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."

Friday, March 21, 2014

The Future For Clinical Decision Support From One Who Has Been There Almost Since The Start.

This appeared a little while ago.

Middleton still untangling CDS promise

Posted on Feb 03, 2014
By Anthony Brino, Editor, HIEWatch
Blackford Middleton, MD, first came across the term “clinical decision support” in 1983.
That’s when he was in medical school, at SUNY Buffalo, discussing health data management. “I thought that for the medical students and doctors it was ridiculous that we were carrying around clipboards to transfer data between hospital information systems,” said Middleton in a recent interview with Government nHealth IT. Today, Middleton is chief informatics officer at Vanderbilt University Health System and chair of the American Medical Informatics Association board.
Even back then, the year before Apple’s first personal computer went to market, he and his classmates thought it would be worthwhile for information systems to help clinicians with the complexity of diagnosis — and that endeavor continues.
As Vanderbilt and other institutions try to advance one of the most ambitious applications of clinical decision support, the field of pharmacogenomics, at both the molecular and computational levels, in the short-term Middleton is hoping the federal EHR incentive program can help raise the national baseline of evidence-based healthcare by making clinical decision support systems more accessible, intelligent and interoperable.
Middleton, who spent more than a decade at Partners HealthCare before landing at Vanderbilt, has had a front-row seat in the evolution of clinical decision support (CDS) systems — and a hand in developing them.
After med school, as an informatics fellow at Stanford in the early 1990s, he worked on the Quick Medical Reference DT system, through which clinicians entered symptoms and received advice on 700 disease profiles.
“We found it could make basic diagnoses pretty well, near to the level of a medical student perhaps, but not the expert clinician,” he said.
It had a number of limitations that continue in CDS to this day, including for what some consider the most advanced intelligence system, IBM’s Watson.
“Reasoning in computers is hard. They don’t know what they don’t know,” Middleton said. “Diagnosis is filled with nuance. That remains a fundamental challenge. It’s much more important to get the knowledge base right, because reasoning methods will evolve.”
Watson and other artificial intelligence systems are capable of learning from mistakes, though, and Middleton thinks the healthcare community should do the same when it comes to CDS systems and health IT in general.
 Lots more here:
For me what comes from this is that the path to perfection is CDS is not going to be a straight line. Increased computing power, innovations like IBM’s Watson and so on are all going to help as is the ongoing improvement in clinical knowledge and guidelines. Additionally we really have not worked out just what the best user interface for the CDS to interact with the clinician is and how it might work optimally.
There is a way to go but I really think we are on our way!
David.

Thursday, March 20, 2014

What Do You Do When You Get A PCEHR Review You Don't Like? You Rewrite It!

Back in the late 1990's I did a review (with Paul Clarke and some really good people) of General Practice Computing.

You can read all about it here:

http://ozhealthithistory.wikispaces.com/General+Practice+Related+Files

The report was partly suppressed and parts re-written at the demand of the Department of Health and Ageing. Funny the same Secretary of the Department is still in place!

Since then the GP Report has been seen as being pretty useful!

I am now hearing mutterings the same may be happening with the PCEHR Review. The Department has form in my direct experience so who knows? Are they up to it again?

Rumours or facts might be really fun!

David.



Pre - Budget Review Of The Health Sector - 20th March 2014.

As we head towards the Budget in Early to Mid May 2014 I thought It would be useful to keep a closer eye than usual on what was being said regarding what we might see coming out of the Budget.
According to the Australian Parliament web site Budget Night will be on Tuesday 13th May, 2014.
Here are some of the more interesting articles I have spotted this week.
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Cuts to Medicare support for PTSD cause sufferers more harm

Date March 10, 2014
An online petition by the Alliance for Better Access (ABA) pressure group calling for the Medicare cuts to be reversed has reached about 20,000 signatures.
Mary*, a Sydney woman in her 20s, has a recurring nightmare of her childhood. It is like the final scene in Apocalypse Now , where Marlon Brando's Colonel Kurtz loses his mind, only Mary dreams that her "abusive, warped, religious fundamentalist and controlling" mother is Brando amid the chaos and madness that was her early life.
Her mother probably had post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, she thinks, but because it was never treated she passed it down to the next generation.
One of Mary's siblings killed herself. Mary married an abusive man, and she thought she was to blame for the terrible way he treated her because she was conditioned, as a child, to accept abuse; that it was always her fault.
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New boss walking the talk

