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."

Monday, May 21, 2012

AusHealthIT Poll Number 122 – Results – 21st May, 2012.

The question was:

Do You Think The Funds Provided For The NEHRS (PCEHR) In The Recent Budget Are Enough To Sustain And Grow The Program?

For Sure
-  0 (0%)
Probably
-  5 (18%)
Neutral
-  3 (11%)
Probably Not
-  8 (29%)
No Way
  11 (40%)
Votes 27
Really fascinating - less than 20% thought that the budget allocation was enough to sustain the system. It is really the money that seems to talk and tell the truth.
Again, many thanks to those that voted!
David.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

There Are Some Pretty Profound Lessons Here For Those Who Will Listen. Pity About DoHA and NEHTA Just Pushing On.

The Victorian HealthSMART had the ‘last rites’ administered this week. Here is some of the coverage. First here:

Victoria kills HealthSMART IT project

No more money after June 30.

The Victorian Government has abandoned its statewide HealthSMART IT project, reportedly citing a cost overrun of at least $140 million.
A spokeswoman for Health Minister David Davis' office told iTnews that funding for the project would conclude on June 30 this year.
Four lead agencies - Eastern Health, Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital, Austin Health and Peninsula Health - will continue using HealthSMART, after adopting the system almost a year ago.
However, the other six health services slated to have received the system will be able to make their own choices about the computer systems they require, according to a report by ABC News.
The ministerial spokeswoman said that the Government would also look at alternate arrangements, and set up an expert panel to inform it of next steps.
The state government has considered abandoning HealthSMART as early as February 2011.
More of the saga here:
and here:

Vic scraps HealthSMART system

The Victorian Government has made the decision to scrap its HealthSMART system, which was years overdue and had run hundreds of millions of dollars over budget.
HealthSMART was launched in 2003 and had been designed to run as a single electronic foundation for the state's public health service. The single platform would combine a finance system, as well as patient-management and clinical-applications services.
However, Health Minister David Davis today confirmed that the government had scrapped the continuation of the roll-out of HealthSMART, with the government to now work on a hospital-by-hospital basis, to set up individualised systems.
Davis said the government is determined not to "throw more good money, after bad" and would set up an expert panel to advise it on the best way to upgrade the hospital information and communication technology (ICT) systems.
"In those hospitals where it has been put in place or partially put in place, health services will make their decisions from that position, but going forward, beyond that, health services will be able to examine what is appropriate for their particular service," he said.
The road to the system's cancellation is one littered with blowouts and delays; $323 million was originally budgeted for the system and a deadline for completion was set for the end of 2007.
Lots more here:
Last here:

