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, November 20, 2013

Two Smart Local Bloggers Highlight Just How Hard, Unsafe and Complicated E-Health Can Be. Worth Browsing!

First we have this.

The Power, the Glory and the Dangers of structured health data

2013-November-12 | 11:03 By: Filed in: exchange formatspathology
It is now over eighteen months since I publicly aired my grave concerns regarding a  critical safety issue for Australia’s Personally Controlled Electronic Health Records (PCEHR) system, which centred around the lack of scrutiny of the quality of data in CDA documents to be contributed to people’s records. I have no idea if anyone other than Grahame Grieve took my concerns seriously. Certainly, no-one else has ever contacted me regarding the serious safety and quality issues I raised at the time, least of all NEHTA.
But it does appear that safety and quality issues have been getting slightly more attention in recent months than they did 18 months ago – at least in Australia. And on this front, I have some further good news.
By way of background, for most of that 18 months I was working for SA Health on the integration and migration of ( mainly Adelaide-based public ) hospital systems to work with a new potentially statewide public hospital EMR and Patient Administration System known affectionately as EPAS. The network’s “central” components comprise a number of Allscripts Sunrise products, an Intersystems Ensemble Integration Engine, and an Enterprise Patient Master Index built around the IBM  Initiate EMPI product. It is undoubtedly one of Australia’s largest health system integration undertakings, with over 200 interfaces supported by the single integration engine. I was responsible for the specification and documentation of many of these interfaces and for testing a number of key ones, including much of the integration with EPAS. Nearly all of the interfaces use  some variant of HL7 v2.3.1. I  became acutely aware of the structural and semantic issues associated with integration on this scale, and even more so with the issues pertaining to codes and code mapping. The primary clinical system, Sunrise Clinical Manager, alone has well over a thousand code tables (Dictionaries) many of which were in a cyclical state of flux during the configuration and testing phases of the project. Over 10,000 new codes were introduced just to describe patient locations – hospitals, campuses, wards, rooms, beds, chairs etc. in a uniform fashion. The integration task was, and still probably is, a herculean task. We had full time team of 12 involved.
Despite HL7′s dominance in the e-health messaging world over the past 15 or so years, there has never been any viewer produced anywhere in the world (to my knowledge) that allows or assists technical IT people, let alone clinicians, to view HL7 messages in a “meaningful” way, with their codes decoded into human readable form. Until now!
I have spent the past two months changing the situation. I’ve taken the embryonic version I started for Healthbase Australia’s Pathology message validator some 2.5 years ago and radically improved it to the point where I think it worth making it available to the community. The current incarnation “understands” most of the internal HL7  message codes, it can display the meaning of SNOMED, LOINC, AMT, AUSTPATH, some ICD-O morphology codes, ISO+ units, and I have started to incorporate the new Pathology Units and Terminology descriptions developed under the Royal College of Pathologists Australasia (RCPA)  led PUTS project. The view hides, by default, the arcane codes used by HL7 and presents pathology, diagnostic imaging and other HL7 v2 based messages in a form readily understandable to clinicians and even patients. It follows the evolving Australian AS4700.2 standard, and conventions. It renders inline images directly, it supports and displays embedded narrative reports – PIT, JPG, HL7 formatted text, PDF, RTF and HTML as described in the Standards Australia Handbook HB262.  It supports the viewing of multiple messages per file. 
The previous federal Health Minister announced shortly before the September election, some funding and an undertaking to accelerate the uploading of pathology results to the PCEHR. From the rumours that have been going around, this is likely to be done using PDF versions of each report, uploaded somehow from GP desktops. If only we could, instead, harness the power already inherent in the HL7 v2 messages already sent by most pathology labs to GP systems. The Healthbase Results Viewer gives a glimpse of how that might add value that a PDF file could never do. The following image is a snapshot of a result where the viewer has interpreted the structured data and automatically added links to one or more detailed authoritative web sites describing the tests undertaken, their context for use, their typical reference ranges and any qualifiers and warnings. The two authoritative sources for this test information, that I have already built into the viewer are the LabTestOnline site and the RCPA manual. The viewer links directly to the relevant test page. Moreover, to illustrate how universal  and flexible an approach this is, I have also included links to much of the Spanish version of LabTestsOnline and the viewer picks up these links through a LOINC/viewer/labtestonline synonym table.
More here:
The good here is the Eric has spotted a serious risk and has actually done something to help people address it. All we need is awareness of the risk and for care to be taken!
Second we have the above mentioned Grahame Grieve discussing complexity.

