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."

Tuesday, December 17, 2013

MYEFO - December 17,2013 - Health Sector Implications - Gentle Cut Back.

There is a useful table on Page 71 of the Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook (MYEFO). All in millions of dollars.
2013-14:
Health
Budget (May 2013)        Today
64,636 Million       64,685 Million (basically unchanged)
2014-15:
Health
Budget (May 2013)        Today
68,081 Million       67,592 Million (-1%)
2015-16:
Health
Budget (May 2013)        Today
71,597  Million      70,870 Million  (-1%)
2016-17:
Health
Budget (May 2013)        Today
75,493 Million      74,574 Million  (-1%)
So what we see is growth in the Commonwealth Health Budget but the rate of growth, in aggregate, compared with the Labor plans is steadily cut back. There seems be roughly 10 billion added in a budget which hits almost 75 Billion. $2.5Billion looks to be about 3.3% on average. Given health inflation tends to run at 5-6% p.a. this is a real cut which looks to be over $2 billion over 4 years.
The full document is here:
The main health specific cuts for this year are cancellation of this program:
There are also some additional but smaller additions to the Budget.
Page 104 of MYEFO (as numbered) provides a detailed breakdown. They amount to about $250 million over the 4 years - so clearly more savings to come.
Interestingly there is $5M for eMental health over 3 years added.
No apparent e-Health announcements.
David.

Monday, December 16, 2013

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 16th December, 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

I think the biggest news of the week was the announcement of the revised strategy for the NBN which looks as though it will be slower and take a while longer to be delivered.
On a personal note my internet experience has been dramatically improved by the addition of the Firefox extension Adblock.
See here:
This is pure magic and stops all that nonsense with a web site going off to Facebook, Twitter etc. while not actually showing the page you want. Worth 20 times the voluntary 5 bucks that is asked for I reckon! Has made my month!
This will be the last news review for 2013 (baring major news events) so can I wish all who browse here a happy and safe Christmas for you and all you care about.
I suspect 2014 will be a big year somehow.
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Information Commissioner received no eHealth privacy complaints in 2012-13

  • David Braue (CSO Online (Australia))
  • — 09 December, 2013 11:35
Australian privacy-enforcement authorities did not receive any complaints about the use of personally controlled electronic healthcare records (PCEHR) during the first year of their use, new figures confirm.
According to figures published recently by the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) and tabled in Parliament this month, the organisation “received no complaints regarding the PCEHR system” during the 2012-13 reporting period and closed only one outstanding complaint, related to the Healthcare Identifiers Act 2010, that was held over from the previous year.
Under the terms of a memorandum of understanding (MOU) between the OAIC and the Department of Health and Ageing – which runs through 30 June 2014 – the OAIC received $2.2m in funding to carry out enforcement activities around the use of eHealth records.
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Majority of Australian patients want greater access to electronic medical records, according to Accenture survey

Strong disconnect between patient and doctor expectations regarding access to records
SYDNEY, Australia; 10 December 2013 – The majority of Australian health patients (78 per cent) believe they should have full access to electronic medical records (EMR), but roughly only one in four consumers (22 per cent) say this is what they currently have, according Accenture's nine-country survey of more than 9,000 consumers, including 1,002 Australians. These findings are also consistent with other research that shows only 18 per cent of Australian doctors believe patients should have full access to their own record.
Supporting the growing trend of patient engagement, nearly half of Australian consumers (47 per cent) surveyed without online access to their medical records would be willing to switch doctors to gain access. This percentage rises to 55 per cent among consumers under 55 years in age without online access to their records.
“The health sector is developing more advanced electronic capabilities to support clinical decision-making and more integrated care. Consumer engagement is a part of this, but not necessarily a primary driver,” said Leigh Donoghue, managing director of Accenture’s health business in Australia. “This may need rethinking in light of the considerable gap between doctor and consumer attitudes towards electronic access to medical records, particularly for younger, technology-savvy consumers.”
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Aussies to be automatically enrolled for e-Health records under changes

December 13, 2013 12:00AM
AUSTRALIANS would be automatically enrolled for an e-Health record and have to opt out to protect their health privacy under sweeping changes to the $1 billion white elephant.
A government review of the troubled computer system is also considering changing the extent to which patients control what appears on the record.
And doctors could get paid to upload patient health summaries onto the record to get more clinicians involved in using it.
Launched in July 2012 the Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record was meant to bring medical records into the digital age and contain an electronic patient health summary, a list of allergies and medications and eventually X-rays and test results.
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Review of the Personally Controlled Electronic Health System

News

By: Avant Media
The new Commonwealth Government recently announced a review of the Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record (PCEHR) system and Avant has been invited to provide a submission to the Review panel.
Avant has been generally supportive of the voluntary, national ehealth record system which aims to cut down the chance of adverse medical events and improving coordination and quality of healthcare, by allowing consumers and health professionals to access to a range of health information. 
However the introduction of the system has not been smooth, with many of our members expressing concerns about the level of medico-legal risk that they may be exposed to when they use the system, as well as having issues with the operability of the system itself.
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2014 prediction – Professor Richard Murray

3rd Dec 2013
AUSTERITY will be the new black, and health must play its part in finding efficiencies while retaining access and quality for patients and communities.
That means the bush has a lot to teach the city about generalism and about team-based care, and about making do while providing excellent care.
We would welcome the opportunity to help inform the broader reforms needed to give us a universal access, high-quality system that is leaner and more responsive to patients and communities.
We need to see that the effort that has gone into the personally controlled electronic health record is salvaged, and that we focus on a broader implementation of e-health that is not about a central point for information storage.
We have a lot more on the e-health agenda in parallel with the shared electronic record agenda, though.
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IBM says Qld govt making it a scapegoat over payroll claim