State government scraps $500m e-health project

  • From: AAP
  • May 18, 2012 1:38PM
VICTORIA'S $500 million e-health system, aimed at creating electronic patient records and prescriptions, has been dumped and will be replaced with a patchwork approach.
Health Minister David Davis confirmed the Government had scrapped a further rollout of HealthSMART, the project to modernise the health system's information and communications technology (ICT).
He said the Government would now work on a hospital-by-hospital basis to set up individualised systems.
The HealthSMART rollout began in 2003 under the previous state Labor government but is fully operational at just four health services across Victoria.
Mr Davis said the Government was determined not to "throw more good money after bad" and would set up an expert panel to advise it on the best way to upgrade the hospital ICT system.
More here:
The thing that should not be lost here is that this is really a very sad and very wasteful outcome.
I reviewed all this in June 2007 (Now essentially 5 years ago) and made the following assessment:
“Under the Health ICT Strategy, the Government was to remove obsolete, aged products and invest in modern proven systems, based on accepted interoperability standards covering hospital administration systems, clinical systems and electronic medication ordering.
Of course that was never going to happen. We now find that – to quote from the HealthSMART website:
“HealthSMART is a $323M technology program operating across the public health care sector funded through the 2003-04 Victorian State Budget. Initially a four-year program, it is now running over six years from 2003 - 2009.
To be frank even this timeline looks more than optimistic. Why do I say this?
First, it seems that with clinical systems HealthSMART has adopted the approach of developing State-Wide Builds of the Cerner Software. Experience elsewhere has shown that this can be very problematic (just look at the UK NHS) – as the users don’t see they are getting the system they need that really suits them – rather they are getting a compromise – to them – state-wide solution.
One only has to see that the State-Wide System is being driven by a committee representing 13 different health systems (from major to minor hospitals and from cancer to paediatric hospitals) with over 40 members to recognise that getting agreement on what is to be done will be both slow and tricky to achieve.
Second if one reviews the time-lines provided in each of the progress reports (Roadmaps as they are called) it is clear that with each update issued the time-lines are extending.
Third my making the choice to implement Cerner clinical applications on top of an iSoft Patient Management System they have greatly complicated the operations of each and have lost many of the key benefits of integration that the Cerner system offers.
This is especially true given their approach is to integrate patient administration, outpatients, emergency, laboratory, pharmacy and radiology (at least) onto a Cerner core repository. I believe this is a plain stupid strategy. The amount of context switching from source systems (lab, pharmacy etc) that many clinicians will be forced into is likely to be both time-wasting and annoying.
Fourth with the some of the system selections made there must be the suspicion that adequate financial due-diligence was not undertaken given the difficulties being experienced at present by iSoft.
Fifth, any Health IT strategy that takes six-seven years to implement in the Public Sector has a high risk profile no matter what else goes well initially.
It seems to me that sadly this strategy is facing some existential threats. I hope it can prosper and deliver but it is looking less likely to me as of late June, 2007.
Full blog here:
A year later we had this:

Vic rethinks e-health

Karen Dearne | September 30, 2008
VICTORIA is ruling a line under its patchy HealthSmart IT rollout, and has returned to the drawing board with plans for a new whole-of-health ICT strategy for the period 2009-2013.
When the now-$427 million program began in 2003, it was hoped that the ICT refresh and rebuild across the state's public hospitals, rural alliances and community health providers would be complete within four years.
But in April this year, Victoria's auditor-general Des Pearson said HealthSmart had been overly ambitious in its targets, and was at least two years behind schedule.
More than half of the original budget had been spent with only 24 per cent of the planned installations complete.
The audit office found that HealthSmart had failed to get the cornerstone Cerner clinical system working at any of its sites, and had replaced only one of 10 HOMER hospital systems which were obsolete when the program began.
Mr Pearson said the project judged most at risk, but with the greatest potential benefit, was Cerner's Millennium suite of e-health records, appointments scheduling, diagnostic services, results reporting and e-prescribing applications.
A $79 million deal with Cerner was signed in March 2006, but costs had risen by $17 million to $96 million in 2006 - the biggest price blowout so far, the audit office found.
More here:
And of course we had the always bad sign of the program director leaving (smart people know when the jig is up and it is not working and that one should go before being sprung):

HealthSmart boss resigns

17 September 2008 08:52 PM
The public servant in charge of Victoria's mammoth HealthSmart electronic health initiative has resigned for what the state's health department today said were personal reasons.
Fiona Wilson had led the troubled project since mid-2003 in her capacity as the director of the Office of Health Information Systems within the Victorian Department of Human Services. However a spokesperson for the department told ZDNet.com.au tonight that Wilson had grown weary of the regular commute from Auckland where her partner resided.
More here:
Full blog here:
http://aushealthit.blogspot.com.au/2008/09/useful-and-interesting-health-it-links_21.html
As it is when the staff are complaining vociferously!

Monday, February 11, 2008

Southern Health (Victoria) Staff Speak Out on HealthSMART.

The following rather long letter arrived – by post – in an unmarked envelope – last week.
The impassioned three page letter (scanned) can be accessed here.
(Note the file is about 3.0 Megs and takes a few moments to load even on a broadband link)
While it is hard to know the exact truth behind all these claims enough of the thrust of what is being said makes very good sense, and to me the broad points ring true.
Full blog here:
The bottom line here to me is what went wrong were 2 fundamental issues:
1. The failure to recognise the complexity of the large organisations and allow them enough autonomy. This just led to push back and eventual failure.
2. A range of poor technical and implementation decisions - a key one of which was not to listen closely to the experience of the vendors who had been engaged.
Looking back my comments from 5 years ago look pretty prescient and sensible.
All I can say is I hope we don’t also continue to push on and waste money for 5 years on the equally flawed NEHRS which is getting even greater ‘push back’ in my view.
David.