Complexity of Standards – Updated

Posted on November 14, 2013 by Grahame Grieve
Someone asked me to update the diagram, from The Complexity Of Standards:
A rough plot of the internal complexity of the standard (y, log) vs the complexity of content that the technique/standard describes
They wanted to know where FHIR sits on the graph. Well, here’s a guess:
(Click below to see picture)
Comments:
  • The goal is go downwards and right
  • While I think that FHIR is inherently simpler than HL7 v2, it’s breadth of functionality is a lot wider, so I couldn’t rate it as overall simpler
  • FHIR has more semantic depth than CDA in several directions, though the core clinical statement in CDA can go further – but both CDA and FHIR become exercise in extension at that level. So FHIR wins by a little
See blog for picture here:
What I see as useful here is to see people putting in  a serious effort to make things safer and easier. Only the very naïve think all the answers are easy and out there - especially in the safety and semantic domains - they simply are not!
David.

HISA / HIMMA Survey Of Views On The PCEHR - Have Your Say.

Got this earlier today via e-mail

Have your say - PCEHR Inquiry

Survey responses due Friday 22nd November 5pm EDST
The Health Informatics Society of Australia (HISA) and the Health Information Management Association of Australia (HIMAA) invite you to respond to this survey.
Federal Health Minister, the Hon Peter Dutton, has recently announced a review of Australia's Personally Controlled Electronic Health Records (PCEHR) program.  There is no call for public submissions, with submission being by invitation only.  HISA & HIMAA have been invited to respond to the inquiry.
To facilitate your ability to provide input into the review, we have produced a survey and invite your response.  We will draw from your responses to submit a response on your behalf.
The survey is open to all and we encourage you to not only make a personal contribution, but to pass on this email to others in your networks and encourage them to participate.
The survey will take only approx. 15-20 minutes to complete.
----- End E-mail
This link will get you there to do the survey - worth doing I reckon
Enjoy
David.

Senate Estimates Hearing Happening Today. NEHTA and E-Health On Later Today Nov 20, 2013

Always a fun watch.
Here is the link to the program:
Relevant Part of Program is:
5:35pm-6:20pm
Outcome 10 Health System Capacity and Quality

Program 10.1: Chronic Disease - Treatment
Program 10.2: e-Health Implementation
National e-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA)
Program 10.3: Health Information
Program 10.4: International Policy Engagement
Program 10.5: Research Capacity and Quality
Program 10.6: Health Infrastructure
You can watch the sessions from this link:
Enjoy.
David.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

It Is Interesting To See An Editorial In The SMH Pointing Out E-Health Failure On Mr Abbott’s Part.

This editorial appeared last week in the Sydney Morning Herald.