4th Mar 2014
PROMINENT consumer advocate Carol Bennett tells MO why she agreed to take the reins at one of Australia’s leading MLs.
After five years at the helm of Australia’s best known consumer and patient advocacy group, Carol Bennett last month took over at one of the nation’s leading Medicare Locals.
The now former Consumers Health Forum CEO arrives at the Hunter Medicare Local — which covers Newcastle and surrounding areas of NSW — at a fascinating time for the organisation and the broader Medicare Locals scheme.
Shortly after the Coalition’s election victory in September last year, Health Minister Peter Dutton announced the ML program would be the subject of a full review. While in opposition, Mr Dutton had been heavily critical of MLs as one of the central planks of the Labor government’s health reform agenda. He repeatedly argued the ML initiative was set to waste millions duplicating bureaucracy rather than aiding or expanding patient services.
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From the Ministry of Silly Promises

Alan Mitchell
Are Tony Abbott’s extravagant election promises coming back to haunt him as he confronts the reality of Labor’s fiscal legacy? It seems so.
First, Abbott’s colleagues were reported to be urging the Prime Minister to modify or delay his $5.5 billion a year paid parental leave scheme. The scheme will provide generous transfers to middle-class households and, on the international evidence, generate few additional public benefits.
Now, the government’s green paper on its proposed Emissions Reduction Fund – the centrepiece of its alternative to Labor’s emission trading scheme – has attracted withering criticism from the economist Ross Garnaut.
Garnaut conducted the review that led to Labor’s emission trade scheme, so you might suspect him of being biased. But he is also an internationally respected economist with a reputation riding on the quality of his analysis.
Of most concern to Abbott’s colleagues will be Garnaut’s warning about the potential cost of meeting the government’s emissions reduction target.
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Co-payment would hurt rural health

11th Mar 2014
AMONG the roast dinners, seafood feasts and rich desserts of the Christmas period, the proposal to the National Commission of Audit for a $6 co-payment for general practice consultations certainly provided a talking point around many tables.
While the topic receded briefly, it is now back on the political agenda and has highlighted some important issues around the future direction of health policy, including the ongoing cost of healthcare services; how this expenditure can be put to best use; and issues of equity and access, particularly in rural areas.
The proposal is underpinned by an assumption that a $5 or $6 co-payment is low enough that it would not deter people from visiting a doctor if they absolutely needed to.
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Fiona Nash's decision to axe drug and alcohol adviser has cost $1 million

Date March 13, 2014

Amy Corderoy

Health Editor, Sydney Morning Herald

The government has paid nearly a million dollars to cover its sudden axing of Australia's peak drug and alcohol body, documents reveal.
A leaked report from the administrator winding up the Alcohol and Other Drug Council of Australia shows the government has paid out more than $949,000 so far because of the decision by beleaguered Assistant Health Minister Fiona Nash to cut the organisation's funding without notice.
Public health groups and former Liberal MP and council board president Mal Washer have said the decision was ill-informed, especially given the organisation cost only between $1.3 million and $1.6 million annually.
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Inquiry into AHPRA finds confusion, complexity

13th Mar 2014
AHPRA remains a large and complex bureaucracy with potential confusion over lines of responsibility and accountability, a recent inquiry into the organisation has found.
The report also noted that AHPRA spent almost $1 million regulating just 300 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Practitioners (ATSIHP) in 2012-13 despite the group contributing just $26,000 in registration fees.
The Department of Health’s submission to the inquiry acknowledged that the long term viability of the ATSIHP board was a concern given the high level of subsidisation it required to remain operational.
The analysis of the nation’s health professional regulator was released this week by the Victorian Parliament’s Legal and Social Issues Legislation Committee.
In submissions sent to the inquiry, doctors’ groups – along with MDOs – were highly critical of the regulator, complaining of substantial registration fee increases, poor communication to practitioners, registration errors made by AHPRA and drawn out complaints processes. 
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Opposition health MP warns of further cuts to drug and alcohol agencies

