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."

Wednesday, June 03, 2009

International News Extras For the Week (01/06/2009)

Again there has been just a heap of stuff arrive this week.

First we have:

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Reinventing Health Reform: Innovators Take on the Bureaucrats

by David J. Brailer

There have been few times in the past when new ideas and innovation in health care were needed more than they are today. This is a time when patients, clinicians, policymakers and health leaders face many challenges and are in need of new ideas. Many hope that this time of change and disruption is also a time for our aspirations and dreams to soar.

That we need innovation in health care may surprise some people. After all, we are an industry that is proud of our creativity and discovery. Look at the progress we have made in the life sciences -- in biotherapeutics, implanted devices, imaging modalities, genomics and diagnostics. In each of these areas, we have seen near-complete knowledge turnover in the past decade, and many of these ideas have already made it to the commercial marketplace.

But life sciences is only 15% of health care spending. In the other 85% -- the way care is delivered, organized or financed -- we have seen little change across many years.

It is not that we don't know what we want from a better health care system. In my opinion there are five things we should do much better tomorrow than we do today:

  • First, when someone seeks treatment, do not kill or maim them;
  • Second, get more for our money tomorrow than we do today;
  • Third, give consumers a real stake in their health care;
  • Fourth, protect society from an inevitable biological or other public health disaster, whether natural, accidental or intentional; and
  • Fifth, bring into common use new tests and treatments that add real years to our lifespan within a short period of their discovery.

We have an urgent need to make these aspirations reality -- to bring them to commercial viability and to show the world that they work on the scale needed to matter in health care.

Much more here with links :

http://www.ihealthbeat.org/Perspectives/2009/Reinventing-Health-Reform-Innovators-Take-on-the-Bureaucrats.aspx

This is an excellent piece of commentary in my view. The five things to be working on are spot on!

Second we have:

NHS patients given right to delete electronic record

NHS patients will be allowed to delete electronic summaries of their treatment records from a new national medical database, the Guardian has learned.

The decision represents a significant concession in data protection policy following talks between health service officials and the Information Commissioners' Office (ICO).

Until recently the Department of Health had resisted pressure from sceptical patients and doctors critical of the security risks generated by confidential records being transmitted across the NHS broadband computer network known as the Spine.

Last month, officials described the cost of deleting individual summary care records (SCRs) from the system as prohibitive. The Department of Health had offered instead to "mask" or "suppress" unwanted files, making them difficult to access – a process that would nonetheless leave personal details on the database.

SCRs are being introduced as part of an NHS-wide initiative being rolled out across the country to provide clinical staff with information on those they treat.

Much more here:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2009/may/26/nhs-patient-medical-database-spine

This certainly shows just how hard the privacy issues are with shared records. NEHTA take note. A mix of secure communications, PHRs and provider controlled systems look like a better option to me for a host of reasons.

More coverage here:

http://www.ehiprimarycare.com/news/4872/patients_will_be_able_to_delete_their_scr

Patients will be able to delete their SCR

26 May 2009

Third we have:

May 25, 2009

NHS 'loses' thousands of medical records

By Michael Savage, Political Correspondent

Exclusive: Information watchdog orders overhaul after 140 security breaches in just four months

The personal medical records of tens of thousands of people have been lost by the NHS in a series of grave data security leaks. Between January and April this year, 140 security breaches were reported within the NHS – more than the total number from inside central Government and all local authorities combined.

The sacred principle of doctor-patient confidentiality is being compromised, Richard Thomas, the Information Commissioner, has warned. Britain's information watchdog has ordered an urgent overhaul of data security in the health service.

Some computers containing medical records have been left by skips and stolen. Others were left on encrypted discs – but the passwords allowing access were taped to the side.

In an interview with The Independent, the Information Commissioner's chief enforcer blamed the growth of a "cavalier attitude" among NHS workers across Britain for the exposure of the sensitive records.

-----

Examples cited include:

Privacy emergencies: NHS security breaches

*Computers containing the names, addresses and medical notes of 2,500 Camden Primary Care Trust patients were left beside a skip at St Pancras hospital, London. The computers, which were not encrypted, were stolen and never recovered.

*Medical details of 6,360 inmates and former inmates at Preston prison were lost after a memory stick was taken outside the grounds and went missing. The date was encrypted, but the password had been helpfully written on a note taped to the device.

*Cambridge University Hospital lost an unencrypted memory stick carrying treatment details of 741 patients was taken away in a staff member's car. The stick was found by a car wash worker who worked out who the device belonged to after accessing it.

*The unencrypted medical histories of 2,300 cancer patients were compromised by Hull & East Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust after the theft of a desktop computer and a laptop.

*Two laptops were stolen from Central Middlesex hospital, and a desktop computer from nearby Northwick Park hospital, after the card security system was disabled for maintenance. Test results of 361 patients were lost. The details were encrypted.

Full reporting continues here:

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/nhs-loses-thousands-of-medical-records-1690398.html

This is a salutary warning regarding the level of care that is needed to look after data properly. It is not easy.

Fourth we have:

Providers turn to IT for efficiency, but is it working?

By Jean DerGurahian / HITS staff writer

Posted: May 26, 2009 - 5:59 am EDT

Part one of a two-part series:

With speed and accuracy the name of the game for laboratory results, Great Basin Scientific hopes its new diagnostic tool will help providers find infections quickly and efficiently so that care delivery can be improved.

The tool is a silicon chip-based technology that allows staff to test multiple samples on one platform. The Salt Lake City-based company expects that its automated molecular diagnostic system will give results in less than one hour. The tool is still in the development stage; Great Basin has conducted a preclinical study with a full clinical trial in four to six participating labs scheduled to begin in August.

It is the productivity cycle of the hospital lab—the number of tests that can be processed during a shift—that is central to Great Basin’s work. Test-to-result time is critical for effective work, said Great Basin CEO Ryan Ashton. Providers need to know what’s wrong with a patient. “They want to run those tests 24-7.”

Technology plays a role in boosting the laboratory’s ability to conduct more tests, Ashton said. Moving diagnostics to the point of care is something hospitals are exploring because they recognize it would reduce the time it takes to get a sample, test it and return the results to the care provider, he added. “Anything that’s going to make their jobs easier is going to be something they’ll really like.”

Indeed, technology plays a role in productivity across the board, and the healthcare industry is no exception. From faster laboratory results to real-time electronic information in emergency departments to online “dashboards” that monitor performance metrics—providers have begun to embrace automated processes to improve their operations.

More here:

http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20090526/REG/305269964

The second part is found here:

http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20090527/REG/305279991

For both registration is required (Cut and paste URL if you have access issues and have registered)

There are some useful research findings on cash benefits presented in this article as well as discussions as to good ways to use performance information.

Fifth we have:

Cyber Secure Institute Issues Analysis of Virginia Health Database Hack and UC-Berkeley Hack; Demonstrate Inherent Risks in e-Health That Must Be Addressed

WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Today, Rob Housman, the Executive Director of the Cyber Secure Institute, released this statement concerning the recent hacks showing the vulnerability of the healthcare of Americans:

Have you ever told your doctor something private that you wouldn’t want your friends and neighbors or a tabloid paper to know?

Have you ever received a medical test result that you wouldn’t want shared with your employer?