Electronic health records will make it easier to save a life

Date November 11, 2013
EDITORIAL
How could 22 doctors overlook the signs that one man was suffering from a serious drug addiction? Nathan Attard, 34, died alone, in an apartment infested with stray animals and filled with rubbish and drug paraphernalia, a Sydney coroner's court has heard. Doctors had prescribed him an array of medication including Xanax, morphine, Seroquel and Valium.
After the conclusion of the inquest into Attard's death, Deputy State Coroner Carmel Forbes is expected to recommend a statewide computerised system that would allow doctors and pharmacists to share information and detect patients who are prescription shopping. Such a system is overdue. For years health authorities have been calling for an electronic prescription monitoring system, without result.
''Failure to establish an electronic patient record within five years would be an indictment against everyone in the system, including the government," Prime Minister Tony Abbott said in 2003 during his first formal speech as he took over the health portfolio under John Howard's leadership. He failed that time, let's hope his government does not fail again. The former Labor government began introducing an e-health system but like many of its commitments the roll-out was plagued with difficulties. Just before the election several experts charged with rolling out the billion-dollar project quit the program amid claims the Department of Health and Ageing was more concerned with signing people up to the systems than providing a record that could be usefully managed by doctors.
More than 650,000 people have applied for e-health records but GPs have created only about 4000 shared-health summaries for their patients, which list their diagnoses and medications, because there is no clear financial incentive for GPs to spend the time to input all the information into the patient records. The Australian Medical Association has called for the government to overhaul the scheme. AMA president Steve Hambleton fears concerns over privacy have trumped common sense. Under the system being developed, patients will be able to go in and delete records after a doctor has entered them. This means doctor shoppers, especially those who accumulate prescription drugs, could remove records showing their behaviour.
…..
To allay privacy concerns, patients could have control over who had access to their records. These records should be viewable by patients, but not changeable (to prevent, for example, doctor shoppers deleting multiple prescriptions from different doctors). Privacy concerns are valid, and people should be able to opt-out from e-records, but for the rest of the community privacy concerns should not trump the implementation of an efficient, useful national electronic system.
The full editorial is here:
This is a very interesting editorial marred by an sad error in fact regarding the ability of the patient to alter the medically entered Shared Health Summary - they can’t.
The editorial makes the very powerful and rather sad point that both sides of politics have really failed to deliver a useable national health record system, while sadly failing to point out that the idea of value of a national e-health record is not something that is by any means certain.
While the editorial seems to be of the view that there is intrinsic goodness and value in a national record system I would suggest there may be less risky and cheaper ways to address the issues that the National EHR is intended to target. A boost to the clinical use of IT in all aspects and then some regional health information sharing mechanism could be a better approach.
The need for leadership, governance and a well-considered overall strategy seems often not too be mentioned as well. As well, being really clear as to the business case for action is also vital.
All in all a ‘curate’s egg’ of an editorial but it is good to see some discussion of e-health in the mainstream media. Coverage has been pretty thin in the last year or two!
David.

Monday, November 18, 2013

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 18th November, 2013.

Here are a few I have come across the last week or so.
Note: Each link is followed by a title and a few paragraphs. For the full article click on the link above title of the article. Note also that full access to some links may require site registration or subscription payment.

General Comment

This week it has been all about the PCEHR review. I am sure may people are busily preparing their submissions for the review. They are due on the 22nd November.
Other than that there is a good range of other things happening so enjoy the browse.
-----

Labor promised so much, delivered so little, on e-health

WORLDWIDE, e-health has been recognised as one of the means of enabling governments to maximise healthcare spend.
Barack Obama called it the "low hanging fruit" and former health minister Nicola Roxon assured Australia that "e-health promises change that will transform Australia's healthcare".
Implemented properly there is little doubt that healthcare co-ordination can be improved.
So what happened over the past two years and 11 months to result in Health Minister Peter Dutton's announcement that more than $1 billion was wasted by the previous Labor government?
-----

Billion dollar e-health needs targeted approach to rescue

12th Nov 2013
THE multimillion-dollar personally controlled electronic health record (PCEHR) system can still be salvaged if a Coalition review is properly targeted, according to e-health experts.
However, former National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA) clinical leads who spoke to MO following the announcement of the review last week said significant usability issues had to be overcome.
Health Minister Peter Dutton said Labor had “wasted over a billion dollars in its failed attempt” to build the PCEHR.
-----

PCEHR inquiry unlikely to recommend killing scheme

Lead talks up data analytics opportunities.

The man tasked with reviewing the government’s personally controlled electronic health record (PCEHR), Richard Royle, said he and his team have no plans to “kill off” the scheme.
Royle, who heads up the Queensland operations of private healthcare provider UnitingCare, has been asked by new federal health minister Peter Dutton to chair an inquiry into the PCEHR rollout commenced by Dutton’s Labor predecessors.
The intention of the review is to address usability issues and to boost clinical confidence in the system, Royle said.
He said he would also have to remain mindful of the government’s expenditure on the new technology going forward.
-----

Tasmania lays foundations for e-health overhaul

The state's 2012-2016 Connected Care strategy is laying the basis for better integration with national e-health programs, such as the PCEHR, according to the health department's deputy CIO
Tasmania's Department of Health and Human Services has gone to market seeking foundational building blocks for an ICT strategy that will drive better outcomes and options for patients, according to the department's deputy CIO.
The department is currently guided by a multi-year ICT strategy which it put in place last year and labelled 'Connected Care', explains Tim Blake.
"We decided when we started developing [Connected Care] about 12 months ago that we needed a new brand – something that spoke powerfully to what we wanted to achieve," he says.
"Connected Care I think is fairly clear: It's the idea we need to co-ordinate or integrate the way that we care for our patients across the whole health system. So that's from primary care, into emergency departments, in-patient contexts, outpatients, community health – all of those things, over time, we need to integrate."
-----

