoway-inforoute.ca/en/News-Events/InTheNews_long.aspx?UID=315

While being more than prepared to admit getting together the various actors in the Canadian e-Health space might be a bit on the late side the same is certainly true in Australia.

With the departure of the old NEHTA CEO there is a space where an initiative of this sort – involving the various relevant actors would make a huge practical difference.

From all I am hearing the new Acting CEO is likely to see the sense in taking steps to seriously re-engage and to re-build. We can all do without a repeat of the ‘old NEHTA’ style of engagement (and the associated angst) It would good make sense that a new initiative would involve different people to lead the engagement process, from the NEHTA side, to make it clear change – as was identified as being needed by the BCG report – as actually on foot.

What might be a good idea is a mini 2020 style summit where all the actors get together and consider the papers produced by HISA, the Coalition for e-Health (CeH), AHHA and so on to devise a pragmatic, practical way forward.

The membership of the CeH is very broad and so it would form an ideal engagement conduit.

Members include:

Consumers & Patients

Cancer Voices

Choice - Australian Consumers Association

Consumers' Health Forum of Australia

Leukaemia Foundation of Australia

NSW Cancer Council

Health Colleges, Societies & Associations

AAPP - Australian Association of Pathology Practices

AACB - Australian Association of Clinical Biochemists

ACHI - Australian College of Health Informatics

ACHSE - Australian College of Health Service Executives

ACRRM - Australian College of Rural and Remote Medicine

ADIA - Australian Diagnostic Industry Association

AGPN - Australian General Practice Network

AHHA - Australian Healthcare and Hospital Association

AMA - Australian Medical Association

ASM - Australian Society of Microbiology

APS - Australian Psychology Society

HIMAA - Health Information Managers Association Australia

NCOPP - National Coalition of Public Pathology

RACGP - Royal Australian College of General Practitioners

RACMA - Royal Australian College of Medical Administrators

RANZCR - Royal Australian New Zealand College of Radiology

RCNA - Royal College of Nursing Australia

RCPA - Royal College of Pathologists of Australasia

Informatics Societies, Associations & Research Units

ACS - Australian Computer Society

AEEMA - The Australian Electrical and Electronic Manufacturers' Association

AIIA -Australian Information Industry Association

ANCC EH - Australian National Consultative Committee on e-Health

CSIRO

Engineers Australia

HISA - Health Informatics Society of Australia

HIPS - Health Information Privacy & Security

MSIA - Medical Software Industry Association

Melbourne University

Monash University

NIA - Nursing Informatics Australia

Sydney University

University of NSW

Standards Development & Testing Organisations

AHML - Australian Healthcare Messaging Laboratory

ACHS - Australian Council on Healthcare Standards

HL7 Australia

IHE - Integrating the Health Enterprise

OpenEHR

Standards Australia

National Pathology Accreditation Advisory Council

For all our sakes we need effective engagement between the Standards providers and the Standards users that means each gets what is needed out of the work the other does to the benefit of all.

A no brainer really – and way too long coming. The time is now right and I believe the stars are aligned!

David.

Sunday, May 04, 2008

Useful and Interesting Health IT Links from the Last Week – 04/05/2008

Again, in the last week, I have come across a few reports and news items which are worth passing on.

These include first:

Brailer's Health Evolution Partners makes its first investment

By Bernie Monegain, Editor 04/28/08

Health Evolution Partners, the investment management firm founded by the nation's former national healthcare information technology chief, has made its first investment - an undisclosed amount - in e-prescribing company Prematics.

As a result of the funding, David J. Brailer, MD, will join Prematics board of directors.

Brailer, founded Health Evolution Partners in 2007 after he resigned from his post as national coordinator for healthcare information technology, appointed by President Bush.

Health Evolution Partners Innovation Network (HEPIN) led the Series B round of funding.

"The time is right for investing in electronic prescribing," Brailer said. "We looked at numerous ways for Health Evolution Partners to enter this market, and Prematics was by far the best choice. We have committed the financial resources and expertise that Prematics needs to be the nation's leading electronic prescribing company."

More here:

http://www.healthcareitnews.com/story.cms?id=9112

A report on the value and utility of e-prescribing is found here:

http://www.healthevolutionpartners.com/eprescribing_Outlook_0428.pdf

It is interesting to the Dr David Brailer invest in e-prescribing. He clearly thinks these approaches have a big future.

Second we have:

Patient identifier key to health system reform

29-Apr-2008

By Megan Howe

The development of a unique patient identifier is absolutely essential to achieve successful reform of the Australian health system, according to a peak lobby group, which claims the government’s e-health body is floundering.


Releasing three position papers calling for wide-ranging reform of the health system, the Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association (AHHA) said a unique patient identifier was the “most important undertaking which underpins all other recommendations, requiring immediate implementation”.