Recent attacks demonstrate that your most private healthcare information is seriously at risk. And, absent major changes, the risks will grow exponentially.

Last month, hackers attempted to extort $10 million after breaking into a Virginia State web site used by pharmacists to track prescription drug abuse. The records of more than 8 million patients were deleted and a ransom note was put on the Virginia Prescription Monitoring Program’s homepage, demanding $10 million dollars in exchange for the return of the records.

At almost the same time, The University of California at Berkeley disclosed that hackers had broken into their health-services database. The University began sending out notification letters to current and former students. The hackers had access to, and may have taken, health insurance information and medical information. The breach in the server took place from October 9, 2008 until April 9 this year, when administrators discovered messages left behind by foreign hackers.

These are not the first instances where cybercriminals have stolen the private healthcare information of Americans. Last December, Lawanda Jackson pleaded guilty to violating federal privacy laws by selling private medical data from celebrities, including Britney Spears, Farah Fawcett and Maria Shriver (wife of California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger), to the National Enquirer tabloid. Last October, cybercriminals attacked Express Scripts, one of America’s largest processors of pharmacy prescriptions, threatening to release personal information of millions of Americans unless their demands were met. There is an ongoing investigation into the Express Scripts incident.

More here:

http://www.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20090526005194&newsLang=en

DDI Health Selects Vital Images as Its Preferred Advanced Visualization Solution

MINNEAPOLIS, May 26, 2009 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Vital Images, Inc. (Nasdaq:VTAL), a leading provider of advanced visualization and analysis software, has been selected by DDI Health, a leading provider of diagnostic eHealth (EMR) software solutions in Australia (including a Web-based PACS), to be its integrated advanced visualization partner. DDI Health will be one of the first eHealth providers to offer advanced visualization to its customers in the Australian market.

"We are excited to expand into the Australian market with a partner like DDI," said Michael H. Carrel, president and chief executive officer at Vital Images. "We believe that there is tremendous value and potential in the close integration of EMR systems, PACS, and advanced visualization capabilities. We look forward to working closely with DDI to deliver that value to the Australian market."

More here:

http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/news.html?d=166050

It is good to see collaboration between US and Australian companies like this, especially in the e-Health space.

The DDI web site is worth a look. Some of the stuff looks pretty cool!

http://ddihealth.com/Home/tabid/57/Default.aspx

This space is pretty active with ProMedicus having bought what seems to be a similar company a few months back.

http://www.promedicus.com.au/release/ProMedicus_Release_090128.pdf

Seventh we have:

Thursday, Apr. 16, 2009

In Denmark's Electronic Health Records Program, a Lesson for the U.S.

By Eben Harrell / Copenhagen

The Frederiksberg University Hospital in Copenhagen looks like any other hospital in the developed world, except for one notable absence: there are no clipboards. Instead, doctors and nurses carry wireless handheld computers to call up the medical records of each patient, including their prescription history and drug allergies. If a doctor prescribes a medication that may cause complications, the computer's alarm goes off. In the hospital's department of acute medicine — where patients often arrive unconscious or disorientated — department head Klaus Phanareth's PDA prevents him from prescribing dangerous medications "on a weekly basis," he says. "There's no doubt that it saves lives."

In the effort to reform American healthcare, electronic health records (EHR) are a double victory: they both save money (by reducing the duplication of tests and labor associated with manual filing systems) and improve outcomes (by reducing medical errors). President Obama recently pledged $19 billion to computerize America's medical records by 2014. But while health economists and campaigners in America debate what such a brave new paperless world will look like, the small Scandinavian country of Denmark has already made the transition, and is happy to tell the world about it. (Read "The Year in Medicine 2008: From A to Z.")

Denmark has a centralized computer database to which 98% of primary care physicians, all hospital physicians and all pharmacists now have access. Danish residents can gain access to their own records through a secure website. The website alerts the patient by email if a doctor, pharmacist or nurse views their records, and allows patients to make appointments, set end-of-life wishes, and even email their doctor for advice on illnesses that do not require an office visit. While basic records go back to 1977, a detailed history is available of all "patient contacts" since 2000.

Much more here:

http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1891209,00.html

I would add there are a few lessons for somewhere closer as well!

Eighth we have:

Patient Safety Missing from Health Reform Discussion

Janice Simmons, for HealthLeaders Media, May 26, 2009

Nearly 10 years ago, the Institute of Medicine released its report To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System, which put a spotlight on problems surrounding patient safety. Last week, a panel of providers and policymakers who initially experienced firsthand the impact of that report—which estimated that upward of 98,000 people died each year in hospitals due to medical errors—had a chance to reflect how the report exceeded or fell short of expectations during the intervening years at a meeting of the National Patient Safety Foundation Annual Congress outside of Washington.

Lucian Leape, MD, one of the authors of the report and an adjunct professor of health policy at the Harvard School of Public Health, said the early publicity over the report "really took us very much by surprise."

Overall, there were three messages to the report:

  1. This is a serious problem
  2. It's not bad people but bad systems
  3. This needs to be a national priority

"Unfortunately number three never happened, and that's the big disappointment," he said.

In the healthcare reform area, patient safety should be an important issue in the debate, but federal attention has not been there, said James Guest, who is president of Consumers Union. "I think it's critically important that in addition to access, in addition to cost savings, and in addition to other factors, patient safety really ought to be front and center in health reform."

Full article here:

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/content/233554/topic/WS_HLM2_QUA/Patient-Safety-Missing-from-Health-Reform-Discussion.html

This is certainly the truth – and the message seems to have made even less progress here in Australia, despite the efforts of many. I suspect the population have really not been given a clear enough message of the scale of the problem.

Ninth we have:

Should Virtual Colonoscopies Be Covered by CMS?

Carrie Vaughan, for HealthLeaders Media, May 26, 2009

Earlier this month, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services announced that it would not cover computed tomographic colonography or virtual colonoscopy. CMS said in a memo that while the "technology was promising," there was insufficient evidence on the performance of CT colonography in Medicare aged individuals to "conclude that screening CT colonography improves health benefits for asymptomatic, average risk Medicare beneficiaries."

Advocates of CT colonography blasted CMS' decision saying that wider use of screening could save 20,000 lives annually.

Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer among both men and women in the United States and accounted for nearly 50,000 deaths in 2008, according to the American Cancer Society. The majority of these deaths could be prevented by the early detection of colorectal cancer through screening, but only half of people age 50 or older, for whom the test is recommended, have received the screening. The reasons vary. Some people lack education about the importance of screening, others don't have health insurance coverage, and some just procrastinate or avoid taking the test because it is an invasive procedure and requires the unpleasant task of cleansing the colon.

Much more here:

http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/content/233570/topic/WS_HLM2_TEC/Should-Virtual-Colonoscopies-Be-Covered-by-CMS.html

This is an interesting discussion and shows how somehow the decisions around technology adoption can be less than simple.

Tenth we have:

Feds propose Web site to educate public on PHRs

The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) has proposed developing a Web site containing facts about personal health record (PHR) systems and the privacy policies related their use to help consumers make informed decisions.

In a notice in the Federal Register today, the national coordinator’s office described a project to develop an online model or template in which PHR providers would present the facts and key information about privacy, security and information management policies.