eHealth isn't rocket science, says former rocket scientist

Professor Michael Georgeff says that implementing a web-based chronic disease management program for primary care teams is “not rocket science.”
He should know; although he’s now the Chief Executive Officer of Precedence Health Care, which developed the cdmnet program, Prof Georgeff formerly worked on NASA’s space shuttle, when he was Program Director at SRI International in the USA, where he helped create the first “intelligent software agents” to control the shuttle.
He will be delivering a Plenary Address at this Friday’s annual Australian Medicare Local Alliance National Primary Health Care Conference 2013, speaking about integrating care in the primary health care setting through eHealth.
-----

The Power, the Glory and the Dangers of structured health data

2013-November-12 | 11:03 By: Filed in:
It is now over eighteen months since I publicly aired my grave concerns regarding a  critical safety issue for Australia’s Personally Controlled Electronic Health Records (PCEHR) system, which centred around the lack of scrutiny of the quality of data in CDA documents to be contributed to people’s records. I have no idea if anyone other than Grahame Grieve took my concerns seriously. Certainly, no-one else has ever contacted me regarding the serious safety and quality issues I raised at the time, least of all NEHTA.
But it does appear that safety and quality issues have been getting slightly more attention in recent months than they did 18 months ago – at least in Australia. And on this front, I have some further good news.
By way of background, for most of that 18 months I was working for SA Health on the integration and migration of ( mainly Adelaide-based public ) hospital systems to work with a new potentially statewide public hospital EMR and Patient Administration System known affectionately as EPAS. The network’s “central” components comprise a number of Allscripts Sunrise products, an Intersystems Ensemble Integration Engine, and an Enterprise Patient Master Index built around the IBM  Initiate EMPI product. It is undoubtedly one of Australia’s largest health system integration undertakings, with over 200 interfaces supported by the single integration engine. I was responsible for the specification and documentation of many of these interfaces and for testing a number of key ones, including much of the integration with EPAS. Nearly all of the interfaces use  some variant of HL7 v2.3.1. I  became acutely aware of the structural and semantic issues associated with integration on this scale, and even more so with the issues pertaining to codes and code mapping. The primary clinical system, Sunrise Clinical Manager, alone has well over a thousand code tables (Dictionaries) many of which were in a cyclical state of flux during the configuration and testing phases of the project. Over 10,000 new codes were introduced just to describe patient locations – hospitals, campuses, wards, rooms, beds, chairs etc. in a uniform fashion. The integration task was, and still probably is, a herculean task. We had full time team of 12 involved.
-----

The SNOMED CT-AU November 2013 release is now available for download

Created on Friday, 15 November 2013
The release can be downloaded from: https://nehta.org.au/aht/
-----

Electronic health records will make it easier to save a life

Date November 11, 2013
EDITORIAL
How could 22 doctors overlook the signs that one man was suffering from a serious drug addiction? Nathan Attard, 34, died alone, in an apartment infested with stray animals and filled with rubbish and drug paraphernalia, a Sydney coroner's court has heard. Doctors had prescribed him an array of medication including Xanax, morphine, Seroquel and Valium.
After the conclusion of the inquest into Attard's death, Deputy State Coroner Carmel Forbes is expected to recommend a statewide computerised system that would allow doctors and pharmacists to share information and detect patients who are prescription shopping. Such a system is overdue. For years health authorities have been calling for an electronic prescription monitoring system, without result.
-----

About CareMonkey

CareMonkey is a parent controlled electronic medical form used by schools and clubs.
The information in the CareMonkey application is secure and backed up daily. Only the school, club or people you specifically choose can see your personal health and safety information. The data is hosted on commercially available, reliable and secure systems in Australia and USA.
CareMonkey is designed, built and supported by CareMonkey Pty Ltd, a software company headquartered in Melbourne, Australia. The team behind CareMonkey are distributed around the globe from Australia to Argentina to India and Philippines.
-----

Complexity of Standards – Updated

Posted on November 14, 2013 by Grahame Grieve
Someone asked me to update the diagram, from The Complexity Of Standards:
A rough plot of the internal complexity of the standard (y, log) vs the complexity of content that the technique/standard describes
They wanted to know where FHIR sits on the graph. Well, here’s a guess:
-----