Sarah Dingle reported this story on Thursday, March 13, 2014 12:30:00
ELEANOR HALL: The Labor Party is warning that the Federal Government's axing of one of the country's longest-running drug and alcohol bodies could be the forerunner to more cuts in other health organisations.
Figures reported today suggest that closure of the Alcohol and Other Drugs Council will cost the Government almost a million dollars.
The Federal Government is currently conducting a review into drug and alcohol funding as Sarah Dingle reports.
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Guild regrets having to cap services

13 March, 2014 Nick O'Donoghue 0 comments
Funding for pharmacy professional services would dry up without caps being imposed on the programs, George Tambassis, Pharmacy Guild of Australia national president says.
Mr Tambassis described the impact the decision to restrict accredited pharmacists to providing a maximum of 20 HMRs a month as "regretable", during the State of the Industry symposium at APP2014 today.
"The truth is we had no choice [but to implement the caps] as the Government insisted that the limited budgets for these services had to be enforced," he said.
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Health minister flags pharmacy cuts

Joanna Heath
Health Minister Peter Dutton has signalled for the first time pharmacies will not be immune to the government’s search for savings in the health budget, delivering tough love to one of the most feared industry lobbies in the country.
But in a move that will disappoint supermarket giants Woolworths and Coles, Mr Dutton pledged to prevent the retailers from opening their own ­in-store ­pharmacies.
“I have met with hundreds of ­pharmacists in recent years and there are a number of propositions that have been put to me about how government should be providing support, which clearly is not within the remit of ­government,” Mr Dutton told a ­pharmacy industry conference on the Gold Coast on Thursday.
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Dutton opens role to pharmacists

Date March 14, 2014
Federal Health Minister Peter Dutton has signalled the possibility of paying pharmacists to deliver a greater range of health services including vaccinations.
In a speech to pharmacists on the Gold Coast on Thursday, Mr Dutton said the nation needed ''all hands on deck'' to tackle massive growth in conditions such as obesity and dementia.
Describing pharmacy as ''a cornerstone to the delivery of not just medications but on a daily basis patient care'', Mr Dutton said he was open to discussions about paying pharmacists to deliver ''tangible services and interventions that will provide better patient outcomes''.
He also ruled out allowing ''retail giants'' such as Coles and Woolworths into pharmacy.
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AMA warns about health screening scams

Date March 16, 2014

Neil McMahon

The head of the Australian Medical Association has launched a blistering attack on health screening services, labelling them a scam targeting the ''worried well'' with $200 scans in local RSLs, churches and scout halls.
Dr Steve Hambleton also backed warnings by the consumer organisation Choice that health screenings could both raise false alarms and give false hopes to patients targeted in a direct-mail campaign aimed mainly at people over 50.
''They are preying on the worried well and they are using the imprimatur of places like the RSL and the scout halls, which are respected in the community, so people think it must be OK,'' Dr Hambleton said.
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Comment:
It seems even clearer there is a significant change coming on the basis of this week’s news as well.
It really is interesting to see all the various kites being flown as to what might be in the gun to be cut back. Not long to wait now!
As usual - no real news on the PCEHR Review.
More next week.
David.

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

New Zealand Seems To Be Rushing Forward With E-Health. A Much Cheaper And I Suspect Better Approach Than Australia And The PCEHR.

This very interesting article appeared a few days ago.

Health software puts patient in charge

Updated at 11:27 am on 16 March 2014
Karen Brown.
An online revolution is the biggest change for family doctors' practices in decades and it has big potential benefits for the public.
E-health through so-called patient portals will provide online access to personal health information, similar to online banking. The system enables patients to renew prescriptions, receive lab-test results online, book appointments and possibly even see doctor's comments written following consultations.
Wellington man Blair Polly was one of the first to trial ManageMyHealth through his GP, Richard Medlicott, and is a convert.
Patient portals are a key part of a raft of electronic health initiatives being promoted by the Government as the way of the future in health; it wants 90 percent of general practitioners' (GPs) patients to have access to the technology by the end of 2014.
Experience overseas has shown people love having easy access to health records, and the clinicians and others here say such systems will empower patients.
The patient portals use technology similar to that used in internet banking to provide secure access by patients to health summary information.
Mr Polly started using the portal several years ago, at about the time he was diagnosed with type two diabetes. He was seeing Dr Medlicott on a regular basis and keen to get the condition under control.
He gets an email from Dr Medlicott when a new lab result has come through, and he goes online to see what it is and read the comments the doctor has about the result. He also renews his prescriptions online and emails Dr Medlicott at Island Bay Medical Centre whenever he has a question.