Saturday, May 19, 2012

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links - 19th May, 2012.

Note: Each link is followed by a title and few paragraphs. For the full article click on the link above title of the article. Note also that full access to some links may require site registration or subscription payment.
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Expert Panel: OpenMRS Implementers: Experiences and Lessons Learned, May 14th to 18th 2012.

Started by A/Prof. Terry HANNAN on 07 May 2012
Many clinical organizations are working to implement an electronic medical record (EMR) or electronic health record (EHR) to digitize their work and improve the care they can provide. However, many have questions about how to choose an EMR and how to implement these programs.

To answer these questions, we have been fortunate to obtain access to the knowledge resources of four experts in the field of e-health and OpenMRS implementation. OpenMRS is an open source EMR with a community of hundreds of implementers and developers, that have implemented this system in over 130 sites in 50 countries (
http://openmrs.org/about/locations/), including the US, South Africa, Germany, the Philippines, and Chile. Further, both the Rwandan and Kenyan governments have chosen OpenMRS for the implementation of their national eHealth infrastructure.
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Telemonitoring helps to lower blood pressure rates

By danb
Created May 11 2012 - 11:59am
With an estimated one in three adults in the U.S. suffering from high-blood pressure [1]--which, when combined with stroke, costs the U.S. healthcare system $156 billion annually--it is imperative that better methods of caring for the condition emerge. Telemonitoring research unveiled this week [2] at the American Heart Association's Quality of Care and Outcomes Research Scientific Sessions 2012 in Atlanta provided a glimmer of hope for such patients.
Patients who received telemonitoring help and regular follow-up support from a pharmacist were more likely to have lowered their blood pressure than patients receiving traditional care, according to researchers, led by Karen Margolis, M.D., of Bloomington, Minn.-based HealthPartners Research Foundation.
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Public vs. private HIEs: Room for both?

By danb
Created May 11 2012 - 1:25pm
While private health information exchanges are non-reliant on government handouts and thus, slightly more self-sustaining, according to an article [1] published in this month's Journal of AHIMA, they also, according to some, undermine efforts of public HIEs, which aim to connect providers for the greater good, rather than for greater profits. So the question remains: Is there room for both?
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ONC Seeks Input on NwHIN Governance

MAY 11, 2012 12:05pm ET
The Office of the National Coordinator for HIT has issued a request for information on establishing a governance mechanism for the emerging Nationwide Health Information Network.
The mechanism will include common rules expressing technical, privacy and security, and business practice requirements to create a consistent trust baseline for stakeholders, according to a PowerPoint presentation from ONC. “In the absence of national guidance, states and other private sector stakeholders/consortiums are beginning to develop state/consortium-unique and potentially conflicting governance approaches to electronic health information exchange.”
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5 reasons data inaccuracies occur in EMRs

By Michelle McNickle, Web Content Producer
Created 05/10/2012
Studies have shown in recent years that the quality of data in many electronic medical records is often not very good. According to Peter Witonsky, president and chief sales officer at iSirona, this is largely due to simple inaccuracies that occur more often than we think.
"A lot of these fall into the same category, in my mind, but it's different ways of getting to that category," said said Witonsky. "That latency of data is terrible. We have customers, prior to us, with eight to 10 hours in latency of data, and that's not uncommon. It's not the end of the world, but there are tons and tons of examples of what latency of data will do to decision making on the other side."
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Doctor Fights Back Against Online Complaints