IBM to let firms tap supercomputer Watson's brain

Date November 15, 2013 - 1:47PM

Alex Barinka

IBM's Watson technology, famous for outsmarting humans on the US game show Jeopardy!, will be offered as a cloud-based tool to application developers, letting them tap a resource capable of giving everything from shopping tips to medical advice.
Programmers will be able to access the IBM Watson Developers Cloud, an online marketplace with resources for developing apps, use a content store with data from third-party providers and get help from IBM and contracted professionals, the Armonk, New York-based company said in a statement on Thursday in the US.
“There is so much more that can be accomplished by drawing on the creativity of individuals, organisations, entrepreneurs, start-ups and established businesses that truly innovate every day on their own,” said Stephen Gold, vice president of Watson Solutions, in an interview. “Watson can be this ultimate assistant to help individuals get their questions answered and their problems solved.”
-----

Self-healing computers will change the world: Jeff Hawkins

Date November 11, 2013 - 10:45AM

Matthew Hall

In one man's vision of the future, helpdesks and IT departments will be redundant because computers mimicking the human brain will self-heal.
That's if Jeff Hawkins has his way. A neuroscientist who previously founded mobile computing companies Palm and Handspring, Hawkins is developing software that mimics the human brain and can currently correct computer glitches without human intervention.
"It's not an easy field," Hawkins cautioned but the pay-off is technology that he believes will eventually change the way the world works.
Hawkins' product is called Grok and is machine intelligence software based on the brain's neo-cortex – the grey matter that deals with sensory perception, motor commands, and language among other functions. Machine intelligence is, Hawkins claims, the next big thing in the development of computing technology.
-----

Glasziou, the HANDI-man

11 November, 2013 Amanda Davey
It may have been launched just last month, but HANDI, the first online formulary for non-drug interventions appears to have been readily embraced by GPs, if online traffic activity is any indication.
Developed to ensure doctors have easy access to information on non-drug interventions, HANDI is the brainchild of GP Dr Paul Glasziou (pictured) who says take-up rates for the online manual have been encouraging.
"We developed HANDI because patients are increasingly asking about and wanting non-drug interventions but for GPs this sort of information can be difficult to find, let alone implement without instructions," he said. 
-----

Biometrics means world without passwords

  • AAP
  • November 14, 2013 12:00AM
YOU may never need to memorise another password. That's the goal of researchers at Purdue University's International Centre for Biometrics Research.
Stephen Elliott is the director of international biometric research at Purdue University in Indiana. He says iris and fingerprint scans as well as facial and voice recognition are just a few of the tools that improve security while making lives easier.
-----

DoH spends $848K monitoring media

14 November, 2013 Antonio Bradley
The Federal Department of Health has defended spending at least $848,000 to monitor the media in the past financial year.
The revelation emerged last Thursday, five months after Senator Dean Smith asked the department to detail its media monitoring spending during a Senate Estimates committee.
The department said it spent the money between July 2012 and May 2013, by contracting a company to take press clippings and produce electronic media transcripts, among other services.
The $848,000 was spent out of a total budget for media monitoring of $926,000 for the financial year.
-----

Panel: Hospitals are just starting to build health IT foundations

Better care will also mean patients using devices at home
Health care providers are just beginning to figure out how big data, mobile platforms and integrated software can deliver better care at lower costs, according to speakers at The Economist's Health Care Forum in Boston.
Talk of using large-scale data analysis to develop customized treatment plans is premature since most health care providers are still edging toward joining the big-data movement, said Charlie Schick, IBM's director of big data, healthcare and life sciences, during a panel discussion at the Tuesday event.
"The reality is hospitals are early on in analysis maturity," he said. "They're trying to answer questions required by the government. Big data is a buzzword."
-----

Educators hope to recoup funds from troubled Ultranet

Date November 11, 2013

Benjamin Preiss

The Education Department is negotiating to get a cut from sales of the failed schools Ultranet system amid plans to sell the network overseas.
The department is handing over the network to NEC Australia, which had a contract to run the system until the end of this year.
An Education Department spokesman said negotiations with NEC included the ''consideration of royalties''.
-----

Labor told of $31bn NBN risk

  • CHRIS KENNY AND ANNABEL HEPWORTH
  • The Australian
  • November 16, 2013 12:00AM
A SECRET review of the NBN prepared for the Gillard government almost three years ago estimated it would leave taxpayers up to $31 billion worse off and warned of major risks in the plan, many of which were later realised.
The Weekend Australian has learned that the review by investment bank Lazard found the project would confront construction problems leading to cost increases for the building phase.
It also found that the project - once touted by the former Labor government as ideal for "mum and dad investors" - was so risky that no private investors would stump up the capital.
It is believed Lazard had raised concerns about Telstra's involvement under a multi-billion-dollar deal transferring many risks associated with the project from Telstra's books to NBN Co, while leaving Telstra with the option of competing against the NBN - yet still receiving funds from it - after 20 years.
-----
Enjoy!
David.