More here:

http://govhealthit.com/articles/2009/05/22/feds-propose-phr-website.aspx?s=GHIT_260509

Maybe something that NEHTA / the NHHRC should emulate?

Eleventh for the week we have:

Blumenthal: Stimulus a 'sweetener, not determinant' of health IT adoption

Health information technology leaders made the case for linking the economic stimulus plan to the broader goals of health reform, including improved heath care services and population health, at a conference in Washington, D.C., yesterday.

The health IT provisions of the stimulus were designed to correct the failure of the market to spur the adoption of health IT and to demonstrate its value. In doing so, it will also be a tool to meet the aims of health reform, said Dr. David Blumenthal, the nation’s health IT coordinator, at a May 20 conference sponsored by the Brookings Institution.

Under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, physicians and hospitals will be entitled to increased Medicare and Medicaid payments starting in 2011 if they can demonstrate “meaningful use” of electronic health records. ONC has said they would define the term by early summer.

Much more here:

http://govhealthit.com/articles/2009/05/21/blumenthal-on-health-it-adoption.aspx?s=GHIT_260509

This provides useful insight into how Dr Blumenthal is thinking about his new role.

Twelfth we have:

CCHIT to adapt programs to federal health IT agenda

  • By John Moore
  • May 19, 2009

Certification organization to adjust schedule, policy handbook to reflect mandates

The Certification Commission for Healthcare Information Technology will put its 2009-2010 programs on hold and update its certification policies in light of guidance contained in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

CCHIT said today it will defer the launch of its latest certification programs until it has reviewed the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT’s forthcoming standards and certification criteria. ONC will deliver a draft rule containing those items to the Health and Human Services Department by Aug. 26, according to ONC’s plan for complying with ARRA. CCHIT’s certification cycle was set to begin July 1.

More here:

http://govhealthit.com/articles/2009/05/19/cchit-health-it-agenda.aspx?s=GHIT_260509

This is pragmatic and sensible. I do hope all the good work that has been done is not lost in the Administration transition.

Vastly more here:

http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20090528/REG/305289991

Leavitt talks CCHIT, stimulus and new administration

By Joseph Conn / HITS staff writer

Posted: May 28, 2009 - 11:00 am EDT

Part one of a two-part series

Thirteenth we have:

http://www.ehiprimarycare.com/news/4871/google_says_user_data_aids_flu_detection

Google says user data aids flu detection

25 May 2009

Google’s co-founder Larry Page has said that the European Commission’s demand for user data to be deleted after six months would prevent the site from being able to plot and predict potential pandemics.

According to a BBC report, Page said the less data internet companies like Google are able to hold about user searches “the more likely we all are to die.”

Speaking at Google’s annual European Zeitgeist conference in Hertfordshire, UK, he said that deleting search data after six months would be “in direct conflict” with the ability to map pandemics.

Much more here:

A classic example of the unexpected consequences of a policy position. Clearly the longer the search data is held the easier it will be to tell the severity and rate of spread of pandemics.

Fourteenth we have:

Emerging Nursing Technologies

Employing proven technologies can positively impact nurse satisfaction, hospital operations and patient care.

Breakthroughs in informatics improve nurses' daily routines.

By Amy Lillard

Today's nurses are at the center of care delivery. But nurses on average spend only about 31 percent of their time on direct patient care. The rest? Paperwork. Resource allocation. Information management. Workflow and communications issues. All the necessary work that can and must be done, but which puts extraordinary pressure on a nurse's capabilities and time.

But the use of proven technology solutions can have a major impact on individual satisfaction, hospital operations and patient care. A new report for the California HealthCare Foundation, Equipped for Efficiency: Improving Nursing Care Through Technology, says emerging technologies like wireless communications, real-time location systems and even delivery robots can dramatically increase a nurse's time with patients.

When nurses and their facilities take on their everyday challenges, and apply powerful tools to tackle them, a better work environment and better healthcare result, say the report authors.

Examples Abound

The nurses consulted for the report mentioned numerous projects completed with the help of technology, said Fran Turisco, MBA, research principal at CSC, a consulting and systems integration company, and co-author of the report with Jared Rhoads, MS, senior research analyst at CSC.

"Nurses are asking, 'Here's a problem, now how can we use technology to redesign the care process and help us everyday?'" Turisco said. "These technologies are working in real hospitals and for real nurses, people who rolled up their sleeves, dug into a problem and put technology to use to make a big difference."

The report details how hospitals across the country are using technology for practical solutions to persistent problems. This perspective is spreading to nurse administrators and nurses on the unit floor, as they are faced with shortages and increased patient demands.

"Nurses are constantly multitasking at the highest level," said Linda Talley, RN, director of nursing systems at Children's National Medical Center in Washington, DC. Talley and her team used a patient monitor alarm system to enhance communications.

"We need to continue to push toward finding smart solutions that bring decision support to what we have. It's tremendously challenging to triage and prioritize all the multiple tasks nurses are confronted with every day. Why not use the tools at hand to make nursing work more efficient, intuitive and user-friendly?"

Lots more here:

http://nursing.advanceweb.com/editorial/content/editorial.aspx?cc=200146

Good to see the nurses getting some profile in the area.

Fourth last we have:

Electronic health records: potholes on the road to eHealth

Last Updated: Wednesday, May 27, 2009 | 3:53 PM ET

CBC News

Canadians are heavy users of the health-care system. Every year, there are 322 million office-based visits to the doctor. The vast majority of them — 94 per cent — result in handwritten paper records.

Those records — your health history — normally stay in a file folder in your doctor's office, inaccessible to a medical professional who might appreciate the information they contain when you're facing a medical emergency and are unable to communicate.

Making those records available in an electronic format has been on the federal government's to-do list for nearly 20 years. But it took until Sept. 11, 2000, for Ottawa to commit substantial cash to get the ball rolling.

The federal government announced that it would set aside $500 million for "an independent corporation mandated to accelerate the development and adoption of modern systems of information technology, such as electronic patient records, so as to provide better health care."

The following March the money went to Canada Health Infoway Inc., a not-for-profit organization set up to bring Canada's health-care system into the 21st century.

Canada Health Infoway says better access to information will enable clinicians to:

  • Devote more time to patients.
  • Improve patient safety by reducing the risk of errors that could be prevented by access to a patient's complete health record.
  • Deliver more efficient care, leading to lower costs and shorter wait times.

Canada Health Infoway has received $2 billion towards the revolutionizing of the nation's health records. While the agency's goal is electronic health records for all Canadians by 2016, so far, only five per cent of records are electronic. But the agency expects half of health records to be electronic by the end of 2010.

Canada Health Infoway says fully electronic health records will save the health-care system $6 billion a year.

Much more here:

http://www.cbc.ca/health/story/2009/05/27/f-electronic-health-records.html

This is a very useful external view on how things are going in Canada in e-Health. Seems major progress but a few big issues yet to be sorted would be the summary.

Much more reporting here:

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/ottawa/story/2009/05/28/ehealth-mcguinty-review028.html

Opposition wants minister's resignation over eHealth spending

Of course there is also some positive news!

http://www.infoway-inforoute.ca/lang-en/about-infoway/news/news-releases/434-telehomecare-project-to-improve-delivery-of-services-in-yukon

Telehomecare project to improve delivery of services in Yukon

May 27, 2009 (Whitehorse, YK) – Health and Social Services Minister Glenn Hart today announced a telehomecare project to improve the delivery of services to homecare clients.