Joe Cantlupe, for HealthLeaders Media , May 10, 2012

On neighborhood Internet community bulletin boards, like the ones I frequent, people write their joys, concerns, and gripes about everyday life, whether it's about a house painter, or the local school system. They also rave about doctors they are crazy about, and occasionally nix those they definitely wouldn't recommend.
But the physician talk is only sporadic, and generally not too specific. There seems to be an understanding that the physician probably lives nearby and might see the negative comments.
Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Health Information Technology in the United States:Driving Toward Delivery System Change, 2012

From the abstract: "Health information technology (HIT) has become central to health care reform policy-making due to its potential to improve efficiency and increase the quality of health care in the United States. Adoption of these technologies has remained a priority of the federal government as evidenced by incentive programs enacted through legislation, including the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 and the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
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Friday, May 11, 2012

ONC Must Go Further To Achieve Flexibility in its 2014 Edition

Of the three tenets of meaningful use -- adopt certified electronic health record technology, demonstrate core and menu set requirements, and report on clinical quality measures -- adopting certified EHRs has proven more complicated than most providers anticipated. In an iHealthBeat Perspective last year, we discussed some of the specific challenges that health care providers -- in this context, both eligible hospitals and eligible professionals -- have faced in adopting certified technology. One of the most significant challenges was the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT's December 2010 clarification that required providers to possess each of the certified EHR's capabilities, not just those that they intended to use to demonstrate meaningful use. 
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California Providers Reach Out For EHR Help

Unusually large number of Californian docs ask state's regional extension center, CalHIPSO, for help meeting Meaningful Use regulations, but few have actually achieved MU so far.
By Ken Terry,  InformationWeek
May 11, 2012
More than 7,700 healthcare providers have enrolled in the California Health Information Partnership and Services Organization (CalHIPSO), the largest health IT regional extension center (REC) in the nation. This is significantly more than the 6,200 providers who were expected to participate when CalHIPSO started two years ago with $33.2 million in federal grants.
The target population for RECs includes rural and safety net providers, as well as primary care doctors in practices of 10 or fewer physicians. Currently, CalHIPSO's membership is divided about evenly among small private practices, community health centers, and public hospitals and rural providers, said CalHIPSO CEO Speranza Avram in an interview with InformationWeek Healthcare. AdTech Ad
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Experts: Use patients to reduce errors in electronic records

By mdhirsch
Created May 10 2012 - 10:07am
Giving patients better access to their electronic health records is not only part of Stage 2 of Meaningful Use. It's also an effective way to improve the quality of the data, according to a panel of experts who spoke on a recent webinar [1] hosted by the National e-health Collaborative [2], a public-private partnership established by a grant from the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC) to foster national health information exchange (HIE).
"You can't proofread your own stuff. You have to have a second pair of eyes," said speaker Dave deBronkart, co-chair of the Society for Participatory Medicine.
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Despite challenges, disruption, experts sunny on HIE market

By gshaw
Created May 10 2012 - 12:08pm
In spite of turmoil, the health information exchange (HIE) market grew more than 40 percent in 2011, according to a Chilmark Research report [1].
"In little over a year we have seen several vendors exit the market, several others enter and the acquisitions of Carefx by Harris and MobileMD by Siemens. We also saw Microsoft pull completely out of the clinical market by turning over all its HIT assets (except HealthVault) to the new joint venture with GE, Caradigm," Chilmark notes in a post [2] about the report.
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New ONC dashboard tracks nationwide HITECH progress

By Mike Miliard, Managing Editor
Created 05/09/2012
WASHINGTON – The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) has  launched its new Health IT Dashboard, offering an interactive trove of data related to grants programs, regional extension centers and other measures of health IT adoption.
Chock full of maps, charts and graphs, the dashboard presents comprehensive information about ONC innovation grant programs, and it offers detailed presentations of performance data for programs such as the Health IT Regional Extension Centers and Community College Consortia to Educate Health IT Professionals.
"The release of the Health IT Dashboard is a significant milestone and we are glad to welcome the website as a tool for delivering key data to ONC's stakeholders and the interested public," said Victor Lazzaro, ONC's performance officer and director for the Health IT Dashboard projects.
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Telemental Health Dramatically Cuts Psychiatric Hospitalization Rates