Sunday, November 17, 2013

PCEHR Enquiry Submission November 2013 Final Version

This is the final version of the submission which I will submit tomorrow. Many thanks to all who have commented and provided e-mail etc. It has been a great help.
-----

PCEHR Enquiry Submission November 2013 Final Version

Submission From Dr David G More To PCEHR Review - November 2013

Summary Recommended Way Forward.
1. Major overhaul of leadership and governance of the e-health program to improve strategy, direction setting, standards setting, stakeholder engagement and consultation and transparency.
2. Investment in Clinical Systems (GP, Specialist, Diagnostic, Allied, Aged Care and Hospital) to be strengthened with continued support of  standardised Clinical Messaging and Clinical Information Exchange between care providers. Emphasis on private sector provision where appropriate
3. Continued support of national e-Health Infrastructure (IHI, Terminology, SMD etc.) under the governance cited in Point 1.
4. Competitive development of standards compliant regional health information exchanges to optimise information flows and access for clinicians.
5. Support for voluntary patient access and engagement with clinician systems to facilitate patient / clinician communication, information sharing and co-operation.  
6. Progressive rapid phase out of the current PCEHR as points 2 to 5 are realised. This should happen as quickly as possible given the patient safety risks associated with data quality, incompleteness etc.

Submission

Note this is a condensed high-level summary document. I do not believe anything contained here is not supported by detailed evidence which can be found on my blog.
Background To and Core Issues Regarding the PCEHR Program.
The idea for the Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record emerged from the NHHRC, as an afterthought, and appeared, without any significant consultation, in the May 2010 Budget as a $467M 2 year project that was to go live on July 1, 2012. Further funding was to be contingent on the system delivering benefits - but nevertheless more funding has provided to the present day.
There was no cost / benefit studies undertaken on the plans and it was assumed the benefits case for a quite different NEHTA IEHR proposal was assumed to be correct - despite the fact that many of the drivers of the benefits were not present in the PCEHR (e.g. Clinical Decision Support). A public consultation on the original PCEHR Proposal resulted in virtually no change to the plans despite a lot of sensible concerns being expressed.
The PCEHR went live, with some issues that appeared to be related to absurdly tight delivery guidelines applied by the then Minister, in July 2012 and since then it has been gradually enhanced and considerable work has been done to integrate access to the PCEHR from the major General Practice Management Systems. This explains why some 16 months later the system is still not delivered and fully functional. Politics has also led to ‘function creep’ with announcements of additional functionality before the system was stabilised.
Nowhere in Western World has a major Health IT project of this scale, with the planned mode of operation been either delivered successfully in such a time-frame or shown to offer benefit. The design has been based on intuition rather than evidence and on the basis of clinician and patient reaction this seems not to have been correct. (The evidence for this lies in the fact that despite over 1 million people having registered for a record only 30,000 or so have actually added some of their information to the record - so the public is not using it).  
The Three Major Issues
Ignoring all the usability, medico-legal, workflow, workload, data ownership, data control, security, privacy, patient safety and clinical relevance issues (which are all very, very important) to me there are three major problems. The first is that the PCEHR can’t be a system that properly and fully serves the needs of professional clinicians and patients simultaneously. They have dramatically different needs and just who the PCEHR is for and what it is actually meant to do for them is crucial. If it is for patients the system lacks and really can’t deliver the functions international experience shows are valued (appointment making, repeat prescriptions, direct e-mail to their GP and access to approved laboratory results (not yet available but maybe possible). If it is for clinicians it is too slow, lacks decision support, external communications and the list goes on. 
The second issue is, bluntly, that the concept of patient control just alienates clinicians as a place to source information that can be trusted. Clinician trust is vital and the issue of being able to trust information crucial, as if information is either inaccurate of incomplete then there is a real risk of patient harm. From a practical clinical perspective it is much more sensible and much safer to start a patient’s assessment and treatment from the ‘ground up’ than try to sort out what can believed and what can’t be. There are real medico-legal implications in all this.