November 9, 2013
Mark Ludlow
Global information technology ­company IBM has hit back at the Queensland government’s compensation claim over the botched health payroll system, saying it was being made a political scapegoat over the project.
The Newman government is seeking significant damages for the failed ­system, which is expected to cost $1.2 billion to fix. IBM said it will defend itself against any proceedings.
A spokeswoman for IBM said the firm had yet to be formally served or notified of any claim, despite a statement of claim being filed in the Supreme Court in Brisbane last week.
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Queensland drags IBM to court over payroll debacle

Summary: IBM believes the court case is only to make it a "political scapegoat".
By Michael Lee | December 8, 2013 -- 08:31 GMT (19:31 AEST)
The Queensland government is beginning to seek compensation from IBM after the company failed to deliver as expected on the state's health payroll system.
According to the Australian Financial Review, a statement of claim has been lodged with the Supreme Court. This course of action is in contrast to the former state government's handling of the issue in which Anna Bligh sought to settle the case outside of court.
In 2011, IBM buried the hatchet with the Queensland government, with the company's Australian managing director Andrew Stevens telling ZDNet Australia that it was "behind us and behind Queensland".
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2014 prediction – Dr Steve Hambleton

3rd Dec 2013
THERE is no doubt that health will see savings in the budget.
The minister has indicated that he is unwilling to cut anything from general practice. He is unwilling to cut anything from hospitals but that every portfolio has got to participate in the savings push, so it is likely to be entities or agencies or parts of the portfolio that are not involved in direct patient contact.
Health Workforce Australia is one of those agencies. The parts of Health Workforce Australia that look at the numbers and varieties of specialists that Australia needs, we think need to be retained so we can do some proper workforce training.
(Note - No mention of e-Health)
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Science academy launches app to explain vaccination

  • AAP
  • December 13, 2013 12:00AM
A NEW tablet app will help counter misinformation from anti-vax groups, the head of Australia's peak medical body says.
The free Science Q & A app, launched on Thursday by the Australian Academy of Science, gives parents the latest evidence-based information on immunisation.
It comes amid concern that some communities are putting the lives of their children and others risk by not vaccinating their kids.
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Cloud accounting and eHealth gives GP more time for patients and students

It’s been a busy year for Narooma GP Jenny Wray, awarded a Member of the Order of Australia on Australia Day this year for her services to rural medicine and then in October named the ‘NSW Business Owner of the Year’ in the 2013 NSW Telstra Business Woman Awards.
Dr Wray (a former RACGP ‘GP of the Year) has worked on the NSW South Coast since 1977, opening her own practice, Lighthouse Surgery, in Narooma in 1994, which she has since expanded to a second practice in the small fishing town of Bermagui.
She says that the extensive application process for the Telstra Business Woman awards were a great opportunity to make some big changes to the way she ran her practice.
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Jane McCredie: Texting hazards

Jane McCredie
Monday, 9 December, 2013
WE humans are quite good at convincing ourselves that rules are for other people.
The less nimble or less skilled might need to comply for their own safety but we can safely cross against the red light or send a quick text while driving to meet friends.
I don’t know how scientifically based it is, but this New York Times interactive game designed to highlight the effect of texting on driving certainly makes you question your ability to multitask at that level.
A paper published in the Annals of Internal Medicine last week argues the use of electronic health records may pose a similar challenge for doctors.
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Aged care CIO dreads telehealth switch-off

No guarantee of ongoing funding for telehealth pilot.

Halfway into a two-year, NBN-enabled telehealth trial, Feros Care CIO Glenn Payne says he is not looking forward to the day he has to go back to his elderly participants to uninstall the potentially lifesaving equipment.
In June next year, the not-for-profit aged care provider will have to end the trial while they wait for news on a permanently funded roll-out.
“This will be really sad for us,” Payne told iTnews.
The team will report its findings, including the estimated reduction that the $2.7 million telehealth trial has on the national healthcare burden, at the end of the experiment.
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Vic health investigates data fudging claim

December 13, 2013 9:02AM
VICTORIA'S Department of Health and Monash Health are investigating claims staff were forced to fudge data at the Dandenong Hospital emergency department.
Sixty nurses and doctors signed a six-page complaint alleging widespread fabrication of emergency department discharge records to meet federal government targets, News Corp Australia reports.
They said senior management had directed them to "backdate" discharge times, and were concerned this jeopardised patient care.
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Hospital audit

Date December 14, 2013

Kate Hagan

Ernst and Young will conduct an independent audit of Dandenong Hospital's emergency department data following claims that staff were directed to alter records to meet time targets.
The Victorian Health Department and Monash Health ordered the audit after nurses and doctors signed a document claiming records were being altered to make it appear patients were being discharged or sent to a ward bed within four hours.
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2013: the year millions of passwords hit the headlines

Date  December 13, 2013 - 11:33AM

Liam Tung

Hackers had a field year in 2013.
A data breach involving more than 40 million passwords occurred once every three months in 2013, including an Australian breach that may be the world’s worst for the year.
The multi-gigabyte torrent of passwords and other private customer data that hackers siphoned out of company servers this year made LinkedIn’s 6.5 million records breach in 2012 look like a minor spill.
Four online companies joined the leak club, including Adobe, note-taking app Evernote, deal site Living Social, and Australian dating site Cupid Media. Together, the four breaches alone saw just under 300 million passwords and usernames fall into hackers’ hands.
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The worst IT project disasters of 2013