AHHA policy project officer Ms Cydde Miller said privacy concerns about the patient identifier needed to be addressed, but without its introduction, reform was impossible.

“We can’t do large-scale population health analysis and find out what is going on with the health of Australians [without it],” she said.

“People are mobile and to have one national patient identifier will reduce the amount of work clinicians do because they can go into the system and get a full medical history from everyone.”

The association criticised the government body charged with developing the nation’s e-health system, the National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA).

“The AHHA is concerned that progress in Australia on improving information within and about the health system has been waylaid by a lack of focus and direction in the national work program led by NEHTA. Due to a range of impeding factors, this process is struggling to maintain the engagement of all necessary partners in such a significant undertaking,” it stated.

Continue reading here if you have access:

http://www.australiandoctor.com.au/articles/fb/0c055ffb.asp

It is good to see the professional press picking up some e-Health suggestions. The full documentation is found here:

http://www.aushealthcare.com.au/publications/publications_by_group.asp?id=3

Third we have:

Austin Health completes phase one of rollout under HealthSmart program

System currently used by 400 staff

Sandra Rossi 30/04/2008 12:29:56

Victorian health care provider, Austin Health, has just completed phase one of a HR rostering and payroll system that has reducing processing time by 70 per cent.

The workforce planning and management system, which was first piloted last year and is currently being used by 400 employees, is being rolled out under the Victoria government's HealthSmart program.

This system will be integrated with other HealthSmart systems across the state.

The standardised platform from Kronis Incorporated provides award interpretation, time and attendance, employee pay conditions and rostering.

In coming weeks Austin Health will begin the second phase of the project to automate roster generation.

The generation process will take into account both employee requests and skills to meet clinical and patient care requirements.

Austin Health's HR systems project manager, Leslie Bell, said the system reduces the amount of time taken by line managers to prepare and manage rosters and by payroll staff to process pay.

"The system has reduced the time required to enter the data for payroll processing by 70 per cent, and reduced the errors and warnings by delivering accuracy in excess of 99.5 per cent, which was unheard of previously," Bell said.

"All the payments made to employees in the pilot areas have been checked and verified, with the system exceeding expectations."

More here:

http://www.computerworld.com.au/index.php?id=1855751830&eid=-6787

It is good to see HealthSMART is having some success. Of course it is very early to claim success with only 400 staff being paid by the system – given the number of staff in the Victorian Health System. As an example there are 6,000 doctors and 30,000 nurses in the Vic Public Health System. Again, while important, we see success with administrative systems when what is really needed is clinical system success.

Fourthly we have:

Hospital worker 'sold celeb details'

From correspondents in Los Angeles

April 30, 2008 08:51am

Article from: Agence France-Presse

US federal prosecutors have charged a former employee of a Los Angeles hospital over selling information from celebrities' medical files to the media.

Lawanda Jackson, 49, was an administrator at UCLA Medical Centre, which recently announced it had taken action against several staff for peeking at the private records of singer Britney Spears and actress Farrah Fawcett.

She was indicted on April 9 for "accessing the private medical records of celebrity patients at the UCLA Medical Centre and selling information obtained from those files to a national media outlet," the prosecutor's office said.

More here:

http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,23621512-23109,00.html

Good to see such behaviour is taken seriously in the US. We must be alert to make sure there are sufficient disincentives in place in Australia as well.

Fifth we have:

Cancer Council drops legal action

By Drew Cratchley and Rosemary Desmond

April 28, 2008 05:19pm

Article from: AAP

THE fight against cancer in Queensland is set to benefit after the Cancer Council Queensland and the State Government ended a dispute over access to case records.

The council announced today it was dropping a Supreme Court action it launched earlier this month against Queensland Health in which it sought routine access for researchers to statistics from the Queensland Cancer Registry.

The Council wanted better access for researchers to analyse data and assess the effectiveness of cancer screening and prevention programs. The Government had resisted the request due to concern over possible breaches of patient privacy.

But last week Queensland Health Minister Stephen Robertson said the Government had received updated legal advice that the release of the information would not breach the Public Health Act.

More here:

http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,23610935-29277,00.html

It is good to see this silliness resolved with sanity prevailing.

Sixth we have:

How Personal Health Records Could Make Care Less Efficient

Posted by Jacob Goldstein

High hopes are afoot for personal health records, online homes where patients can store their medical information to take from doctor to doctor and keep track of things like prescriptions and test results. Microsoft and Google, among others, are jumping in the patient-controlled record pool.

But on a visit to Health Blog HQ yesterday, Steve Leiber — who runs Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society, the trade group for health IT — pointed out a potential downside to the patient-centric records.

“Physicians aren’t going to trust it,” he said.

That could be trouble if patients opt for the personal records and try (because of privacy concerns, say) to keep their medical information off of a doctor or hospital’s electronic medical record.