The third issue - which relates to the second is data quality. Obviously trust and data quality are inextricably linked. We have seen many errors in the data uploaded to the PCEHR already from Medicare Australia data sources - which includes some in my PCEHR record. Data quality in health information is presently not ideal in many health systems and needs to be improved before much use is made of the information for management and research.
Throughout the conceptual development, actual development and roll out, the drivers of progress have been NEHTA and the then DoHA who have been actively hostile to many private sector initiatives,  have actively corrupted and distorted the e-Health Standards setting processes, and have really failed to even seriously consider the patient safety issues around the PCEHR and other initiatives with only the most limited information being made available and that really not addressing the core issues.
Over the last two to three years the leadership and governance of the PCEHR Program and other initiatives has been secretive, non-transparent arrogant and un-consultative.  
The outcome of all this is that we have a system which was not recommended by the 2008 National E-Health Strategy, which does not serve anyone’s needs well, which is said to have now cost near to a billion dollars, which is strongly suspected to be intended to be an administrative and not clinically focussed system which have so far delivered virtually no benefits to patients or their doctors.
What Is To Be  / Should Be Done From Here?
To put it simply, for me, what is needed is that the policy makers decide (in consultation with relevant stakeholders) what it is they want in a national system and just who that system is to be deigned to serve.
It goes without saying that what follows assumes dramatically improved leadership, governance and transparency which has been evidenced to date by NEHTA and DoHA in the e-Health domain.
If asked, my preferred approach to e-Health going forward, would have two broad components.
The first would be based on enhanced connectivity and functionality for current practice management systems used by GPs, Specialists, Allied Health and Hospitals. The objective would be to maximise, standardise and optimise the information flows between all actors in the health system and thereby improve the patient experience as well as the quality and safety of care. Much of this could be achieved working with the private sector. As part of this effort there needs to be a major focus on data quality and interoperability.
Part of the enhancements would be to design (as is happening in the UK and the US) ways that patients could interact electronically with their clinicians to see the benefits cited above.
The second would be to develop regional geographic shared record hubs which would hold a carefully considered small  subset of health information to assist Hospitals and other clinicians offer care (with the patient’s consent) based on information held on the shared records in emergent and travel situations. These hubs I envisage as being developed, trialled and refined over time with an active network to learn what was working, what was not and how the good ideas that are working can be spread.
As far as current activities are concerned I would see the continuation of the core e-Health infrastructure (SMD, IHI Service, Terminology Support etc.) and would consider continuing support of the PCEHR until such time as regional shared record hubs can be put in place. Longer term I believe the overall architecture of the PCEHR is so flawed that it should be retired.
I would also fundamentally restructure NEHTA and the e-Heath parts of DoH to improve transparency, stakeholder engagement etc. I believe all this is consistent to the 2008 E-Health Strategy and likely to be consistent with the planned 2013 refresh.
Similarly I would be very keen to ensure all further investments be subjected to rigorous assessment of clinical impact and value for money. Obviously a formal audit of the overall e-Health program to date is also required.
There is a lot of detail that can be filled in to flesh out these ideas but overall it seems to me an approach of this type can achieve the dual objectives of quality professional / clinician support and communication with patient interaction to the extent they desire. Taking this route would also re-engage Government with the private sector and allow the Government to focus on the things it needs to do while having the private sector do what it does best and would be consistent with the National E-Health Strategy
Please Note: I am more than happy to discuss these ideas with the review panel if desired.
References and Major Links.
Tuesday, April 12, 2011

The PCEHR Concept of Operations - As Released Today - Is Just Not A Goer

6 November 2013, 2.29pm AEST

Unfixable: time to ditch personally controlled e-health record scheme

A/Professor David Glance.  Director of the UWA Centre for Software Practice UWA

The e health revolution—easier said than done

Research Paper no. 3 2011–12
Dr Rhonda Jolly
Social Policy Section
17 November 2011

MSIA: The eHealth paradigm and the PCEHR

Written by Emma Hossack on 18 May 2012.

Opinion: the eHealth world moves on

Labor promised so much, delivered so little, on e-health

Emma Hossack is the secretary of the Medical Software Industry Association and CEO of Extensia. The views above are her personal views alone.