The Healthcare.gov rollout leads a pack of painful projects including one from Australia
Trends come and go in the technology industry but some things, such as IT system failures, bloom eternal.
"Nothing has changed," said analyst Michael Krigsman of consulting firm Asuret, an expert on why IT projects go off the rails. "Not a damn thing."
"These are hard problems," he added. "People mistakenly believe that IT failures are due to a technical problem or a software problem, and in fact it has its roots into the culture, how people work together, how they share knowledge, the politics of an organization. The worse the politics, the more likely the failure."
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NBN Co has not tested fibre to the node

Date December 11, 2013 - 4:44PM

Lucy Battersby

NBN Co has not conducted any trials of the alternative national broadband network since the change of government, executives told a senate select committee on Wednesday morning.
Nor has NBN Co received detailed information from Telstra about its own fibre-to-the-node trial or the condition of its copper network, despite the fibre-to-the-node model relying on copper to deliver broadband to premises.
NBN Co and Communications Minister Malcolm Turnbull are expected to release a review of NBN Co on Thursday morning, including audits of the company’s financial history and strategy.
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Updated: NBN Co releases strategic review

New plan to cost $41 billion and will be delivered three years later than Labor had previously forecast

At least 90 per cent of Australians would get broadband speeds of about 50 Mbps by year-end 2019 under a Coalition proposal to overhaul the NBN.
The recommendation was made in NBN Co's 60-day strategic review of the NBN, released today with redactions for commercially sensitive material. The review will be used in the NBN Co's next corporate plan, planned for release in the first half of 2014.
The goal marks a delay from Labor's goal of 25 Mbps speeds for all Australians by 2016. The NBN Co report said there was "no viable path" to achieve that target.
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Revised NBN to deliver access to fast broadband to Australians sooner and at less cost to taxpayers

12 December 2013
Revised NBN to deliver access to fast broadband to Australians sooner and at less cost to taxpayers
  • NBN Co submits Strategic Review to Government
  • 100Mbps wholesale download speeds available to more Australians by 2019 than if previous plan had continued on current path*
  • Peak funding reduced by faster uplift of revenue, reduced construction costs and lower debt levels
NBN Co has completed the Strategic Review of the National Broadband Network and has delivered the findings to the Government.
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HFC in the National Broadband Network

Posted on December 14, 2013

HFC, the NBN, and the meaning of life

With the release of the NBNCo Strategic Review earlier this week, I’ve seen some very significant misunderstandings (and consequent angst) expressed about the inclusion of HFC into the mix of technologies intended for the NBN rollout. 
This post is intended to be a counterpoint to those misunderstandings.
I haven’t written this post to tell you that this is the best, or the only, way to change the shape of the future version of this network.
I haven’t written this because I’ve stopped believing that the best ultimate answer wherever possible is Fibre-To-The-Premises (FTTP) – because it still is.
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Learning to love the alien

Date December 5, 2013
Can we rewire our human distrust of robots that look like us, asks George Zarkadakis.
Humans have evolved to relate emotionally to inanimate artefacts, which is strange when you think about it. Children play with dolls and toy soldiers as if they were people. Adults talk to their cars. As long as they are robot-like and "mechanical", we are comfortable around them, and can display affection. But when it comes to human-like robots, something unnerving happens.
As they acquire more human-like features, our affection wanes and we begin to get a creepy feeling. Our liking turns to revulsion. Androids that look too human freak us out.
This odd phenomenon is called the "uncanny valley", and it has befuddled engineers and scientists who design robots and interactive software.
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Ancient Mars lake may have supported life: NASA

Date December 10, 2013 - 9:03AM

Kerry Sheridan

NASA's Curiosity rover has found remnants of an ancient freshwater lake on Mars that may have supported tiny life forms, scientists say.
There is no water left in it, but drill tests and a chemical analysis of its fine-grained rocks by Curiosity's instruments suggest microbial life could have thrived there billions of years ago.
The rocks contain signs of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and sulphur, and "would provide perfect conditions for simple microbial life", said the report in the journal Science.
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Enjoy!
David.

Sunday, December 15, 2013

What Is Likely To Come Out Of The PCEHR Review? It Is Pretty Hard To Pick.

This appeared a few days ago.