Easy to use

The system is surprisingly easy to use, Mr Polly says.
"I've said to other people that if you can jump onto TradeMe or if you can use Facebook or anything like that, it's certainly no more difficult than those sorts of things and it just opens up the lines of communications between myself and my doctor."
Mr Polly he feels he's being more proactive about his health, and says it's convenient because he can do things online when he thinks of it or has time, without interrupting his doctor in any way.
He's looking forward to the day all his health records are online and easily accessed, no matter where he may be in the country -- something the health system is still working towards.
Mr Polly says it may also be saving him money; in the past he would have booked an appointment to see his GP over a possible problem but now he'll send a short email and often get an answer which resolves the query.
Listen to more on Insight ( 27 min 51 sec )
Lots more here:
Here we go with a properly considered system in NZ doing the things that people want and need, and improving interaction with their clinicians, via a sensibly considered patient portal.
The patient gets simple access to help, advice and information and the clinician retains their position as a trusted source of health information for the patient -as well as having just a single point of patient records.
That 750 patients of 850 offered the service took the offer up speaks volumes to me!
I bet this cost 1/10 of what Australia has paid for a much less useful system.
David.

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Privacy Health Check –It’s Time To Comply!

Legal, clinical, security and change management experts will present in Sydney next Tuesday as a part of the International Association of Privacy Professionals national training programme. Compliance with the new APPs is essential in respect of the health information, and the fines and reputational damage of not complying make it worth your while. The application of laws, practical implications and a list of key take away actions will all be provided.

Non-members who read this blog are invited free if they say “ David More” When registering or call Emma Heath on 0413768588.

Full details can be found here:

 http://pams.com.au/iapp/StaticContent/Images/140325_iappANZ_Privacy_Health.html

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All I can say is those who are interested or need to understand their obligations need to decide if this might be an afternoon well spent!

David.

I Wonder How Much Of This Will Turn Out To Be A Real Problem. Always Hard To Know When Politics Gets Involved.

This appeared a few days ago.

SA Health accused of probity errors and project failures

Opposition vows to investigate department if elected.

The South Australian opposition has backed its pre-election promise of a review into eHealth programs, making a series of explosive and damaging allegations about loose procurement, mismanagement and secrecy within the SA Government’s largest organisation.
Shadow health minister Rob Lucas says that he has been the recipient of an “overwhelming” number of reports from concerned whistleblowers that still work within the health department and its IT industry partners.
The first of his claims is that the department took a lax approach to procurement probity.
Late last year, Lucas told parliament that an employee of a major US computing vendor was hired by SA Health on a three month maternity leave contract. He alleges the contractor managed a periodic desktop refresh tender process and purchased 30,000 devices off the state’s client computing and server equipment panel. The vendor in question was one of the major bidders for the deal.
“The concern that has been raised, not just with me but also with very senior managers in SA Health, is that this particular person will have had access to very sensitive competitor pricing information within SA Health, as well as other commercially sensitive information about the structure and nature of tenders from competitor companies,” Lucas warned.
“When that person returns to their particular company, they will return armed with that information which obviously places them in a very advantageous position.”
According to the MP’s sources, concerns were raised about this perceived conflict of interest by other staff members, but the concerns were subsequently ignored.
Lucas received another complaint about the tender process behind SA Health’s $30 million Enterprise System for Medical Imaging (ESMI), which alleged an inappropriately close relationship between a senior official involved in the procurement and one of the tendering companies.
He detailed to parliament a number of text messages sent by the official, alerting a friend that their bid was “not on the radar” of the evaluating panel, suggesting that they would have to lift their performance.
Again, he claimed, there is no evidence that complaints made to the relevant probity director have been followed-up.
Lucas believes his sources are “looking for a voice in terms of expressing their concerns”.
“They have raised the issues within SA Health, in some cases for nearly two years, only to run into a brick wall or no response from this minister or and previous ministers and senior executives within SA Health.
“When all else is lot, some of these people have taken the brave step of raising the issues with members of parliament... to try to have their concerns listened to,” he said.
Lucas has not named any of the sources or people whose behaviour he claims to be concerned about.
When asked if he would apologise to SA Health and health minister Jack Snelling if a review showed the claims to be unsubstantiated, he told iTnews that he is “confident in the information” he has been provided with. He added that he will be “the first to concede that in this sort of field where there can be differing points of view on the same case”.
“But I have had 30 years in parliament, 11 of those as a minister. I think this sort of experience gives you some level of expertise in assessing these sorts of claims,” he argued.
Lots more here:
To me the issue here is to understand how much in election eve grandstanding and how much reflects an actual problem.
With the SA Election seemingly so close (at the time of writing) it will be interesting to see what will happen and if this will actually go any further.
Given the good things that we have all heard about SA Health IT recently it might be that this is all a political storm in a teacup!
Time will tell.
David.