Departmental homecare staff will now be using a mobile data system, that they can bring into their clients’ homes and access up-to-date electronic homecare records.

Third last we have:

AT&T, other firms test devices to help monitor patients from afar

08:24 PM CDT on Monday, May 25, 2009

By ANDREW D. SMITH / Special Contributor to The Dallas Morning News
businessnews@dallasnews.com

Long-term treatments for diabetes, high blood pressure and other chronic killers work only if patients care for themselves properly.

That's why doctors, hospitals, and high-tech companies such as Dallas-based AT&T Inc. are so excited about a new generation of devices that let medical professionals track patient progress.

These wireless devices automatically send doctors stats that people already measure – weight, blood pressure, etc. – so doctors can intervene at the first sign of trouble rather than waiting till patients feel bad enough to seek help.

The Department of Veterans Affairs already uses such "telehealth" technology on 35,000 patients.

Now, private health groups – working with insurers, universities and technology makers – have begun tests that could lead to widespread deployment over the next couple of years.

"A lot of this is old technology," said Bob Miller, executive director of AT&T's communications-technology research department. "But we're putting it together in ways that will help millions of people live dramatically better lives."

Much more here:

http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/bus/stories/052609dnbusattmed.3b68acd.html

This is an increasingly important area that is attracting more attention in the mainstream press.

Second last for the week we have:

Summary Care Record use jumps in Bolton

26 May 2009

Use of the Summary Care Record by the out-of-hours service in Bolton has risen from 200 accesses a month to 200 accesses a week following the introduction of an integrated ‘SCR’ system from Adastra.

Adastra’s integrated SCR enables fast ‘two click’ access to the national Summary Care Record than was previously available, enabling summary care record access to become routine to check whether a patient has an SCR record.

The increase in uptake has been mirrored in other urgent care settings in Bolton where the Adastra SCR integrated solution is available, according to Dr Darren Mansfield, NHS Bolton’s clinical lead for urgent care.

More here:

http://www.ehiprimarycare.com/news/4870/summary_care_record_use_jumps_in_bolton

This is good news, but one really wonders why access was not properly integrated in the first place!

Last, and very usefully, we have:

The Myth of Macroinnovation

by Nat Torkington

An idea is making the rounds and appearing in articles like this New York Times piece, and it goes roughly thus: the age of the small inventor is over because to work on stuff that matters requires the largescale coordination of people and materiel that only governments and large corporations can provide. This notion that we're entering a Golden Age of Macroinnovation is bunkum, I'm happy to report.

Scale matters, scale has always mattered, but scaling is not innovating. It's true that there are many opportunities for businesses and governments to do big things. That's always true—all my friends who worked at Yahoo! and Microsoft said one of the attractions was the ability to write code that would be used by hundreds of millions of people. However, the article basically says, "large institutions are tackling large problems." That's wonderful news, much better than large institutions ignoring large problems, but has nothing to do with innovation.

Perhaps I'm wrong, perhaps scaling is a form of innovation. Innovation is characterised by disruption and the unknown. Think of those governments and large corporations and ask yourself: are these the birthplaces of radical thinking, new ways of getting things done, and risk-taking leaps into the unknown? Of course not. Governments are the most risk-averse institutions in the world, more so than medicine where lives hang in the balance—doctors at least listen to evidence, whereas the definition of bureaucracy is "we follow the rules regardless of reality". Governments exist to preserve the status quo that elected them, not disrupt it.

.....

I love that governments, NGOs, businesses, and citizens are going to be tackling large and meaningful problems with the aid of the tools and techniques developed by researchers, entrepreneurs, and hackers around the world. But to mistake using those techniques for inventing them is to ignore that great lesson of Margaret Mead: "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful committed people can change the world; indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

Much more here:

http://radar.oreilly.com/2009/05/the-myth-of-macroinnovation.html

It is the end of the last paragraph I wanted to highlight. I think it is remarkably true and certainly so in the e-Health domain.

There is an amazing amount happening. Enjoy!

David.

Tuesday, June 02, 2009

More Discussion on the Flawed PEHR Plans from the NHHRC

It seems more than those who read this blog (and have made submissions to the NHHRC) have noticed there are some rather dodgy parts of the National Health and Hospitals Reform Commission (NHHRC).

From the excellent Crikey (www.crikey.com.au) health blog

(See:

http://blogs.crikey.com.au/croakey/author/melissasweet/)

We find the following:

E-health plans will benefit private rather than patient interests

, by Croakey

Cris Kerr, an advocate for the value of patient testimony, especially around e-Health systems, has responded to Paul Smith’s recent report on the National Health and Hospitals Reform Commission plans. Cris writes:

“I wish to draw attention to the recent NHHRC release entitled, ‘Person-controlled Electronic Health Records’, where on page 14 the following is stated:

‘ … We took the view that people would choose to hold and access their personal electronic health records in a variety of ways, including mobile devices such as smart phones and secure storage media, and that a market would also develop for provision of secure on-line backup and storage services for people’s electronic health records. A person-controlled approach to electronic health records, along with a distributed repository, helps avoid the risk noted by the Australian Privacy Foundation that: “… a centralised database … requires only a single point of failure to facilitate data breaches and the growing problem of identity fraud.”

25 Companies such as Google, Global Health, and Microsoft are already exploring different approaches to the online storage of personal health information through services such as Google Health, Hothealth.

The above represents a contradiction. If one provider and one platform presents a single security risk, then multiple commercial providers and multiple platforms present multiple security risks, and hence; the case as presented does not validate delegating the development and operation of Personal Electronic Health Records (PEHRs) to private (commercial) interests and providers.

The NHHRC recognizes the dysfunctional nature of ‘data silos’, yet proposes a ‘data silo’ by recommending PEHRs be developed and operated in isolation, by private providers, and completely separate from our core health system data, which is ‘perceived to be more important’.

If the patient’s experience is being perceived as less important, why?

Why has the potential gain from patient’s contributing to their own core health records been discounted and devalued?

This release provides evidence that the NHHRC attributes zero value to what patients could be contributing to their own core health records, to national health system improvements and learnings, and to the country’s collective research efforts.

Much more here:

http://blogs.crikey.com.au/croakey/2009/05/27/e-health-plans-will-benefit-private-rather-than-patient-interests/

Allowing for the fact that there are way more than 25 different commercial organisations looking at PHRs Cris makes some good points.

As I have pointed out in my submission this all has the look of an attempt to reframe this e-Health problem as one the patient has – and not one that should be addressed coherently by the health system as a whole – being provided with some quality leadership from Government. This of course has been much lacking to date.

Read and enjoy the perspective offered from a consumer and patient advocate.

David.

Monday, June 01, 2009

It is Dramatically Improved National E-Health Governance, Not a New Business Case, that E-Health in Australia Needs .

As mentioned on the blog over the weekend it seems that over the next few months there may be a few positive steps taken to commence funding implementation of the National E-Health Strategy.