Aussies to be automatically enrolled for e-Health records under changes

·         SUE DUNLEVY
·         News Limited Network
·         December 13, 2013 12:00AM
AUSTRALIANS would be automatically enrolled for an e-Health record and have to opt out to protect their health privacy under sweeping changes to the $1 billion white elephant.
A government review of the troubled computer system is also considering changing the extent to which patients control what appears on the record.
And doctors could get paid to upload patient health summaries onto the record to get more clinicians involved in using it.
Launched in July 2012 the Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record was meant to bring medical records into the digital age and contain an electronic patient health summary, a list of allergies and medications and eventually X-rays and test results.
Seventeen months after it was launched only a million people have signed up for the record and only one per cent of these records has a clinical summary uploaded by a doctor.
A government inquiry into the record headed by Uniting Care Health chief Richard Royle has been charged with overhauling the struggling policy.
The intention of his panel is "not to kill it but build on the foundation base", he says.
"If there is one consistent theme it is that the industry wants to see it work," says the man who will next year launch Australia's first digitally integrated hospital.
Voluntary sign-ups for e-health records have been slow and the Consumer's Health Forum which previously backed an opt-in record has told the inquiry it now wants an opt-out system.
More here:
On the basis that there was not actually much hard news in the article a correspondent pointed out that this might be a little ‘kite flying’ on the part of the review to test what sort of reaction was elicited.
Alternatively it might have just been adding just a little pressure for some release on the review’s thinking. As all will recall the Minister is to get an interim report by the end of 2013, but, I would guess there is little chance of the review becoming public for a good while yet.
The one bit of real news for me was that there had been 82 submissions. As of writing Eric Browne’s estimable list convers about 30 or so submissions - so there are apparently a good few that have not yet been disclosed. Missing are just what DoH and NEHTA are saying for example.
See here:
With all this said I have thought more about my blog of last week and have slightly changed my view. The main reason for the change is that I suspect (and have been assured) there is furious lobbying going on behind the scenes about the review outcome - and indeed the article mentioned above may be a response to briefings which have led to an awareness of that campaign.
See here for original blog on the topic.
It seems to me there are three possible outcomes.
First there is the option to fundamentally review the intent,  information model, consent model, patient control model, design purpose, architecture, planned role etc. for the PCEHR and to develop a major e-Health project that might actually deliver something that is useful for the key stakeholders. This would be smaller, more focused on delivery and clinical outcome driven and would prove itself useful gradually over time at hopefully a lower cost.
This would, however, be a fairly large, long, expensive, risky and complex project (or series of projects) - and it is hard to know what would be happening in the meantime. This would also probably be only slightly cheaper and smaller than the original PCEHR project. Having actually considered what is really needed in a national EHR record, it also might just work!
Second there is the ‘lip stick on the pig’ approach which tarts up a few things, hope pathetically that doing these minor changes will improve usage and utility while not costing much. This is what is being lobbied for as it will assist all the little piglets to stay pretty firmly attached to the funding nipple for a year or so more till the abject failure simply cannot be ignored. A review at that time may even the suggest that option 1 now needs to be done - and more milk and honey will flow. This is the easy political - kick the can down the road - option.
Third the program can be cancelled / phased out and a new better governed and designed approach can be adopted with efforts diverted to more basic activities. This is the preferable - but politically much harder - option.
So we have the PCEHR Heavy Option - fairly expensive and risky, might work but politically costs too much for a cash strapped government - the PCEHR Light Option - costs little but defers problem and gets nowhere- and last the PCEHR No Option, switch off and focus on the important e-Heath basics - right answer but hard sell.
You can be sure the vested interests, rent-seekers and disparate academics looking for a project  are in there very hard pointing  out how wonderful all this PCEHR is - how the evidence supporting it will flow if only we are supported for a few more years -  and what is another billion dollars between friends? Of actual evidence essentially they have none of course! Option 2 is preferred by these souls as it might just keep things going but my how much more we could squeeze from option 1 they must be wondering!
You choose. I would almost bet you some flavour of Option 2 is what we see. If that happens will be a bit sad!
Would love comments!
David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 196 – Results – 15th December, 2013.

The question was:

What Do You Think Is The Chance The PCEHR Review Will Recommend Closing Down The PCEHR?

100% 6% (3)

80% 4% (2)

60% 12% (6)

40% 12% (6)

20% 27% (14)

0% 37% (19)

I Have No Idea 2% (1)

Total votes: 51

A pretty clear response indeed! The majority think there is a low probability that the PCEHR Review will recommend closing it down.

Again, many thanks to those that voted!

David.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links - 14th December, 2013.

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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Health IT gets new roadmap

Posted on Dec 06, 2013
By Erin McCann, Associate Editor
Part of moving forward and progressing with health IT initiatives involves proactively setting new goals and establishing a roadmap for the future. The Workgroup for Electronic Data Interchange Foundation has taken this to task by releasing its 2013 report that puts forth recommendations for the health IT industry over the next decade. 
Report officials outline 10 recommendations in four critical areas of focus including patient engagement, payment models, data exchange and interoperability and innovative encounter models. 
"These recommendations should serve as a catalyst and call-to-action to all stakeholders to truly help implement the health IT infrastructure that our nation will need in the future, both short-term and long-term," the report reads. "Much rides on the success of these recommendations."
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Cerner takes on genomics with Claritas

Posted on Dec 06, 2013
By Bernie Monegain, Editor
Cerner Corp., one of the top EHR vendors in the country, is teaming up with Claritas Genomics to advance personalized medicine by building tools and connectivity that will better integrate next-generation, sequence-based diagnostic testing into clinical practice.
The relationship with Cerner will enable Claritas to tap into an existing, scalable computing infrastructure that integrates ordering of genomic sequencing tests, laboratory processing, results interpretation, return of results to the clinician and incorporation of the result in the patient's electronic medical record, executives of both companies announced in a Dec. 5 news release.
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WEDI report focuses on opportunities, challenges of HIT

Posted: December 5, 2013 - 1:45 pm ET
The Workgroup for Electronic Data Interchange has issued a report on the state of the art of healthcare information technology focusing on cloud computing, smartphones and other wireless devices and mobile healthcare applications.
The report identifies how today's technology creates new opportunities to improve efficiency in the healthcare system and lower the cost of care. The report also looked at the challenges faced by the industry in applying these new technologies.
More than 200 volunteers from the healthcare industry and government worked on the project, according to Reston, Va.-based WEDI. The workgroup was founded in 1991 by then-HHS Secretary Dr. Louis Sullivan and was designated as a health IT adviser to HHS by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996. Its 1993 recommendations led to inclusion of the “administrative simplification” section of HIPAA, which includes the “transactions and code sets” provisions, an attempt to bring standardization to electronic healthcare transactions.
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CMS, ONC go for meaningful use delay