Monday, March 17, 2014

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 17th March, 2014.

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

The most interesting article this week are the claims around e-Health in South Australia. From the outside things seemed to be sailing along - if not a little slowly - but it seems again we have a few problems emerging - a story to watch.
Other than that there are clearly lots of issues around the NBN, some small private company e-Health initiatives and the usual country practice having an e-Health promotion.
Lastly the video from Dr Edwin Kruys is well worth a watch (3 mins) to see how the health regulator might be rather behind the times. Watch the video and let me know what you think here or on Edwin’s blog. The quote from a major legal firm on this link makes it clear there is a problem!
“In our view, the very broad wording in paragraph 6.2.3 of the updated advertising guidelines potentially exposes all health practitioners to a risk of breaching section 133(1)(c) of the National Law. This is because when health practitioners become aware of a testimonial ‘associated with their health service’, they must actively seek to have the content removed from a website over which they have no control. Aside from being notoriously difficult to have content removed, this requirement potentially places an onerous burden on all health practitioners. We note the report in Australian Doctor that the Medical Board has expressed an intention to include an addendum to the guidelines on this issue, but will not amend the wording of paragraph 6.2.3 [3].
The updated advertising guidelines also contain a new section on social media. Paragraph 7.1 makes it clear that health practitioners are responsible for all of the content on social networking pages that they control or administer. This standard applies regardless of who posted the content. This means that health practitioners are required to remove a testimonial or any other content from their own social networking page if it breaches the updated advertising guidelines or the National Law.
In light of these changes, we encourage all health practitioners to read the updated guidelines very carefully before publishing any type of advertising. Given the significant penalties for advertisements that contravene the guidelines and the National Law, health practitioners should contact their medical indemnity insurer if they have any concerns.”
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SA Health accused of probity errors and project failures

Opposition vows to investigate department if elected.

The South Australian opposition has backed its pre-election promise of a review into eHealth programs, making a series of explosive and damaging allegations about loose procurement, mismanagement and secrecy within the SA Government’s largest organisation.
Shadow health minister Rob Lucas says that he has been the recipient of an “overwhelming” number of reports from concerned whistleblowers that still work within the health department and its IT industry partners.
The first of his claims is that the department took a lax approach to procurement probity.
Late last year, Lucas told parliament that an employee of a major US computing vendor was hired by SA Health on a three month maternity leave contract. He alleges the contractor managed a periodic desktop refresh tender process and purchased 30,000 devices off the state’s client computing and server equipment panel. The vendor in question was one of the major bidders for the deal.
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Vision for Life: Life-saving video system will give hospitals a clearer picture

Date March 12, 2014

Lucy Carroll

Health Reporter

When Gemma Cudmore's nine-day-old baby Beau fell ill suddenly last year she rushed him from her home in Appin to the local emergency department.
Within minutes of arriving at Campbelltown Hospital, paediatricians at Westmead - more than 40 kilometres away - had diagnosed him with a congenital heart defect over a video monitor.
''The second the Westmead doctors saw him on the cameras, they knew it was an emergency,'' says Ms Cudmore, 29.
''He was struggling for breath. He wasn't just sick - he was dying. The vision meant doctors could keep him alive until he had surgery.''
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Crash victim Stephen Power gets a new face thanks to 3-D printing