The details of recent discussions are found here:

http://aushealthit.blogspot.com/2009/05/are-there-green-shoots-appearing-for.html

If this is to happen then it is vital that the investment be got right and funds be spent on the right things – especially in the light of the ever-present Global Financial Crisis (GFC).

At its broadest the National E-Health Strategy suggests that we need much improved co-ordination and governance of the national e-health efforts, an incremental and balanced approach, new investment channels and continuation of work on basic e-Health infrastructure.

It has been clear for some time that while work in areas such as identifiers, messaging, authentication and terminology has been progressing there is little or no understanding outside NEHTA as to just where things are up to and what has actually been developed via the very substantial funds (hundreds of millions) that have been invested over the last five years (yes it is now over 5 years!). NEHTA should be releasing, at a minimum, at least quarterly, if not monthly, public progress reports on each of the major work streams. Good heavens even most major privately owned public companies manage that sort of frequency of reporting!

It is also clear that there is a lack of balance in just what NEHTA is addressing there being too much emphasis on servicing the State Public Hospital Sectors (hardly a surprise given that is the background of virtually all its directors) and not enough on GPs, Specialists and the Private Hospital Sector.

An example of this issue is seen here:

NEHTA ‘lacks primary care focus’

29-May-2009

By Sarah Colyer

The long-awaited rollout of electronic health records could be undermined by a public hospital focus among those in charge, AGPN warns.

The network is calling for GP representation on the board of the National E-Health Transition Authority, which it says is dominated by state and territory health department interests.

AGPN CEO David Butt told Australian Doctor: “It’s no good NEHTA providing a strategy that everyone is supposed to buy into when at the governance level NEHTA is still very much representational of the public hospital sector.

“It needs to include general practice and the private sector.”

Mr Butt said the AGPN welcomed the National E-Health Strategy, developed by independent consultants Deloitte, but was concerned it would be implemented by an “unbalanced” board.

Of the 10 members of the NEHTA board, all except the chairman – businessman Mr David Gonski — are state and territory health department executives.

But Dr Mukesh Haikerwal, a consultant to NEHTA as its clinical lead, downplayed the concerns.

More here (subscription required)

http://www.australiandoctor.com.au/articles/f6/0c0612f6.asp

There is also evidence that NEHTA and the NHHRC are definitely not on the same page as far as Individual EHRs and Personally Held PHRs with as recently as the last week or two NEHTA giving presentations on the IEHR as a core part of their work.

See here for example:

http://www.nehta.gov.au/component/docman/doc_download/729-physicians-week-michelle-bramley

and here:

http://www.nehta.gov.au/component/docman/doc_download/728-ehealth-the-future-of-aged-care-michelle-bramley

NEHTA is yet to develop and release a National E-Health Architecture – Just why is that I wonder?

It is also clear that how NEHTA is to interact with external entities is still by no means sorted internally. As an example we have one group internally attempting to broaden access to its thoughts among an informed e-Health readership and not being able to execute this in a way that satisfies NEHTA’s need to get the broadest possible feedback or that of many of the external stakeholders.

NEHTA has also totally failed to broaden its board, despite that being a key recommendation of the Boston Consulting Review of NEHTA in 2007 that was acknowledged as a necessary change in the 2007/8 Annual Report.

See here:

http://www.nehta.gov.au/component/docman/doc_download/588-nehta-annual-report-2007-2008

Directors Report – Page 28

Significant Changes in State of Affairs

As required under its Constitution, a review of NEHTA was undertaken by the Boston Consulting Group during the financial year. The review resulted in agreement that the company continue operations and resulted in an amendment to the Constitution permitting the appointment of up to three independent directors to the NEHTA Board.

All that has happened in 18 months is a new independent chairman and zilch else.

The key to NEHTA’s success, and the success of e-Health in Australia in general, is that we establish proper broad based governance of the overall effort with the funds, skills and mandate to drive forward with a reasonable chance of success.

After five years it is clear that NEHTA is not structured, skilled, staffed or motivated to undertake the required reform and improvement on its own. If there is to be funding of the National e-Health Strategy it is not getting the business case right but rather getting National E-Health Governance right that is fundamental to success.

If AHMC / COAG are indeed going to invest they had better make very sure they get the governance right or they will be sending good money after bad. The Deloittes report makes this fact crystal clear and they should be ignored at all our peril.

David.

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Useful and Interesting Health IT News from the Last Week – 31/05/2009.

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

First we have:

Sharing generation faces Australia Card 3.0

By Nate Cochrane

9 May 2009 05:59AM

Tags: australia | card | access | card | aulich | biometrics | australia | facebook

The Facebook generation, unbowed by their parents' sense of privacy propriety, is fast-tracking a global "Australia Card", a Sydney biometrics conference heard yesterday.

Speaking at the Biometrics Institute 10th annual conference yesterday, former Tasmanian Labor senator Terry Aulich said he was "astonished" at the variation in inter-generational attitudes to privacy exhibited by subjects in his research.

Australian governments of both stripes have tried unsuccessfully to mandate a single identification card, first under Labor in 1985 and then under the Coalition 10 years later, but both attempts fell foul of public opinion and the proposals' inherent complexity.

But Aulich said that could all change as a generation weaned on sharing the most intimate aspects of their lives with random strangers online came into their majority.

"There is a new generation that is much more open to invasive technology," he told iTnews. "These people have grown up in an era where people accept invasions of privacy, sometimes they welcome it. They are replacing people, now in their 50s and 70s, that were very protective of privacy."

Aulich said the Federal Government could "get up an Australian Card now - if they were smart and attached benefits to it, and if we had a new Privacy Act".

Aulich said that benefits such as greater speed to access information and convenience would need to be emphasised to win over public support.

Forcing citizens to pay for their ID cards or an inability of card authorities to safeguard data would derail any attempt to re-introduce a national identity scheme.

"What will happen is as the older generation move [on] the younger generation will accept what today would be seen as an invasion of privacy [in] a national identification system," he said.

"But that could be set back at any time in the decision-making process by some absolute stuff ups the way government or companies are maintaining and protecting data."

Lots More here:

http://www.itnews.com.au/News/104311,sharing-generation-faces-australia-card-30.aspx

This is an interesting article that makes at least two points I agree with. First getting decent privacy legislation in place before acting on either Access Cards or e-Health is critical. Second major data leaks to damage confidence and so incremental change is almost certainly the only way to go. Additionally any major public project, if it is to succeed, really does have to convince the public of the benefits that will accrue!

Second we have HCN seemingly under a bit of additional fire.

HCN denies software issues for GPs

by Louise Durack

Health Care Network (HCN) has hit back at claims that glitches in its software are causing GPs to lose money.

Michael Travaglione, a practice owner from Perth, has previously told 6minutes that GPs have been missing out on around $1,000 per year as a result of a software defect within PracSoft affecting GP senior concession card holders.

He claimed HCN has never produced a category within the software for seniors, which would enable GPs to auto-generate bulk-bill concession item numbers as it does for pensioners, veterans, health care card holders and children under 16.

This, he said, had been amounting to a loss of $5.55 per senior over the past three years, despite repeated requests to rectify the situation.

More here:

http://www.6minutes.com.au/articles/z1/view.asp?id=483580

as well as this.