Caroline Cassels
May 9, 2012 (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) — Providing telemental health (TMH) services to patients living in rural and remote areas dramatically reduces psychiatric hospitalization rates, new research shows.
The first large-scale assessment of TMH outcomes showed that patients' psychiatric hospitalization utilization decreased by about 25%.
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6 keys to the future of analytics and big data in healthcare

By Michelle McNickle, Web Content Producer
Created 05/08/2012
A recently released report by Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation proves the value of big data is certainly something to take seriously. And as more organizations create plans to make better use of and leverage their big data, Joe Petro, senior vice president of healthcare research and development at Nuance Communications, believes the industry is on the brink of seeing some pretty remarkable things as a result.
Petro outlines six keys to the future of analytics and big data in healthcare. 
1. Organizations are "drowning in information, but dying of thirst" at the same time. According to Petro, one CMIO at Nuance sums up the current state of big data eloquently: "When you're in the institution and you're trying to figure out what's going on and how to report on something, he says you're dying of thirst in a sea of information," he said. "And what he means by that is, there's a tremendous amount of information but a big data problem, and the issue is how do we tap into that to make sense of what's going on?" This question applies not only to the patient, Petro continued, but also to the government's plans in regard to disease and population management. "The issue is it isn't organized," he said. "It's a mixture of structured and unstructured data, and what's going to happen over the course of next several years is the government is imposing a tremendous amount of information for folks to report."
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ONC privacy and security guide offers 10 steps for MU

By Mike Miliard, Managing Editor
Created 05/09/2012
WASHINGTON – ONC's Office of the Chief Privacy Officer (OCPO) has published a "Guide to Privacy and Security of Health Information," which aims to help physicians, nurses and IT staff better understand how the safety of patient data is essential to meaningful use of electronic health records and mobile devices.
Earlier this spring Healthcare IT News reported the results of a study from HIMSS Analytics and Kroll that showed security breaches are still widespread in healthcare – despite increased attention paid to patient privacy.
The "HIMSS Analytics Report: Security of Patient Data," suggested that, despite increasingly stringent regulatory activity with regard to reporting and auditing procedures, most providers were prioritizing compliance with the rules over actually bolstering their own organizations' security protocols.
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NHS IT has chance to be a world leader

4 May 2012   Chris Thorne
Katie Davis, the current head of IT for the NHS, has given the NHS an 'eight, possibly' score of confidence in the NHS becoming a world leader in healthcare IT within ten years’ time.
Speaking in a question time panel at the end of the 2012 Health Informatics Congress in London yesterday, the managing director of NHS Informatics at the Department of Health, was asked how likely it was that the UK could gain such a position.
“That’s a tough question, it would be unrealistic to say we will definitely have a world beating IT system in ten years because we are in a period of huge change,” Davis told journalist Nick Ross, who moderated the event. “
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HIPAA changes likely to put onus on vendors to protect data

By danb
Created May 9 2012 - 11:04am
Health IT companies that deal with patient data are more likely to be on the hook for data breaches when highly anticipated changes to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act are announced within the next few months, according to an article posted to Mass High Tech.
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KLAS: Providers Have Big Plans For BI Solutions

CIOs Are Looking for More from BI Solutions
Slightly more than half of healthcare providers are planning to buy or replace their business intelligence (BI) solution in the next three years, according to a new KLAS report, which found that those who are in the market are seeking a robust solution.
The report — Business Intelligence Perception 2012: A Wave is Coming found that providers are looking beyond clinical and financial data needs and targeting solutions that offer predictive analytics, data modeling, forecasting, trending, and other functionalities that will help them get meet regulatory requirements and position their organizations for participating in HIEs and ACOs.
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JAMIA: PHR med review tool reduces discrepancies

Concordance between documented and patient-reported medication regimens and reduction in potentially harmful medication discrepancies can be improved with a PHR medication review tool linked to the provider's medical record, according to a Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association article published online May 3.
Medication-related morbidity and mortality is estimated to result in $76 billion in total costs annually, and adverse drug events are estimated to occur in one-quarter of ambulatory patients. Of these, 11 percent are considered preventable.
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Computer-Based Screening May Reduce Teen Substance Abuse