  • Hannah Devlin
  • The Times
  • March 13, 2014 12:44PM
THE life of a man so badly disfigured that he felt self-conscious leaving his house has been transformed by pioneering surgery using 3-D printed parts.
Stephen Power suffered severe injuries to his head and face in a motorcycle crash in 2012 and was in hospital for four months.
"I can't remember the accident — I remember five minutes before and then waking up in the hospital a few months later. I broke both cheekbones, top jaw, my nose and fractured my skull," he said.
Mr Power, who was wearing a crash helmet, had also injured his left eye and, anxious not to cause further damage to his vision, his doctors chose not to reposition his left cheekbone or the bones around the eye socket. As a result, his face remained disfigured, with the left eye positioned too low and left cheek more prominent than the right one.
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Surgeons rebuild man’s face with 3D printer

13th Mar 2014
A BRITISH man who suffered horrific facial injuries in a motorbike accident has had pioneering surgery to rebuild his face using 3D printed parts.
Stephen Power from Cardiff in Wales is thought to be one of the first trauma patients in the world to have a procedure in which 3D printing was used at every stage.
The 29-year-old suffered multiple trauma injuries in an accident in 2012. Despite wearing a crash helmet, his top jaw, nose and both cheek bones were broken and he fractured his skull.
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Telehealth doesn't need fibre, the technology already exists: Experts

Summary: The fundamental problem with telehealth is not a lack of NBN connectivity; it's culture, intransigence, and needing to change the way the health sector does business, said CSIRO chief scientist professor Branko Celler.
By Chris Duckett | March 13, 2014 -- 21:00 GMT (08:00 AEST)
One of the core principles of belief in why Australia needs to deploy a full fibre-to-the-premises (FttP) National Broadband Network (NBN) across the country is telehealth. However, in a panel session that should give FttP proponents nightmares, a quartet of health experts have identified the issues with increasing the use of telehealth as being cultural and operational, not bound by the speed of a data connection.
Speaking at the Connect conference in Melbourne on Thursday, a panel consisting of professor Branko Celler, chief scientist at the CSIRO; Lyn Davies, managing director of Tunstall Healthcare; Stephen Leeder, professor of public health and community medicine, University of Sydney; and Dr Elaine Saunders, managing director, Blamey Saunders agreed that telehealth could start saving governments money today, if only the will existed to implement it.
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Slow broadband puts patients at risk

By PENELOPE GREEN

March 11, 2014, 10 p.m.
THE health of Hunter residents, particularly those in rural areas, is being placed at risk because the region has largely missed out on the National Broadband Network, a top health bureaucrat has warned.
Hunter Medical Local chief executive Carol Bennett said the lack of fast and reliable broadband services in the Hunter was ‘‘adversely impacting’’ on the full potential of e-health technology that should be available to patients.
Ms Bennett said the problem was thwarting systems including telehealth – a video consultation between a doctor  and patient conducted via the internet – and the personally controlled electronic health record – a secure, online summary of a patient’s medical information. 
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A vision for the Aged Care sector

The Federal Government has been urged to help drive industry-wide change and provide assistance with the adoption of technology across the aged care sector, at Monday’s launch of the Aged Care Industry Information Technology Council (ACIITC) ICT Vision report in Canberra.
ACIITC is a collaboration of the two aged services industry peak bodies: Aged and Community Services Australia (ACSA) and Leading Age Services Australia (LASA).
The Federal Minister for Social Services, Kevin Andrews, launched the report at Parliament House on Monday.
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Media Release - March 13, 2014

Telstra’s new photo app for clinicians in time for new privacy laws

Telstra today launched a photo capturing app for clinicians to help them avoid severe penalties as a result of the new privacy laws released yesterday 12 March.
The changes to the Australian Federal privacy laws mean that any clinician who has a patient’s  photo saved on their phone could face fines of up to $340,000, regardless of whether damages have been proven.
Telstra’s app V-Photo, co-developed with IP Health, enables clinicians to take photos on their smartphone or device and save the image along with a description directly to the patient record -- eliminating any chance of the clinician putting themselves or their hospital at risk.
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1STAVAILABLE.COM.AU BOARD ATTRACTS CORPORATE HEAVYWEIGHTS 