Posted on Dec 06, 2013
By Tom Sullivan, Editor, Government Health IT
A joint CMS and ONC blog post today divulges the government's intentions to extend the timeline for meaningful use Stages 2 and 3.
“Under the revised schedule, Stage 2 would be extended through 2016 and Stage 3 would begin in 2017 for those providers that have completed at least two years in Stage 2,” explained acting national coordinator Jacob Reider, MD, and Rod Tagalicod, director of the CMS office of health standards and services.
“The goal of this change is two-fold: first, to allow CMS and ONC to focus efforts on the successful implementation of the enhanced patient engagement, interoperability and health information exchange requirements in Stage 2; and second, to utilize data from Stage 2 participation to inform policy decisions for Stage 3," they write.
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The Rules And Tools Of Patient Engagement

12/5/2013 09:45 AM
Doctors must capitalize on patient curiosity about their own medical records.
For generations, doctors have been saying we want our patients to be more involved in their care, since we know the value engaged patients play in improving outcomes for many preventable illnesses, from heart disease to diabetes. But today, most doctors are not adequately using an available tool to help patients take ownership of their care: the electronic medical record (EMR).
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  • December 5, 2013, 7:12 PM ET

Data Helps Drive Lower Mortality Rate at Kaiser

REDWOOD CITY, CALIF. — Kaiser Permanente’s use of data analytics is helping it lower hospital mortality rates and look for ways to diagnose illnesses earlier. John Mattison, chief medical information officer at Kaiser spoke, Thursday, at VentureBeat’s Data Science Summit in Silicon Valley. Dr. Mattison predicts that by the year 2020, ten times more medical research will be generated by analyzing vast quantities of medical data than by conventional models of clinical research. 
Over the past several years, Kaiser Permanente’s hospitals in southern California – the region with the most members — have enjoyed a lower mortality rate than the national average, according to data from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. “Today you have a 26% lower chance of dying in one of our hospitals than you do in other hospitals,” said Dr. Mattison, adding that Kaiser is starting to lower its mortality rate much faster than the national average. “A lot of this is directly rated to how we use data and integrate data,” he said. 
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  • December 5, 2013, 10:32 AM ET

Analytics Helps UPMC Slash Readmission Rates

University of Pittsburgh Medical Center has slashed readmission rates by 37% since it began using analytics to predict which patients were more likely to be readmitted to the hospital within 30 days.
That represents considerable savings for the hospital in terms of providing urgent care, let alone saving the hospital from potential penalties levied by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services for failing to lower those rates.
The trouble for most hospitals is that they’re geared up for the “average patient,” whereas no one is actually an average patient. The role of analytics at UPMC is to determine most precisely which course of treatment will be most effective for each individual.
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A Guide: How to Identify and Address Unsafe Conditions Associated with Health IT

December 5, 2013, 8:46 am
Kathy Kenyon, JD / Senior Policy Analyst , and Steven Posnack / Director Federal Policy Division, ONC
When front line clinicians confront a clinical mishap or unsafe condition in EHR-enabled healthcare settings (such as a medication error or a missed diagnosis) they may not connect the clinical event with how EHR use could have helped prevent it, how misuse or failure to use EHR functionality as intended contributed to the problem, or how weaknesses in EHR configuration, interfaces, or usability contributed.
To help clinicians and other EHR users address health IT-related safety issues, we have posted a guide and slide deck [PDF - 2.7 MB] [PPTX – 3.0 MB] called How to Identify and Address Unsafe Conditions Associated with Health IT, developed by ECRI Institute under an ONC contract.  The guide aims to help healthcare organizations and Patient Safety Organizations (and perhaps health IT technology developers, industry professional associations, and risk management and liability insurance companies) improve reporting of unsafe conditions associated with health IT, EHRs in particular.
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3 reasons to be cheerful about health IT

Posted on Dec 04, 2013
By Jeff Rowe, Contributing Writer
Unless you’ve just beamed in from another planet, you know there’s a bit of a debate underway about the current state and future of certain healthcare reform efforts. But when it comes specifically to the health IT transition, some stakeholders are still feeling downright upbeat.
As Greg Chittim, senior director of Arcadia Solutions, sees it, the first real wave of optimism about health IT came with the HITECH Act, "and the realization that the technology was at a level that people had a reason to be optimistic about how IT could change healthcare."
While Chittim says that first wave has passed, and many people have begun to ask, "What’s next?," he thinks that "the next 12 months will determine whether our overall optimism over health IT will continue or not."
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Tele-ICU slashes mortality rates, speeds discharges for hospitals

December 5, 2013 | By Dan Bowman
Intensive care unit telehealth technology helped to improve survival rates of ICU patients and speed both ICU and hospital discharges, according to research published Thursday in CHEST Journal.
For the study, Craig Lilly, Director of the eICU Program at Worcester, Mass.-based UMass Memorial Medical Center, and a team of researchers examined the impact of tele-ICU technology across 56 intensive care units, 32 hospitals and 19 health systems over a five-year period. Overall, they found that patients who were cared for by hospitals that used the technology were 26 percent more likely than those that received usual ICU care to survive the ICU; additionally such patients were 16 ercent more likely to survive their hospitalization.
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Telehealth Improves Patient Care in ICUs

Scott Mace, for HealthLeaders Media , December 6, 2013

Patient survival of ICUs is 26% more likely when backed by eICU services, and patients are discharged faster from the ICU and the hospital, a new study finds.