Patients could show up and hand over their memory stick or a Internet address for the files, but doctors on the receiving end might be wary of believing what the records says. “It’s outside a protected chain,” Leiber says. “The second doctors are going to repeat those tests.”

Still, he said, there are potential benefits to the approach. Many trips to the emergency room would go much more smoothly if the patient or a family member could direct the ER staff to a record that lists a patient’s allergies and current meds.

And they could work as a complement to (rather than substitute for) electronic medical records kept by doctors and hospitals. “I see you’ve been seen for X,” a doctor might say to a patient after reviewing his or her personal electronic files, Lieber said. “May I contact this practitioner [to get your medical record]?”

Continue reading here:

http://blogs.wsj.com/health/2008/04/25/how-personal-health-records-could-make-care-less-efficient/?mod=WSJBlog

This blog triggered a useful set of comments that are well worth reading by those interested in the potential of the PHR.

Last we have:

Technology that saves children's lives

Teleconferencing paired with medical diagnostic equipment helps save children's lives worldwide

Mary K. Pratt 29/04/2008 09:38:24

Frank Brady expects to celebrate a significant milestone in June: His Medical Missions for Children charity will treat its 30,000th child that month.

That's an impressive record for the nine-year-old nonprofit organization, which connects leading US doctors with doctors and their pediatric patients all over the world.

MMC uses telecommunications technology and other IT tools to bridge gaps in knowledge, treatment and geography. The organization has created what it calls the Global Telemedicine & Teaching Network to enable US-based doctors to consult with foreign pediatric physicians through a distance-medicine network called the Telemedicine Outreach Program so they can help diagnose and treat children worldwide. Technology also has allowed MMC to expand its services to include educational content for health care providers and patients in multiple countries.

"MMC fulfills a host of health- related needs throughout the world," says Alberto Salamanca, the Mexico-based president of MMC's Latin America region. "Technology has proven to be the most important tool to carry the mission and vision of MMC."

In some ways, Brady, 65, has spent his whole life readying himself for this mission. After he contracted spinal meningitis as a 1-year-old, the doctors told his parents that their son had only three weeks to live. But a week later, they suggested trying penicillin -- at the time, an experimental drug that hadn't been tested on pediatric patients.

The treatment worked, convincing Brady's mother that the boy was spared so he could do something special with his life. Brady's path thereafter wasn't unusual. He spent most of his 35-year career working in international business.

More here:

http://www.computerworld.com.au/index.php?id=929483641&eid=-255

This is a heart-warming story to start the week with. Good to see some real successes with telemedicine and good to see how some initiative can have it happen. Well worth a read!

More next week.

David.

Thursday, May 01, 2008

The Risks of the Cut and Paste!

This interesting editorial appeared in the recently.

Electronic records prone to error, docs write in New England Journal of Medicine

By Bernie Monegain, Editor 04/17/08

Electronic health records could be a tool for perpetuating errors, warn two Harvard physicians in an article published Thursday in the New England Journal of Medicine.

The physicians urge their colleagues to take an unvarnished look at EHRs even as they are championed by President Bush and companies like Microsoft and Google.

The article, written by Pamela Hartzband, MD, and Jerome Groupman, MD, who both work at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston and teach at Harvard Medical School, outlines the pitfalls of using electronic records. It is published along with other articles on EHRs.

One of the major problems with EHRs, the authors say, is that they invite users to cut and paste information. While some information has to be repeated, and cutting and pasting can seem efficient, it also can compromise accuracy.

"Many times, physicians have clearly cut and pasted large blocks of text, or even complete notes, from other physicians; we have seen portions of our own notes inserted verbatim into another doctor's note," the authors write. "This is, in essence, a form of clinical plagiarism with potentially deleterious consequences for the patient. "

The impetus for this type of wholesale cutting and pasting into the record is usually to pass scrutiny for billing, they say.

More here:

http://www.healthcareitnews.com/story.cms?id=9081

On the basis that many readers will have access to the full text – the reference is as follows.

Off the Record — Avoiding the Pitfalls of Going Electronic. Pamela Hartzband, M.D., and Jerome Groopman, M.D. New England Journal of Medicine Volume 358:1656-1658 April 17, 2008 Number 16.

One really has to worry about some editorialists.

It seems pretty clear to me what their main concern is that some clinicians will use the technology to create unreliable and un-thought through clinical notes.

Well I have some news for them. In the old days of written records there was widespread use of both clinical note templates – of the type being cited here - and the widespread use of abbreviations and shortcuts to minimise the effort of note taking and record keeping. It was just as possible then as now to keep the mind in neutral.

There is nothing new under the sun as the saying goes.

As an example, it was always a toss-up as to whether the widely used abbreviation N.A.D. meant No Abnormality Detected or Not Actually Done!