Board boosted by Mark Kehoe and Grant Harrod

 Australia’s leading healthcare appointment booking site, 1stAvailable.com.au, has attracted business innovators and experienced marketers Mark Kehoe and Grant Harrod to the Board as Non-Executive Directors.
Mr Kehoe is Director and one of the original founders of the very successful internet site GraysOnline, now the biggest e-Commerce platform in Australia. Mr Harrod is the former CEO of Salmat, a company which specialises in customer engagement. Both have outstanding marketplace reputations for innovation, business solutions and a proven history of success. Grant and Mark will join Chairman Richard Arnold, Managing Director Klaus Bartosch, and non-executive director Dr Rick Luu on the Board on completion of the current capital raising.
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Local residents can now register for eHealth

March 11, 2014, 2:30 a.m.
The Barber Street Practice team, with support from the New England Medicare Local, is inviting members of the Gunnedah and surrounding community to an eHealth Record Registration Day this weekend.
The Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record or eHealth Record initiative has the potential to bring together, in one secure easily accessed record, a summary of everyone’s key health information.
The opportunity to sign on to the eHealth Record is open to the whole Gunnedah community, not just patients of the Barber Street Practice.
Dr Robert Parsons believes that everyone with a chronic illness or who travels should have an eHealth record.
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People blase about sharing private information

Date March 11, 2014

Sylvia Pennington

Australia's new privacy laws have triggered a flurry of compliance activity and been a boon for lawyers specialising in risk management and data security. But as organisations scramble to ensure their houses are in order by March 12, what of the consumers they're designed to protect? Sylvia Pennington asks.
Jordan Millar already willingly shares plenty of personal data with the world. As well as a detailed work history, Mr Millar's publicly accessible LinkedIn profile contains his date of birth and marital status, while his prolific tweets provide insight into his interests, political affiliations and movements. All information experts say is gold for hackers and ID thieves.
"I think in this day, the younger person is less concerned about privacy," the IT consultant says. "Older people still are concerned. The stuff I put in the public domain I am not concerned about."
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Robot project aims to help doctors diagnose human stroke victims

Roboy's 3D-printed humanoid skeleton and springy electromechanical muscles could help simulate the effects of health problems
Roboy's muscles and joints build on technology developed by the Myorobotics research project to develop building blocks for safer, cheaper robots. Here, the spring and wire ligament are clearly visible.
The creators of the Roboy robot wanted it to move as much like a human as possible, using a skeleton of 3D-printed bones and joints, tendons -- and coiled springs in muscles.
Wait, springs?
The springs are there to give Roboy's movements fluidity. One reason most humanoid robots still move, well, robotically is that their movements are too stiff.
Human muscles are springy, so if we are nudged or bumped out of the way, we gently bounce back, and if we jump or fall, we can absorb the shock, said Rafael Hostettler, manager of the Roboy project at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich.
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Rowlands Misleads on Telehealth

10th March 2014  |  Comments  |  Blog
Assistant Shadow Minister for Communications Michelle Rowland stated in an oped today that the Coalition’s planned broadband upgrades will not allow the delivery of any telehealth services.
She wrote:

“Perhaps it is no surprise that the Minister does not confront these [telehealth] policy issues in a serious way. His Multi-Technology Mix (MTM) model will not provide a medical-grade, reliable connection to each home, meaning Australians will not be able to utilise these services into the future. Furthermore, it is an inequitable model because it is based on the false premise of where there is existing infrastructure, no such further investment is necessary. Make do with what you have. Focus on the download, not the upload.”
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Enough is enough (AHPRA video)

We need your help! The AHPRA advertising guidelines for health practitioners must be changed. Please let us know if you and/or your organisation are happy to sign our letter here and follow the #AHPRAaction hashtag on Twitter. Thanks!
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Set the RIM free!

Posted on March 11, 2014 by Grahame Grieve
Last week I met some enterprise architects who are doing a major project around enterprise modeling in a healthcare project. Without ever having learnt anything about the RIM, they had reproduced the Entity -> Role -> Participation -> Act -> Act Relationship cascade, though their pattern was not so solid, and they had slightly different names for these things.
But the really interesting bit was what they had along side this pattern: work flows, conditions, privileges, policies, and organizational goals. Their perspective on the problem was far wider than the RIM, because they are not focused on the informational content of a healthcare exchange, but on understanding the enterprise, the whole business of developing healthcare, and the patterns that they had that overlapped the RIM were just a part of their overall ontology.
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Am Med Inform Assoc doi:10.1136/amiajnl-2013-002466
  • Brief communication