Last Updated: May 07, 2012.
A computer-facilitated screening and provider brief advice system for primary care can increase adolescent receipt of substance use screening across a variety of practice settings, according to a study published online May 7 in Pediatrics.
MONDAY, May 7 (HealthDay News) -- A computer-facilitated screening and provider brief advice (cSBA) system for primary care can increase adolescent receipt of substance use screening across a variety of practice settings, according to a study published online May 7 in Pediatrics.
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Help! My Shrink Tried To Friend Me

Doctors with bad social media etiquette.

Back in college, a friend of mine was seeing a therapist. It was a small school, and the therapist was always in the commons drinking coffee and smoking with the students, including my friend. It was a little sketchy even back then, but she was sure it would end after college. It hasn’t: More than 20 years later, the shrink is all over Facebook. She’s “liked” my friend’s business Facebook page, she frequently comments on the alumni page, and she’s become Facebook friends with other classmates. My friend is not happy that this ex-therapist—someone with whom she shared deeply personal issues from a difficult time in her life—has taken advantage of easy online access to her, even if it’s virtual. Old classmates you never liked all that much lurking on your page are one thing, but a medical professional who knows your inner secrets is a whole other level of invasion. In my friend’s words: It’s creepy.
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AMA seeks to remedy 'cumbersome' Stage 2 rules

By Mike Miliard, Managing Editor
Created 05/08/2012
CHICAGO – Arguing that changes "are necessary to ensure that the meaningful use program lives up to its intended purpose," the American Medical Association on Monday submitted its comments on proposed Stage 2 criteria to Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Acting Administrator Marilyn Tavenner.
Joined by 98 state and specialty medical societies, the AMA sought more flexibility in its formal comments on the proposed rules for Stage 2 of the Medicare and Medicaid electronic health record incentive programs.
Citing the "technological and other challenges" many doctors are experiencing as they work to meet meaningful use, AMA officials offered suggestions for "synchronizing the multiple health IT and quality programs currently underway" in a bid to drive up physician participation.
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mHealth poised to explode, expert says

By Diana Manos, Senior Editor
Created 05/07/2012
MORTON, IL – Mobile health, or mHealth, is poised to explode over the next decade, says Chad Udell, managing director of Float Mobile Learning, a mobile learning consulting, strategy and research firm based in Morton, Illinois.
“Wellness programs and at-home health monitoring are just exploding right now,” Udell says. “So much of this is due to the fact that people like mobile. Mobile is with us all the time. It has facilitated so much bi-directional communication, and it gives us constant connectivity in a very and meaningful way.”
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Report Posits that Decentralized Data Analysis Increases Privacy Safeguards

MAY 7, 2012 4:46pm ET
A recent report from the Center for Democracy and Technology examines decentralizing analysis of health data to better protect privacy.
“As the digitization of health records makes it easier and more cost effective to share and analyze health data, policymakers and businesses are increasingly looking to use health data for secondary purposes--uses beyond that for which the health data were originally collected,” according to the report.
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Politicians block state drug tracking database bill to protect privacy

By danb
Created May 8 2012 - 1:58pm
Despite calls for a drug tracking databases to help curb prescription medication abuse, not everyone is convinced that such databases are the right way to go. For instance, Missouri state Sen. Rob Schaaf helped to block a bill [1] pushing for the creation of a drug tracking database, calling it an invasion of privacy.
"This bill causes every citizen to be forced against their will to give up their ... personal information about the controlled substances they are prescribed by their doctor," he said, according to [2] the Associated Press. Schaaf, who is also a family physicians, was part of an eight-hour filibuster against the bill.
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Somerset plans 4,000 telehealth users

4 May 2012   Lyn Whitfield
NHS Somerset is planning to monitor the symptoms of 4,000 people living with long-term conditions over the next three years, using technology from Safe Patient Systems.
The programme will be one of the largest roll-outs of telehealth monitoring outside the national whole system demonstrator project, and will focus on people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, congestive heart disease, and diabetes.
The Safe Mobile care System, which was developed by a consultant surgeon, David Morgan, works by providing patients with a touch-screen mobile phone-style device, which is programmed with personalised care plans from its web-based application software.
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GP prescribing 'could be improved by IT'