New research supports telehealth within intensive care units as improving patient survival rates and speeding discharge.
"A Multi-center Study of ICU Telemedicine Reengineering of Adult Critical Care" examined the impact of remote intensive care units (eICUs) on nearly 120,000 critical care patients who were treated at 56 intensive care units, 32 hospitals, and 19 health systems over a five-year period. The research demonstrated reductions in both mortality and length of stay. The results were statistically significant on both an unadjusted and severity-adjusted basis.
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Whopping $17B paid out so far for MU

Posted on Dec 05, 2013
By Anthony Brino, Editor, HIEWatch
As providers ready for meaningful use Stage 2 attestation and policymakers start designing Stage 3, CMS announced that the Medicare and Medicaid EHR incentive programs have paid out just shy of $17 billion to spur adoption thus far.
As of the end of October, more than 430,000 eligible hospitals and professionals have achieved meaningful use, with 93 percent of eligible hospitals and 80 percent of eligible professionals registered for the program.
More than 236,000 Medicare-eligible physicians and 139,000 Medicaid-eligible physicians have attested so far, along with more than 4,600 or 85 percent of all eligible hospitals.
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Theft the Root Cause of Three Recent Breaches

DEC 3, 2013 3:33pm ET
Three provider organizations recently have reported serious breaches where protected information was purposely accessed by unauthorized personnel, but only one is offering protection to patients:
* University of Washington Medicine is notifying approximately 90,000 patients of UW Medical Center and Harborview Medical Center that malware in an email attachment that an employee opened accessed their data files. The FBI is investigating and may be contacting patients, according to the university.
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Security risks on the rise for 2014

Posted on Dec 04, 2013
By Mike Miliard, Managing Editor
Whether it's guarding against "malicious insiders" or ensuring C-suite execs are scared straight about the risks and regs they face, the coming year poses big challenges to healthcare according to Kroll's annual Cyber Security Forecast.
The newest report takes a look at a shifting social and legal environment and spotlights seven trends all industries should pay attention to as they guard against legal, monetary and reputational risk.
Those are outlined below, followed by a Q&A with Kroll's Senior Managing Director Alan Brill, who answered some questions from Healthcare IT News about the industry's preparedness for a new year filled with new security threats.
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RSNA13: Why patient-centered care must be a priority

December 4, 2013 | By Dan Bowman
Patient-centered care needs to be a bigger priority in the medical imaging field, several prominent radiologists have said this week at the Radiological Society of North America's annual meeting in Chicago. The concept holds potential to not only improve the quality of care delivered, but also patient attitudes about the industry, as a whole, according to Bibb Allen, Jr., who serves as vice-chair of the American College of Radiology Board of Chancellors.
Allen and Mary Mahoney, chair of RSNA's Patient-Centered Radiology Steering Committee talked about the importance of patient-centered care at a special interest session Monday.
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New Possibilities, New Problems With Wider Use of EHRs

by Fred Bazzoli Wednesday, December 4, 2013
Progress by our nation's hospitals in adopting electronic health records is yielding new possibilities and advancements, but it also brings new challenges for IT executives in health care organizations.
The federal HITECH program has served as an effective stimulus to get thousands of hospitals into digital recordkeeping. As of Oct. 1, CMS said that 71% of hospitals have attested to achieving Stage 1 meaningful use of EHRs, up by nearly 83% from a year ago.
Providers know expectations for using EHR systems will rise in subsequent stages of the program, with the intent of achieving safer, more effective and less expensive care. To do that, providers will have to be able to take advantage of an abundance of data that will stretch their ability to gain intelligence from the information. In addition, coping with EHRs provides new challenges that seemed unimaginable even a decade ago.
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How CPOE Will Make Healthcare Smarter

Scott Mace, for HealthLeaders Media , December 3, 2013

Computerized physician order entry is a key requirement of meaningful use stage 1. Now that CPOE has reached a tipping point, healthcare IT leaders are at the beginning of a journey that takes the accumulated wisdom of a healthcare provider and codes it into decision-support systems.

This article appears in the November 2013 issue of HealthLeaders magazine.
A key requirement in stage 1 of meaningful use was that providers employ computerized physician order entry for at least 30% of medication orders entered by any licensed healthcare professional who can enter orders into the medical record per state, local, and professional guidelines.
Now that more than 80% of eligible hospitals have received reimbursement for adopting electronic medical record technology, CPOE has gone mainstream. It is also in some ways just the beginning of a journey that takes the accumulated wisdom of a healthcare provider and codes it into decision-support systems that, over time, make CPOE smarter.
"We've got much higher CPOE adoption than we had three or four years ago," says Bill Spooner, senior vice president and chief information officer of Sharp HealthCare, a not-for-profit regional healthcare system based in San Diego with 1,735 licensed beds at four acute care hospitals.
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The Road toward Fully Transparent Medical Records

Jan Walker, R.N., M.B.A., Jonathan D. Darer, M.D., M.P.H., Joann G. Elmore, M.D., M.P.H., and Tom Delbanco, M.D.
December 4, 2013DOI: 10.1056/NEJMp1310132
Forty years ago, Shenkin and Warner argued that giving patients their medical records “would lead to more appropriate utilization of physicians and a greater ability of patients to participate in their own care.”1 At that time, patients in most states could obtain their records only through litigation, but the rules gradually changed, and in 1996 the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act entitled virtually all patients to obtain their records on request. Today, we're on the verge of eliminating such requests by simply providing patients online access. Thanks in part to federal financial incentives,2 electronic medical records are becoming the rule, accompanied increasingly by password-protected portals that offer patients laboratory, radiology, and pathology results and secure communication with their clinicians by e-mail.
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Another view