Australia: Update on Personally Controlled Electronic Health Records - legal and privacy issues

Last Updated: 28 October 2013
Thursday, June 21, 2012

Just A Little Note On The Benefits Claimed By The Pollies For E-Health. They Don’t Know What They Don’t Know.

Lastly my blog at www.aushealthit.blogspot.com.au is searchable with over 3000 articles since 2006.
Author.
David G. More BSc, MB, BS, PhD, FANZCA, FCICM, FACHI - 16 November 2013.

Addendum - Early Initial Responses To The Specific Questions Asked.

Review of specific Terms of Reference:
  • The gaps between the expectations of users and what has been delivered
International experience has made it pretty clear that what consumers want from systems like this are things like access to e-mail the doctor, ability to request repeat prescriptions and appointments and access results. Most of this the PCEHR cannot do and at present it does none. Ease of use is also important - not good on this front as well - as well as slow.
For clinicians the needs are for usability, no workflow issues, integrity and no medico-legal issues or liability as well as sufficient useful information to make access worthwhile.
  • The level of consultation with end users during the development phase
Essentially there was none until very late and this did not actually create a useable system at the time of launch
  • The level of use of the PCEHR by health care professions in clinical settings
The PCEHR is not designed to be used in the clinical setting - the present practice management systems are. It is an add-on that seems to add delay and extra work for not much benefit at this point. It is thus not all that much used
  • Barriers to increasing usage in clinical settings
I can’t see that the PCEHR will ever replace the prime clinical systems and will only be used in those settings when it adds value to a consultation for the clinician or the patient. This will require removing all the medico-legal, privacy, security and usability concerns and then to have a network effect expand the usage base in that order. To me this will need a major re-design based on real consultation. It also won’t happen overnight and probably cost a fair bit. A business case is needed on the proposed new system. Alternatively a new regional approach might be adopted
  • Key clinician and patient usability issues
See the discussions above - especially 1 and 4.
  • Work that is still required including new functions that improve the value proposition for clinicians and patients
As above.
  • Drivers and incentives to increase usage for both industry and health care professionals
The key for clinicians is to ensure that using the national system is cost and workflow neutral while not exposing them to risk.
For industry there needs to be much improved governance and leadership which is not anti-private sector as NEHTA and DoH are presently felt to be - despite their rhetoric.
  • The applicability and potential integration of comparable private sector products
This depends on what the final - as opposed to the present design of the PCEHR is.
  • The future role of the private sector in providing solutions
There are already private sector solutions (e.g. Extensia and CDM-Net) and these need to be looked at - with others to see what is possible
  • The policy settings required to generate private sector solutions
The main issue here is to stop NEHTA and DoH engaging in behaviours that are costing the private sector money while not providing reasonable conditions for private sector solutions to develop and flourish.
It is also important to remember General Practice is made up of many small businesses who are very cost sensitive and need reasonable compensation for the time spent doing any e-Health activities that are not clearly useful to them, the medical software industry or the patient.
----- End responses.
Overall I am reminded of the following quote which seems to say it all.
“If a man does not know what port he is steering for then no wind will be favourable.”
Seneca (4BC - 65AD).

Addendum - Poll on Continuation Of PCEHR.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 192  – Results – 17th November, 2013.
The question was:

Do You Believe There Is Any Realistic Possibility Of Sufficiently Fixing The PCEHR To Make It A Clinical Success And Be Widely Used By Doctors?

For Sure 13% (10)
Probably   9%   (7 votes)
Neutral   6%   (5 votes)
Probably Not   27%   (21 votes)
No Way At All   46%   (36 votes)
I Have No Idea   0%   (0 votes)
Total votes:   79
Another huge response with 73% feeling the PCEHR may not be fixable.
Again, many thanks to those that voted!
David.
----- End Submission.
David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 192 – Results – 17th November, 2013.

The question was:

Do You Believe There Is Any Realistic Possibility Of Sufficiently Fixing The PCEHR To Make It A Clinical Success And Be Widely Used By Doctors?

For Sure 13% (10)

Probably 9% (7)

Neutral 6% (5)

Probably Not 27% (21)

No Way At All 46% (36)

I Have No Idea 0% (0)

Total votes: 79

Another huge response with 73% feeling the PCEHR may not be fixable.

Again, many thanks to those that voted!

David.