2 May 2012   Fiona Barr
Better use of computer systems in general practice could reduce errors in GP prescribing, which are currently found in one in 20 prescriptions, a major study has recommended.
An investigation of prescribing in general practice commissioned by the General Medical Council, found most errors were classified as mild or moderate, but one in 550 was judged to be serious.
It recommends a greater role for pharmacists in supporting GPs, more effective use of IT in general practice, and extra emphasis on prescribing in GP training to address the issue.
Professor Sir Peter Rubin, chair of the GMC, said GPs were typically very busy so it was important to make sure that prescribing was given the priority it needed.
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Climbing the Meaningful Use Mountain

Scott Mace, for HealthLeaders Media , May 8, 2012

Not long before I joined HealthLeaders, I found myself engrossed in a subject that involved technology and medicine, but took place far from the operating room.
The subject was mountain climbing. And the parallels to health system leadership are many. I'll explain. Scaling one of the world's tallest peaks remains an expensive endeavor. Not all calamities can be foreseen. Risks are high. Public exposure is great. (These days, many mountaineers tweet their way to the top.)
In each endeavor, technology continues to make great strides, but often requires a leap of faith, and months, if not years, of preparation. And yet, the best expeditions are guided by seasoned veterans who've often learned the hard way, through failure.
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E-prescribing up by 75% in 2011, Surescripts says

More than half of office-based physicians prescribing electronically
May 4, 2012 | By Alaric DeArment
ARLINGTON, Va. — More than one-third of prescriptions were sent electronically in 2011, the country's largest e-prescribing network said.
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Will Regina Holliday Become Health Care's Rosa Parks?

The protest organized by Regina Holliday over a patient’s right to access their medical information is not quite the same magnitude as agitating for integration in 1950s-era Alabama. Yet there are intriguing similarities between the crusade Rosa Parks launched then and what Holliday is attempting today. Both involve a refusal to accept second-class status and a resolve to push back against entrenched institutions.
Parks’ story is well known. Her refusal to surrender her seat to a white male passenger on a Montgomery city bus in December, 1955, prompted her arrest and a sustained bus boycott by outraged black residents. That boycott’s success propelled a young Martin Luther King, Jr. to the forefront of the fight against segregation. Parks eventually came to be known as the “mother of the modern day civil rights movement.”
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Virtual doctor’s visits catch on with insurers, employers

By Phil Galewitz, Kaiser Health News

Tired of feeling "like the walking dead" but worried about the cost of a doctor's visit, Amber Young sat on her bed near tears one recent Friday night in Woodbury, Minn.
By Todd A. Buchanan, for USA TODAY
Amber Young at home with her husband Bill and sons Cameron, 6, and Brody, 8, as she prepares dinner.
That's when she logged onto an Internet site, run by NowClinic online care, a subsidiary of UnitedHealth Group (parent of health insurer UnitedHealthcare), and "met" with a doctor in Texas.
After talking with the physician via instant messaging and then by telephone, Young was diagnosed with an upper respiratory illness and prescribed an antibiotic that her husband picked up at a local pharmacy. The doctor's "visit" cost $45.
"I was as suspicious as anyone about getting treated over the computer," said Young, 34, who was uninsured then. "But I could not have been happier with the service."
NowClinic, which started in 2010 and has expanded into 22 states, is part of the explosion of Web- and telephone-based medical services that experts say are transforming the delivery of primary health care, giving consumers access to inexpensive, round-the-clock care for routine problems — often without having to leave home or work.
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Markle Foundation releases new policy guide for health IT