Neil Paul has been thinking about the future of GP practice. It needs to change, he argues, and IT needs to help it to do that.
27 November 2013
As you are probably aware, we have just seen the much-awaited GP contract. All sides are claiming it as a success. I remain to be convinced one way or the other.
For me, the key themes are the possible loss of practice boundaries - with NHS England managing home visits for those who live outside a visiting area - the increasing push to case management for vulnerable groups and the desire for extended opening. I don’t have a problem with any of that; but the devil is in the detail.
In order to stay the same, things will have to change
While the new contract is being implemented, we need to be aware of the impending retirement crisis fuelled by the NHS GP pension being destroyed, the imminent loss of seniority payments, the massive increases in taxation, and the general fatigue caused by dealing with increasing demand.
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GP extract to care.data starts in March

2 December 2013   Lis Evenstad
The extraction of GP data as part of the care.data programme will begin from March next year.
The programme will take a monthly dataset from GP practices, covering patient demographics referrals and prescriptions. This will be linked with data from secondary care to create a new set of Care Episode Statistics.
An update on the care.data programme, due to be presented to the Health and Social Care Information Centre’s board meeting this week, says that the preparations are “well underway.”
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3ML pathfinder project put out of misery

29 November 2013   Lis Evenstad
The 3millionlives’ pathfinder programme, supposed to deliver 100,000 telehealth users by the end of this year, has been scrapped.
The scheme was the first step in the Department of Health’s project to kickstart the market by recruiting 3m people onto telehealth and telecare schemes by 2017.
NHS England took over responsibility for the programme in April and EHI reported last month that the pathfinder programme was under review.
A spokeswoman from NHS England said that the pathfinder programme, which has struggled to gain traction since it started, was part of the old DH delivery model.
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For HIEs, shared patients and social networks matter more than location

December 3, 2013 | By Katie Sullivan
It's not all about location for health information exchange networks--physicians are influenced by other physicians with whom they interact with and have common patients with more than geographical location in HIEs, according to new research published in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association.
For the study, network effects among clusters of physicians based on their professional and geographical proximities were examined. A diffusion model was used to capture both indirect and direct network effects among groups, studied over a three-year period, for an HIE in Western New York by researchers from the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Flow of patients among different groups of physicians was found to be a powerful factor in HIE adoption.
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Journal addresses, publishes 'next-generation' EHR research

December 2, 2013 | By Marla Durben Hirsch
The American Journal of Managed Care has now weighed in on the impact of electronic health records and health IT with a special issue devoted to research on the subject.
The issue is highlighted by an introduction by guest editor and former National Coordinator for Health IT Farzad Mostashari, M.D., now a visiting fellow at the Brookings Institute. Mostashari notes that this latest round of health and payment reform is different because of the new tools and data that EHRs and other health IT offer.
"This issue of AJMC provides many reasons to be hopeful that the combination of changing incentives and new data tools can indeed deliver better care at lower cost," Mostashari writes, although he also points to "warning signs" regarding who might reap the most financial benefits.
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Polls highlight chronic disease information needs

Two studies tracking adult internet preferences have honed in on the type of experience and information chronic-disease patients are seeking online. Nonprofit Pew Research Center's Internet and American Life Project found, for example, that internet users with more than one chronic condition are more likely to use the internet to “read or watch something online about someone else's personal health experience,” and are also more likely to share what they know with online communities than users without chronic conditions.
Decision Resources finds that this sort of soft support—as opposed to a straightforward brand message—is important to note because while 68% of polled Boomers (who make up the majority of patients with chronic diseases, including diabetes, hypertension, osteoporosis and heart disease) said they use the internet, they generally gravitate toward broad-based health websites, like WebMD for disease and drug information.
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Do Patient Portals Improve Healthcare?

12/2/2013 10:00 AM
Study results are mixed on how portals affect the quality and efficiency of patient care, suggesting more research is needed.
The impact of patient portal use on health outcomes is unclear, according to a systematic review of studies. Moreover, the researchers said, the evidence to date shows that portals are unlikely to have substantial effects on efficiency and utilization of services, at least in the short term.
Physicians' use of patient portals is growing rapidly, because Meaningful Use Stage 2 requires providers to share records electronically with patients. It's widely believed that these portals can help increase patient engagement in healthcare, so the evidence about the actual effects of patient portals is important.
After combing the literature, researchers were able to identify only 46 fairly high-quality studies that addressed how portals "tethered" to EHRs related to health outcomes, patient satisfaction, and adherence; efficiency or utilization; patient characteristics; and/or attitudes or barriers to or facilitators of use. These included 14 randomized controlled trials, 21 observational studies, and 11 descriptive studies.
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The Most Polarizing Topics in Healthcare IT

Scott Mace, for HealthLeaders Media , December 3, 2013

Seven healthcare IT issues that divide IT leaders, users, and patients, including Healthcare.gov, Epic Systems, ICD-10 and SNOWMED CT, and the BYOD trend.