The solution here, as it is in so many other situations, is education combined with basic common sense and a recognition that in-accurate documentation is a risk to both the patient and the clinician’s career.

This editorial would have been greatly improved by an emphasis on clinical responsibility in record keeping rather than being a whinge about the misuse of ‘cut and paste’!

David.

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

A Few of the Wrinkles of the Shared Electronic Health Record.

A really interesting article and more than one useful comment came to my attention a few days ago. The topic was an issue close the heart of your blogger – just how complex and hard it might be to make a shared EHR actually work in the real world.

Does Lorenzo mean the end of GP electronic patient records?

15 Apr 2008

GP computing has been one of the great success stories in patient care and the use of IT in the NHS.

Since its earnest start in the early 1980s, GP records have gone from paper based narratives held in A5 Lloyd George envelopes to fully interactive records, capable of handling the complexities of modern patient care, including the Quality and Outcome Framework (QoF) used for performance related pay and its central reporting mechanism, Quality Management and Analysis System (QMAS).

Without the universal use of electronic GP records throughout the UK, neither the targets introduced in 1990, nor the 2003 new General Medical Services contract, would have been achievable.

In the North, Midlands and East (NME), the area where Computer Sciences Corporation (CSC) is the Local Service Provider (LSP) under the National Program for IT (NPfIT), CSC is planning to introduce Lorenzo, which is understood to incorporate GP records, by 2010.

At present, CSC are supporting TPP SystemOne as their official alternative GP solution, with a view to incorporating it fully into Lorenzo by 2010.

Managing shared records

A great deal has been written about access to medical records held centrally, including the Summary Care Record (SCR) and the risks of unauthorised access. However, as far as I am aware, little or no attention has been paid to the management of the record itself. Has full consideration been given to the management of how such shared records should be arranged?

Lorenzo is planned as an early manifestation of the SSEPR (Single Shared Electronic Patient Record), defined as “a single electronic patient record for each individual patient used by, and contributed to by, all the organisations caring for that patient”, and scheduled to be introduced within two years.

Regardless of the access controls (and who controls access permissions), there are problems in managing a SSEPR which should concern everyone – and for which at present, I believe, no-one is claiming responsibility.

According to board minutes, Yorkshire and the Humber SHA is currently introducing a new shared record system to local NHS organisations, using a GP system with an integrated community module. The approach used within the TPP SystmOne SSEPR is understood to only let records be amended by whoever made the original entry.

The rationale for this is that the record also belongs to the organisations outside the general practice and only the organisation making the entry can change it: GPs can alter GP entries, community can change community entries and so on.

But using shared records that can only be amended by the service that made the original entry may present some worrying hazards.

Take the example of the patient who is sent to chiropody and returns with a diagnosis of diabetes mellitus, which the GP knows to be wrong; the entry on the records can then only be amended by the service that made the wrong diagnosis originally.

Currently Diabetes Mellitus gets picked up quickly thanks to the searches developed for QOF, and it is expected that patients with the diagnosis have the disease and should be managed appropriately.

Much more (and at least 8 comments) here:

http://www.ehiprimarycare.com/comment_and_analysis/309/does_lorenzo_mean_the_end_of_gp_electronic_patient_records_tcq

This is really a very important discussion as it raises the complexities and questions that sit beside the choice to develop a Shared EHR.

Among these questions are:

1. Does it make sense to deploy a Single Shared EHR (SSEHR) with all the patient information held in a single record – or is it more sensible to share just extracts as envisaged in HealthConnect? As soon as you go down the latter path you face the question of what data you hold where and how access to the detail is controlled.

2. Who is the owner of the record given it is built up from the contributions of many? This then leads on to all the questions about who can edit, change etc and how much trust can be placed in the record. There are also real medico-legal issues that arise as soon as any actual editing of the record becomes possible – if indeed it is permitted.

3.What access should each professional class have to the information in the record. Is there any value in having the pharmacist know about an abortion that was carried out 30 years ago?

4. Who has full access to the record – sealed containers and all. The GP, the patient, relevant specialists or who?

5. What access is the patient to have to the record and under what circumstances should information be held but not disclosed to the patient.

6. If sealed containers are to be permitted – are they totally invisible to others – or are they flagged as existing with a note to contact the individual authorised to open them? This goes to the issue of trust in the completeness of the record.

7. With virtually all EHR’s having considerable amounts of free text, how can highly sensitive, but un-coded information, be properly protected with any consistency.

8. Is there a good benefits case for sharing any more than a basic Continuity of Care record – at the very least in the first instance. Seems to me it makes sense to learn to walk before on tries to run!

These and many other issues are raised in the article and the comments. All worth a very careful read.

Until sound workable policy and work practices can be developed to address ALL these issues we need to hasten slowly down this road in my view. The time to address these issues is earlier than later in the Shared EHR development process. NEHTA are you listening?

David.