GP outrage over HCN fees

by Louise Durack

The Health Communication Network (HCN) has been criticised by GPs for its recent price hikes of its software fees and a new payment system requiring all doctors to pay a full-time licence fee.

The complaints follow a move by HCN last month which saw the software maker remove advertising from its practice software Medical Director, as a result of GP pressure and a ruling by Medicines Australia.

However 6minutes has received complaints from GPs saying that HCN is disadvantaging practices which use overseas doctors who may only be allowed to work very limited ‘after hours’ but who will still need to be paid for.

Perth doctor Dr Michael Travaglione, employs three doctors who fall into this category and told 6minutes that he is ‘very annoyed’ about the latest increases.

More here:

http://www.6minutes.com.au/articles/z1/view.asp?id=482811

It seems the removal of the drug advertisements and the apparent price rises has made the natives a little restless. HCN will need to be careful if it to keep its market share.

Third we have:

Ruling to haunt watchdog

Karen Dearne | May 26, 2009

A CONTROVERSIAL decision to dismiss concerns about a leading GP software package automatically extracting prescription records has come back to bite federal Privacy Commissioner Karen Curtis.

The Australian Privacy Foundation last week asked Ms Curtis to investigate two potential breaches in relation to the sale or re-use of medical records for drug marketing purposes, without patients' knowledge or consent.

In 2005, Ms Curtis rejected complaints that doctors were being paid to supply patient records under a deal with a leading software supplier and drug firms, on the grounds that the information had been sufficiently "de-identified".

At the time, health and privacy advocates said the decision gave a green light to the sale of patient data, while claims individuals could not be re-identified were not confirmed through independent testing.

The latest concerns relate to courtroom revelations that pharmaceutical giant Merck paid specialist nurses $500,000 to trawl through patient records for possible candidates for the firm's anti-arthritis drug Vioxx, now the subject of a class action in the Federal Court in Melbourne.

Source:

http://www.australianit.news.com.au/story/0,24897,25536854-15306,00.html

This is the continuing follow-up of the issue raised here:

http://aushealthit.blogspot.com/2009/05/should-doctors-sell-information-derived.html

Fourth we have:

Beating swine flu

Karen Dearne | May 26, 2009

LEADING medical researchers say lives will be saved if information on suspected and confirmed cases of swine flu is immediately available through a national e-health system.

"One of the keys to protecting the public is finding out who is sick, who is healthy, who has died, and where they live, work, shop or go to school," director of the Telethon Institute for Child Health Research, Fiona Stanley, said.

"We also need to know who has been admitted to hospital, how long they've stayed and what medicines have been prescribed by which pharmacies. This would allow for efficient monitoring and a co-ordinated response to the pandemic. Lives would most certainly be saved."

Professor Stanley, and visiting professor at the University of Western Australia and director of the Indiana University Centre for Bioethics Eric Meslin, said Australia had "every reason to fast-track" e-health, and not just because of swine flu.

Full article here:

http://www.australianit.news.com.au/story/0,24897,25536855-15306,00.html

Yet another reason to get on with e-Health nationwide! It is good to see serious heavy hitters like Prof. Fiona Stanley getting on side publicly like this!

Fifth we have:

Knowing your enemy

  • May 28, 2009

FOUR hundred arachnophobes have braved the first phase of a study that involves graded exposure to images of spiders. Developed by researchers at the University of Tasmania, Feardrop.com is an online exposure therapy program for people with specific phobias.

People rate their anxiety level before viewing the image and then at specific points while viewing the image. The aim is to get people used to the spider image, that is, decrease their anxiety levels as the exposure proceeds.

If their anxiety is low at the end of the exposure, they can proceed to the next, more fearful, stage. "Indications are that people develop habituation responses quickly, within a few minutes of doing an online intervention," says Professor Ken Kirkby, the head of psychiatry at the University of Tasmania. "Generally people don't experience excessively high levels of anxiety online, providing the images are chosen appropriately."

Much more here:

http://www.smh.com.au/national/knowing-your-enemy-20090527-bnpr.html

Good to see the spread of adoption of e-Health in the mental health domain where there is good evidence it can help.

Sixth we have:

E-health conspicuously absent from Budget funding: experts

Elizabeth McIntosh - Friday, 29 May 2009

EXPERTS are pinning their hopes for progressing the e-health agenda on the release of the National Health and Hospitals Reform Commission (NHHRC) report due out in June, following the conspicuous absence of e-health from the latest federal Budget.

.....

Health IT consultant Dr David More supported this call, noting that the unreleased government-commissioned Deloitte e-health strategy proposed a similar organisation, independent of government. But he said it wouldn’t get off the ground unless there was funding.

“Core funding for the strategy should have been in the Budget – even if they had to wait for the NHHRC to come out with their final report,” Dr More said.

RACGP president Dr Chris Mitchell said there needed to be investment in e-health, as despite the significant costs of establishing a system, it would result in significant savings.

More here (Registration required):

http://www.medicalobserver.com.au/News/0,1734,4600,29200905.aspx

Good to see the professional press pushing the arguments made elsewhere and even here!

Seventh we have:

Patients' documents found in city street

  • Erik Jensen
  • May 25, 2009

THE Moran Health Care Group is under investigation for possible breaches of the Aged Care Act after hundreds of private documents were found dumped outside its offices in Sydney.

Ian Martin-Brown, a taxi driver from Lidcombe, found the documents on Bridge Street yesterday morning. There were 10 boxes on the footpath, he said, and about 10 more garbage bags of documents spilling into the gutter.

The documents - some of which police returned to Moran and some of which are understood to be with the City of Sydney - included property contracts, legal correspondence, wills, title deeds, staff details and patient information.

"There were payrolls, there were names, there were account names, bank account numbers," Mr Martin-Brown said.

"There were patient documents - everything you could imagine involved with aged care and hospitals. There were documents and receipts; some documents with respect to property; BSB numbers, account numbers; absolutely everything. It's just a complete legal minefield. It's just mind-blowing."

The Department of Health and Ageing, which regulates private nursing homes, would not say whether it would seize the documents.

More here:

http://www.smh.com.au/national/patients-documents-found-in-city-street-20090525-bjl7.html

Oops! Those paper records causing trouble again!

Eighth we have:

Cheap solution for security

Karen Dearne | May 26, 2009

A BRISBANE man has invented a simple, low-cost online authentication system that would allow banks to offer one-time passcode security to all their customers.

Internet database manager Matthew Walker has won a patent for PassWindows, which synchronises a part-pattern printed on a see-through card window with the rest of a unique pattern generated on the computer screen to display a numeric code.

Online users hold their card against the screen to reveal a randomly created six-digit number that securely authenticates their financial transactions.

Mr Walker said PassWindows did the same job as hardware tokens but for almost no cost, so banks could offer that level of security to all customers, rather than just their high-wealth or business clients.

"Everyone I've run this past says 'yes, technically it works, it's a lot better than relying on user passwords and it's infinitely cheaper than supplying and supporting electronic devices'," Mr Walker said.

More here:

http://www.australianit.news.com.au/story/0,24897,25538086-15306,00.html

On the face of it, this seems like a really clever idea. Could certainly have some e-Health applications as a cheaper ID token.