Lessons learned from the introduction of an electronic safety net to enhance test result management in an Australian mothers’ hospital

  1. Andrew Georgiou1,
  2. Sharyn Lymer1,
  3. Megan Forster2,
  4. Michael Strachan2,
  5. Sara Graham2,
  6. Geof Hirst2,
  7. Joanne Callen1,
  8. Johanna I Westbrook1
  • Published Online First 5 March 2014

Abstract

This study describes the implementation and impact of an electronic test result acknowledgement (RA) system in the Mater Mothers’ Hospital in Brisbane, Australia. The Verdi application electronically records clinicians’ acknowledgement of the review of results. Hospital data (August 2011–August 2012) were extracted to measure clinicians’ acknowledgement practices. There were 27 354 inpatient test results for 6855 patients. All test results were acknowledged. 60% (95% CI 59% to 61%) of laboratory and 44% (95% CI 40% to 48%) of imaging results were acknowledged within 24 h. The median time between report availability and acknowledgement was 18.1 h for laboratory and 1 day 18 h for imaging results. The median time from when a result was first viewed to its acknowledgement was 7 min for laboratory and 1 min for imaging results. The longest recorded time to acknowledgement was 38 days. Electronic RA provides a safety net to enhance test result management.
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Firms not ready for privacy law change

Ben Potter
Corporate Australia is scrambling to prepare for the biggest change in privacy laws in a quarter century.
Up to half of companies which lack resources for the task, mostly small and medium-sized, will not be ready, said Aaron Greenman, a director at consultants Protiviti.
The Australian Privacy Principles start on Wednesday and are backed by civil penalties of up to $1.7 million for companies and up to $340,000 for individuals. They mandate detailed disclosure of how companies collect, use, disclose, secure and correct personal information. They force companies to give individuals access to personal information unless a specific exception applies.
“I’d say a lot of companies post-Christmas have started looking at their privacy policies and what needs to be updated. That’s nowhere near enough,” said PwC risk partner Richard Bergman.
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TPG's FTTB plan could upset NBN: Switkowski

Outcome, not broadband technology, matters: NBN Co
The business case of the National Broadband Network will suffer if TPG and other telcos try to cherry-pick high-value properties including city apartments with fibre-to-the-basement plans, according to NBN Co chairman Ziggy Switkowski.
“The economics of NBN would be severely impacted,” Switkowski said.
TPG late last year announced it would offer unlimited 100Mbps plans for $69.99 based on fibre-to-the-basement technology. Senator Stephen Conroy said the TPG rollout is under way and indicated it may be something to which the government must respond.
Switkowski said NBN Co cannot afford to give up high-value properties critical to the functioning of the NBN business case.
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NBN: Productivity Commission criticises lack of cost benefit analysis

Productivity Commission releases draft report on infrastructure
The initial decision to proceed with constructing the National Broadband Network without a "thorough analysis of its costs and benefits" is an example of "inadequate project selection leading to costly outcomes for some users and taxpayers in general," argues a two-volume draft report on public infrastructure issued by the Productivity Commission today.
The decision of the Rudd and Gillard Labor governments to not conduct a cost benefit analysis of the NBN was a frequent target of criticism by the Coalition while in opposition, including by Malcolm Turnbull, who is now the minister overseeing the network's rollout.
The Productivity Commission has previously weighed in on the issue of an NBN cost benefit analysis. In 2011, Mike Woods, currently the commission's deputy chairman, appeared before a parliamentary committee and argued that such an analysis should "in itself should not be the basis of decision-making" but the "quantification or elaboration of the uncertainties can aid in public policy judgement."
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Will I get fibre, cable or satellite under NBN? You'll know later this year, says Malcolm Turnbull

Date March 14, 2014 - 11:57AM

Ben Grubb

Australians will know what type of technology will be used to connect their homes to the Coalition's national broadband network no later than December, following the release of the revised NBN Co corporate plan in July, Communications Minister Malcolm Turnbull says.
''There will be a forward plan agreed to after the next iteration of the corporate plan is done, which will be around the middle of the year," Mr Turnbull told journalists following the launch of a Sydney technology start-up investment fund on Thursday evening.
Asked if people would know post-July and before December what type of technology would be used to connect them, Mr Turnbull replied: ''I hope so ...''
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Enjoy!
David.