By Diana Manos, Senior Editor
Created 05/07/2012
NEW YORK – The Markle Foundation has issued a new resource to help organizations implementing health IT navigate governance, individual consent, procurement and other areas related to secure information sharing.
The May 3rd release of the new Policies in Practice updates a similar resource, the Common Framework, released by Markle in 2006. Since then, the health IT landscape has dramatically transformed, Markle officials said. The passage of the HiTECH Act, new waves of regulation and increased investment in and adoption of health IT have brought both challenges and opportunities.
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IHI puts the spotlight on innovators pursuing better care

By Bernie Monegain, Editor
Created 05/07/2012
CAMBRIDGE, MA – Hospitals, physician practices and health plans across the country are boosting care – and saving millions – by employing quality measures, information technology and plenty of innovation. A new book tells the stories behind the successes.
Maureen Bisognano, president and CEO of the independent, nonprofit Institute for Healthcare Improvement, and Charles Kenney, a healthcare journalist put the spotlight on seven of these organizations in a new book, “Pursuing the Triple Aim.”
The triple aim they refer to is better care, better health and lower costs.
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Digging into docs' love-hate relationship with EHRs

By gshaw
Created May 7 2012 - 11:41am
If you ask a doctor what she hates about electronic health records, you're liable to get an earful. But it turns out that docs have something to say when it comes to what they love about EHRs, too.
Interviews [1] with a number of practitioners in American Medical News reveal some themes.
Docs hate that there's no guaranteed increase in productivity, that EHRs often add extra steps to their workflow and send them hunting for difficult-to-find data, for example.
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Physicians and social media: Follow the money

By kterry
Created May 5 2012 - 1:03pm
Physicians would not be well advised to use social media to connect with patients [1], said family physician Dike Drummond in a recent commentary posted to KevinMD.com--one of the top social media sites for doctors. His view is evidently similar to that of the majority of his colleagues: while 84 percent of physicians [2] use social media for personal reasons and 67 percent for professional purposes, few of them communicate with patients on Facebook, Twitter, or other social sites.
Some experts say that physicians are reluctant to use Facebook or Twitter for patient contact because of privacy or malpractice issues [3]--and that's undoubtedly true in many cases. But Drummond observed that physicians are not paid for going on social media sites with patients unless they have concierge practices. Furthermore, he pointed out, studies show that a third of physicians feel burned out on any given work day. So the extra time and effort required to interact with patients on social media might be the straw that breaks the camel's back, he argued.
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Monday, May 07, 2012

EHR Vendor Contract Controversy Persists

Like many industries that evolve in a somewhat unregulated marketplace, health IT has enjoyed a bit of a Wild West existence, albeit within a highly competitive environment. The scene is changing. Products' merits and their pivotal position within the care delivery system -- particularly with regard to patient safety -- face increasing scrutiny, as quality improvement advocates, policymakers and even the health IT community press for more transparency and, potentially, regulation.   
One hot-button issue is electronic health record vendor contract language that some claim impedes safety improvement. Two types of clauses have landed in the limelight:
  • "Hold harmless" clauses that require purchasers to indemnify vendors for errors, injuries or malpractice claims arising from use of the product; and
  • Clauses that prohibit users' open disclosure of identified product defects, glitches or hazards.
The American Medical Informatics Association, in a November 2010 position paper, and the Institute of Medicine, in its November 2011 health IT safety report, called for eradication of such clauses on the grounds that they run counter to public policy and safety-improvement interests.
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GOODBYE, PAPER

Electronic health records are being used in hospitals and doctors’ offices. So how are they doing? Do the E-records protect and promote patient safety?

Globe Staff / April 30, 2012
The patient who had come to see Dr. Eduardo Haddad had complicated problems — he was obese and diabetic with pulmonary hypertension. As Haddad reviewed the 50-year-old man’s medications, reading from a long list saved in the patient’s electronic health record, a window popped up on Haddad’s laptop. Two of the drugs, when taken together, could make the patient drowsy, it warned.
Haddad, an independent nephrologist in a two-doctor office in Lawrence, calls himself “old-fashioned.” He still keeps a bank of paper records in the receptionist’s office, but the electronic records system he uses each day is advanced. There are tools to screen for adverse drug interactions like this one and prompts to help him make choices about tests and treatments.
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Enjoy!
David.