Lastly the slightly more technically orientated article for the week:

Users set to ditch tape for online storage

Not so, retorts Tandberg Data

Tom Jowitt (Techworld) 26/05/2009 08:23:00

Tags: tape, tandberg, storage backup, online storage, data loss

Users are set to ditch tape as a storage medium as one in 10 businesses have lost data following a failure of a tape backup system.

That's according to research published from business continuity specialist Connect. The survey of 151 UK IT managers and directors also found that three quarters of SMEs still use traditional backup tapes as the default option to store their data, but that nearly half (49 percent) of all companies expect to switch to an online backup service within the next 3 years.

The study also found that one in five have already switched away from traditional backup tapes, with 10 percent expected to shift across over the next 12 months.

Tapes have been used to store data since the 1960s, but Connect feels that tape as a backup method is "hugely vulnerable and problematic. It is not even cheaper than more reliable options," said the survey.

Mark MacGregor, CEO of Connect told Techworld that over the last 12 months his company had stopped recommending tape as standard for their clients, mostly down to the poor reliability of tapes for recovering data and the decline in costs for online backups.

"Until 18 months ago, our recommendation to our clients was that online backup was not speedy enough and was too expensive," he said. "Online backup was ok for small amounts of data, but over the last year or so, that equation has changed, as the price of online backup has come down and line speed has improved."

MacGregor said that the failure rates of tapes was not so much due to the technology itself, but rather with what people actually did with their tapes. "It is not failure of tapes per se, more failure of the process," he said. "Those process problems, combined with falling costs of online backup, or alternative methods, makes switching to online backup a no-brainer now. Obviously, there can be exceptions though."

More here:

http://www.techworld.com.au/article/304409/users_set_ditch_tape_online_storage

There is no doubt this is a real trend – and is quite sensible as long as other media are used from to time (Tape, DVD etc) which can be stored off line and don’t need power. Of course, whatever is done it is vital to test backups regularly.

More next week.

David.

Friday, May 29, 2009

Are There “Green Shoots” Appearing for Australian E-Health?

The following was circulated by Dr Michael Legg earlier today to the Coalition for eHealth and Health Informatics Society of Australia (HISA) mailing lists.

It is reproduced here with Michael’s permission.

----- Begin Release

Dear Colleague,

eHealth Lobbying

When last the Coalition for eHealth met, Booz/NHHRC, Deloitte’s and NEHTA provided their perspectives on national plans for eHealth in Australia. There was agreement among the CeH members at the well-attended meeting that the next step should be to lobby the Commonwealth for the further development of the national eHealth strategy and for its full funding.

Subsequent to that meeting a lobbying framework was developed and work was commenced on developing a position statement, supporting fact sheets and putting together a small group to visit Canberra. The lobbying visit was scheduled for early June.

As happens in life from time to time, those careful plans were overtaken by events, and through the good graces of Prue Power and the AHHA, at a couple of days notice the opportunity arose to meet with many of the key people that we had planned to target.

So yesterday Prue and I (together with colleagues from the AHHA Dentistry and Governance Groups) met with Minister Nicola Roxon, Shadow Minister Peter Dutton, Senator Judith Adams (Deputy Opposition Whip in the Senate and member of the Senate Community Affairs Committee) and Senator Gary Humphries (Chair of the Liberal Social Policy Committee). A meeting with an adviser to the Prime Minister was also arranged but unfortunately was cancelled at the last moment.

The meeting with Peter Dutton was as positive as it could have been. He began by acknowledging that there had not been the progress there should have been with the previous Government and then asked us to convey to the Minister the willingness of the opposition to support a 10 year eHealth program on a bipartisan basis! It will come as no surprise we did just that in our meeting with the Minister later that day.

Our meetings with the Senators reinforced the CeH consensus statement on a national plan and provided background for the Senators who were preparing for Senate Estimates next week.

The meeting with Minister Roxon too was very up-beat although she was careful to manage expectations. She made clear that the Government recognised both workforce and eHealth were important issues and that Government had been working hard on them and that she expected that there would be significant policy announcements within 6 months. She indicated that the ‘business case’, nudged off the agenda for the last COAG meeting by the GFC, is now slated for the July COAG meeting. She also indicated that there was money outside the budget that could be used for eHealth although she also said that times were tough and how much had not been determined. All cause for optimism!

Michael Legg,

29th May 2009

----- End Release

Sounds pretty good to me! We will have to now see if we can keep all these players to their words!

Have a great weekend!

David.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Report Watch – Week of 25 May, 2009

Just an occasional post when I come upon a few interesting reports that are worth a download or browse. This week we have a few.

First we have:

Dragging health records into the Digital Age

May 18, 2009 4:00 AM PST

By Ina Fried

Staff Writer, CNET News

Walk though a typical Kaiser Permanente doctor's office or hospital, and you won't find a paper chart lying around. Kaiser, with 450 hospitals and offices around the country, is almost entirely paperless.

But as the rest of the health care industry rushes to follow in Kaiser's digital footsteps, Kaiser's paperless success story--a 10-year, $4 billion effort--might actually serve as a cautionary tale.

By no means has the Kaiser e-health project failed. In fact, besides some hiccups, it has gone well: Kaiser said it has seen more satisfied patients and a slight dip in emergency room visits and hospital stays, which cuts costs. Even the doctors grumbling the loudest beforehand don't know what they would do if they were forced back to paper.

Unfortunately, the rest of the health care system looks nothing like Kaiser.

Kaiser is a rare beast: both an insurance provider and medical provider. Investing in digital technology was projected to create efficiencies in its medical services and boost the bottom line.

Most hospitals don't operate like that. They provide a service, bill the insurance company or the government, and move on to the next patient, efficiency be damned.

Nonetheless, the United States appears to be barreling ahead with a far-reaching health care digitization effort that even proponents say leaves many questions unanswered. The Obama stimulus package provides $19 billion for hospital technology efforts, which could go a long way toward prodding penny-pinching hospitals and doctors to finally leap into the 21st century.

More here (including links to many other articles, multimedia etc):

http://news.cnet.com/Dragging-health-records-into-the-Digital-Age/2009-11393_3-6249503.html?tag=txt

This is a pretty comprehensive discussion of the views in the US as they plan to move forward with e-Health. Many links and well worth a browse!

Second we have:

Simulator trains surgeons to be more efficient

18 May 2009

Danish research has found that using simulators to train surgeons can make them twice as quick and more precise when operating.

A study carried out by a team at Copenhagen University Hospital to assess the effect of virtual reality training on keyhole surgery showed that surgeons trained using simulators took a median time of 12 minutes to complete the operation.

Those trained using traditional methods, learning by solely working alongside doctors, took a median time of 24 minutes to carry out the same procedure.

The study, published in the current issue of the British Medical Journal, also showed that the performance level of novices trained on the simulator was comparable to that of intermediately experienced laproscopists and that they carried out better work.

More here:

http://e-health-insider.com/news/4847/simulator_trains_surgeons_to_be_more_efficient

The paper abstract can be accessed here:

http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/abstract/338/may14_2/b1802

and the full paper here:

http://www.bmj.com/cgi/eletters/338/may14_2/b1802#213756

The conclusion says it all:

“Conclusion Skills in laparoscopic surgery can be increased in a clinically relevant manner using proficiency based virtual reality simulator training. The performance level of novices was increased to that of intermediately experienced laparoscopists and operation time was halved. Simulator training should be considered before trainees carry out laparoscopic procedures.”