It's time for those stories that look back at 2013. What better place to start but with those healthcare IT issues that divide us and create lots of topics for journalists like me to pick apart and try to put back together.
My top seven topics:
Healthcare.gov. Its problems were predictable, but is it salvageable? Lipstick on a pig? Now that the calendar has turned to December, mass numbers of signups must materialize for the site to be called a success—especially now that insurers have cancelled millions of old healthcare plans. The new site may do a good job (finally) of showing consumers how much each healthcare plan will cost, but as critics have pointed out, it still fails to make it simple to see exactly what you are buying for that money. How about a section showing the minimum coverage of each health insurance policy? Oh, and while we're at it, let's put all of this in plain English.
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Big growth seen for device integration

Posted on Dec 02, 2013
By Mike Miliard, Managing Editor
The global medical device connectivity market, worth $3.5 billion this past year, is projected to top $33 billion by 2019, according to a new study.
The report, from Transparency Market Research expects a compound annual growth rate of 37.8 percent from 2013 to 2019.
Integration of data from medical devices into electronic medical records helps save time, eliminate transcription errors and improve overall care. But even as meaningful use EMR incentives augur big growth in device integration, the report points out that connectivity and operational issues, cost barriers for small and mid-sized providers and security concerns are all inhibiting the growth of this market.
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John Halamka: Limit EHR certification process to standards adoption, interoperability

December 2, 2013 | By Dan Bowman
The certification process for Meaningful Use is in need of a "radical" overhaul, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center CIO John Halamka says in his most recent blog post. Halamka (pictured right), who also serves on FierceHealthIT's Editorial Advisory Board, says that while attestation should be maintained as a demonstration of performance, certification should be limited to rigorous standards adoption and interoperability.
To explain, Halamka likens the current certification process to the government hypothetically mandating the use of USB thumb drives.
"Not only would [the government] specify a USB 3.0 standard, they would require it is black, rectangular and weighs 2 ounces," Halamka says. "Such prescriptive requirements would stifle innovation since today's USB drives might be in the shape of a key or even mimic a sushi roll."
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Design principles at the heart of wearable technology

December 2, 2013 | By Susan D. Hall
Technology leaders must focus on solving real human problems if wearable technology is to become the omnipresent, multi-billion dollar industry many predict, according to Marcus Weller, founder and CEO of Skully Helmets.
It must meet a legitimate need and should attract attention for more than just its novelty, he writes in a piece at VentureBeat.
"What many understand already is that investment in new technology not founded on authentic utility is the stuff bubbles are made of. Wearable technology should at its core, enable us to transcend our problems," he says.
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Database tracks disease outbreaks, vaccinations reported since 1888

  • November 27, 2013
Researchers from the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health have created an online database of weekly surveillance reports for reportable diseases in the United States from the past 125 years, according to a press release.
Project Tycho, a collection of digitized weekly notifiable disease surveillance tables published from 1888 to 2013, were collected from various historical reports, including MMWR. All of the data is free and publicly available on the Project Tycho website.
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Health Information Exchange Taking Root in Northern California

by Mari Edlin, iHealthBeat Contributing Reporter Monday, December 2, 2013
Northern California health information organizations are helping lay the groundwork for the next steps in expanding health information exchange throughout the state. Their participation in pilot programs for secure messaging, rural health information exchange and personal health records puts Northern California communities in the forefront of the campaign to increase the use of health information technology.
There are 16 community HIOs in California, half of which are operational. A new map shows health technology has reached 35 counties -- more than half of California's 58 counties.
Three Northern California HIOs -- the venerable Santa Cruz HIE, the one-year-old North Coast Health Information Network and the UC-Davis Health System -- are participating in California Health eQuality's California Trust Framework pilot. The effort started in June and runs for six months.
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Linking Genes to Diseases by Sifting Through Electronic Medical Records

By CARL ZIMMER
The days of scrawled doctor’s notes are slowly coming to a close. In the United States, 93 percent of hospitals are now using at least some electronic medical records and 2.2 percent have given up paper records completely, according to the consulting firm HIMSS Analytics.
The federal government has been pushing for electronic medical records for a decade, arguing that they will improve health care and bring down costs. That is still a matter of debate. Critics charge that the system is hobbled by poorly designed software and that some hospitals are using electronic medical records to bill more for the same services.
But a new study suggests that electronic medical records may have another, entirely different use: as a Rosetta Stone for our DNA. Researchers are using them to trace links between genes and disease.
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IT-enabled docs leverage mHealth tools

Posted on Nov 21, 2013
By Eric Wicklund, Editor, mHealthNews
Forget the crowded waiting room with crying babies, years-old magazines and a tiny, tinny radio offering instrumental pop music favorites. Today's consumers want healthcare delivered at a time and place of his or her choosing. And it's up to the clinician to meet those demands.
A panel of four distinguished healthcare providers will tackle this problem in "The World is My Waiting Room," an Executive Breakfast presented by mHealth News and Healthcare IT News at the HIMSS Media mHealth Summit. This discussion, sponsored by Symantec, takes place from 7:30-9 a.m. on Monday, December 9, at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center just outside of Washington D.C.
With a wide variety of mHealth tools and services at their disposal, healthcare providers now have the ability to reach out to the patient outside the office. The challenge lies in creating an experience that will be rewarding for both doctor and patient, providing easy and effective healthcare and reducing wasted time and money.
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Google Glass Enables Surgeons To Consult Remotely

11/29/2013 09:01 AM
When surgeon Brent Ponce wore Google Glass during a shoulder replacement, the ghostly hand of a remote collaborator coached him along.
Brent Ponce wasn't the first surgeon to bring Google Glass into the operating room, but he may have been the first to use it as a truly collaborative tool.
While performing a complete shoulder replacement at the University of Alabama at Birmingham Highlands Hospital, Ponce wore the Glass display under a moonsuit-style surgical hood, allowing the camera built into the frame to capture video and beam it to a colleague, Phani Dantuluri, M.D., tuning in from his office in Atlanta. At the same time, on the Glass' tiny video screen, Ponce could see a virtual hand pointing things out. It was Dantuluri's hand, captured by video on the other end of the Internet connection and superimposed over the surgical field of view.
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Enjoy!
David.