Third we have:

ONC Issues Operating Plan for HITECH

The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology has released to Congress an operating plan for implementing provisions of the HITECH Act within the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

“This operating plan outlines immediate actions to meet statutory requirements and to begin the huge task ahead,” according to the eight-page document. “Over the next several weeks, ONC will hold hearings and meetings to develop and vet plans and procedures.”

The plan describes 19 upcoming regulations, guidance, reports and studies regarding the enhanced HIPAA privacy and security rules, and their due dates under the law. It also lists six tasks, and due dates, for heightened enforcement of the rules.

More here:

http://www.healthdatamanagement.com/news/HITECH-28217-1.html?ET=healthdatamanagement:e873:100325a:&st=email&channel=policies_regulation

The operating plan is found here:

http://www.hhs.gov/recovery/reports/plans/onc_hit.pdf

Fourth we have:

Workplace e-mail intervention program helps people sit less and eat better

May 19, 2009 (OAKLAND, Calif.) An e-mail intervention program is an effective way to significantly improve diet and physical activity by helping people move more, sit less, and make healthier food choices, according to a Kaiser Permanente Division of Research study in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.

The study was a randomized controlled trial of the ALIVE (A Lifestyle Intervention Via E-mail) program conducted among 787 Kaiser Permanente Northern California employees at their worksites. Through the ALIVE program, developed by NutritionQuest, (www.nutritionquest.com) weekly e-mails were sent to the 351 employees randomized to the intervention group; the 436 employees in the control group received only immediate e-mail feedback at the start of the intervention indicating whether or not their reported physical activity and diet met national guidelines. The messages to the participants in the intervention group suggested small, practical, individually tailored goals, such as eating fruit for a snack three times a week, walking for 10 minutes a day at lunch time, or walking to the store instead of driving.

At the end of the 16-week trial, the participants in the intervention group were more physically active, eating more fruits and vegetables, and reducing their intake of saturated fats and trans fats, compared to the control group. The biggest changes occurred among those in the intervention group, who did not meet behavioral recommendations at the start of the trial. For example, employees who were not regularly active before receiving the intervention increased their participation in moderate intensity physical activities by almost an hour a week and decreased the amount of time they spent in sedentary activities, like watching TV and videos, by about two hours a week. These changes had a lasting effect four months after the intervention ended, the study found.

"The takeaway message here for people who want to improve their diet and physical activity, and for employers who want a healthier workforce, is that e-mail intervention programs are a very cost-effective way to get healthy," said study lead investigator Barbara Sternfeld, Ph.D., senior research scientist with the Kaiser Permanente Division of Research and the study's lead investigator. "A tailored e-mail program includes all the things that behavioral scientists have said for years about changing behavior: small goals tailored for the individual, reinforcement, and tracking but delivered in a mass, cost-effective way."

More here:

http://www.scienceblog.com/cms/workplace-e-mail-intervention-program-helps-people-sit-less-and-eat-better-21212.html

The report abstract is found here:

http://www.ajpm-online.net/article/S0749-3797%2809%2900150-0/abstract

More information about what works!

Fifth we have:

Patients Reveal A Willingness to Trade Hands-On Medical Care for Computer Consultations

Study also finds that Internet-savvy consumers will trade some privacy in order to gain transparency, full access to medical records

Date: 5/18/2009

BIDMC Contact: Bonnie Prescott

Phone: 617-667-7306

Email: bprescot@bidmc.harvard.edu

BOSTON -- As President Barack Obama calls for streamlining heath care by fully converting to electronic medical records and as Congress prepares to debate issues of patient privacy, one question has largely gone unasked: What do patients want?

A qualitative study led by a research team at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) helps answer that question. Reported in the June 2009 issue of the Journal of General Internal Medicine (JGIM), the findings provide key insights into consumer preferences, suggesting that patients want full access to all of their medical records, are willing to make some privacy concessions in the interest of making their medical records completely transparent, and that, going forward, fully expect that computers will play a major role in their medical care, even substituting for face-to-face doctor visits.

“We set out to study patient attitudes toward electronic personal health records and other emerging and future electronic health information technologies,” explains the study’s lead author Jan Walker, RN, MBA, Instructor in Medicine in the Division of General Medicine and Primary Care at BIDMC and Harvard Medical School. “And we learned that, for the most part, patients are very comfortable with the idea of computers playing a central role in their care.” In fact, she adds, patients said they not only want computers to bring them customized medical information, they fully expect that in the future they will be able to rely on electronic technology for many routine medical issues.

More here:

http://www.bidmc.org/News/InResearch/2009/May/PatientsandComputers.aspx

The report is here (subscription required):

Insights for Internists: “I Want the Computer to Know Who I Am”

This is a valuable study of patient attitudes that needs to be widely reviewed and discussed.

Sixth we have:

‘Results-oriented standard’ needed for improved HIT

By Jennifer Lubell / HITS staff writer

Posted: May 22, 2009 - 11:00 am EDT

Investing in health information technology is doomed to fail if it's treated as a pure technology implementation program, authors of a new health IT report said during a teleconference sponsored by the Center for American Progress Action Fund.

The billions of dollars in health IT investment authorized under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 “presents a landmark opportunity to catalyze improvement of our nation’s healthcare system,” according to the report, A Historic Opportunity: Wedding Health Information Technology to Care Delivery Innovation and Provider Payment Reform. However, if the funds are simply used for the sake of technology adoption, health IT is not going to work, said Judy Feder, senior fellow with the Center for American Progress Action Fund.

More here:

http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20090522/REG/305229963

Report here:

http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2009/05/health_it.html

Seventh we have:

Using Electronic Records for Research

A consulting and outsourcing firm has prepared a free white paper on how medical record data can be more effectively integrated into research studies

......

To view the white paper, “Medical Record Data Abstraction…Simplified,” visit carecommunications.com.

More here:

http://www.healthdatamanagement.com/news/EHRs-28214-1.html?ET=healthdatamanagement:e874:100325a:&st=email&channel=business_intelligence

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Study identifies top five wireless challenges

May 20, 2009 | Molly Merrill, Associate Editor

CHICAGO – A new study identifies the top five challenges senior IT executives face when implementing wireless applications and devices in the healthcare setting.

HIMSS Analytics used two focus groups for the March study, ranging from large (1,000+-bed) urban health systems to small (100-bed) rural organizations.

According to the HIMSS Analytics Database, approximately one-third of U.S. hospitals use wireless technology.

"In theory, secure mobile access to medical records and imaging, prescriptions and even general administrative databases should allow doctors, nurses and medics to treat more patients faster, more accurately and with greater flexibility – from any location in a large hospital, during home visits or at the scene of an ambulance response," said Jennifer Horowitz, senior director of research for HIMSS Analytics. "However, often the anticipated productivity gains are hampered by a series of fairly common issues related to wireless networks. This report examines some of those key issues and identifies some approaches healthcare agencies are utilizing to address them."

More here:

http://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/study-identifies-top-five-wireless-challenges

The results of the study are now published in a free report available for download at www.netmotionwireless.com/resources/whitepapers

So much to read – so little time – have fun!

David.