Quote Of The Year

Timeless Quotes - Sadly The Late Paul Shetler - "Its not Your Health Record it's a Government Record Of Your Health Information"

or

H. L. Mencken - "For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong."

Monday, April 07, 2014

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 7th April, 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

Suddenly the PCEHR seems to have one of its core underpinnings - the use of CDA for clinical document exchange and presentation seems to have a few exploitable security holes. Guess there is some work going on in the background to fix this!
Other than that we have some system issues from Victoria, lack of interest in disclosure of the PCEHR review and ongoing recruitment for PCEHR registrations which seem not to be being used.
The back to the future changes to Windows 8 seems to suggest Microsoft essentially got their interface wrong. Those pesky and change resistant consumers again!
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Security vulnerabilities in C-CDA Display using CDA.xsl

Apr04
TL;DR: If you’re using XSLT stylesheets to render C-CDAs in your EHR, make sure you understand the security implications. Otherwise you could be vulnerable to a data breach.
This blog post describes security issues that have affected well-known 2014 Certified EHRs. Please note that I’ve already shared this information privately with the Web-based EHR vendors I could identify, and I’ve waited until they were able to investigate the issues and (if needed) repair their systems.
Last month I observed a set of security vulnerabilities in XSLT “stylesheets” used to display externally-supplied C-CDA documents in many EHRs. To be specific: the CDA.xsl stylesheet provided by HL7 (which has been adopted by many EHR vendors) can leave EHRs vulnerable to attacks by maliciously-composed documents.
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CDA Use in the PCEHR: Lessons learned

Posted on April 4, 2014 by Grahame Grieve
I wrote an article for the latest edition of Pulse IT (page 53) called “CDA Use in the PCEHR: Lessons learned”:
One of the key foundations of the PCEHR is that the CDA (Clinical Document Architecture) is used for all the clinical documents that are part of the PCEHR. This article describes the lessons learned from using CDA for the PCEHR.
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CDA Security Issues and implications for FHIR

Posted on April 5, 2014 by Grahame Grieve
Overnight, Josh Mandel posted several security issues with regard to CDA:
This blog post describes security issues that have affected well-known 2014 Certified EHRs. Please note that I’ve already shared this information privately with the Web-based EHR vendors I could identify, and I’ve waited until they were able to investigate the issues and (if needed) repair their systems.
Josh identified 3 issues:
  1. Unsanitized nonXMLBody/text/reference/@value can execute JavaScript
  2. Unsanitized table/@onmouseover can execute JavaScript
  3. Unsanitized observationMedia/value/reference/@value can leak state via HTTP Referer headers
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“No public interest” in PCEHR review release

news The Department of Health has stated it does not believe there is a public interest case for the Federal Government’s review of the troubled Personally Controlled Electronic Health Records project to be released publicly, despite the fact that Health Minister Peter Dutton has stated the document contains “a comprehensive plan for the future of electronic health records in Australia”.
The PCEHR project was initially funded in the 2010 Federal Budget to the tune of $466.7 million after years of health industry and technology experts calling for development and national leadership in e-health and health identifier technology to better tie together patients’ records and achieve clinical outcomes. The project is overseen by the Department of Health in coalition with the National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA).
However, in July the Government revealed it had failed to meet it initial 500,000 target for adoption of the system, with only close to 400,000 Australians using the system at that point.
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Medicare Local keen to get patients used to e-health system

Posted Mon 31 Mar 2014, 2:00pm AEDT
Educating patients about new electronic health services in South Australia's north and west is the next big task for Medicare Local Country North SA.
E-health allows GPs to update patient records stored on a central database.
The e-health system gives GPs, hospitals and pharmacists access to detailed and accurate patient records.
Medicare Local's Sarah Wiles says most GPs are prepared.
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Hospital in chaos over new booking system

Date April 1, 2014

Julia Medew

Health Editor

EXCLUSIVE
Staff at one of Melbourne's largest hospital networks say a new computerised booking system has wreaked havoc over the past year, causing untold distress for vulnerable people and putting lives at risk.
Senior Austin Health employees have told Fairfax Media that the new Patient Choice Booking service at the Austin Hospital and Olivia Newton-John Cancer and Wellness Centre has caused scores of patients to miss crucial appointments with specialists responsible for their care.
This included seriously ill patients, such as organ transplant recipients, cancer patients and those with infectious diseases such as TB and HIV who needed to be seen at particular times to receive continuing tests, medications and other treatment.
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Austin Hospital booking system brings grief to cancer sufferer

Date April 2, 2014

Julia Medew

Health Editor

Until May last year, Kevin Biaggini had no reason to doubt his care at the Austin Hospital. In November 2012, the Ivanhoe father was treated there for liver cancer and thought the medical and administrative staff were excellent.
But when the hospital introduced its new ''Patient Choice'' booking system in May last year, Mr Biaggini said things started to deteriorate. After having a routine MRI scan on May 15 to check his liver was clear of cancer, he received an unexpected phone call 10 days later. The nurse wanted to know why he had not attended an appointment that week.
''Straight away I knew what was in the wind,'' he said.
The nurse went on to tell him the MRI had found more cancer and that he had been scheduled for treatment that week.
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Startup's stethoscope adapter gets to the heart of the matter

Doctors can add the device to their stethoscopes and send heartbeat data to their phones
Seeing the latest smartphone makes some people's hearts beat faster. Now there's an app that can hear them.
The app, from a company called Eko Devices, works with a device that attaches to a standard analog stethoscope. Via the Bluetooth Low Energy protocol, the Eko adapter sends the audio from the stethoscope to the doctor's phone or tablet for recording, viewing, analysis and sharing. The six-person company demonstrated its product at the Demo Enterprise conference in San Francisco Thursday.
Digitizing the heart and lung sounds that a stethoscope picks up allows doctors to view them as waveforms, giving them another tool to detect potential ailments. Digital stethoscopes have been on the market for years, but Eko's accessory allows doctors who prefer traditional analog devices to bring them into the digital age.
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Dan Munro, Contributor
3/30/2014 @ 10:28PM

Setting Healthcare Interop On Fire

There’s a new software standard for sharing health data that’s gaining a lot of interest and support. Still in “prototype” format, it’s called Fast Health Interoperable Resources or FHIR (pronounced ‘fire’) and the early interest is more than just curiosity. Several high profile projects ‒ including the new CommonWell Health Alliance ‒ are actively testing the new software framework.
The reason for all the excitement is relatively easy to understand ‒ even if you don’t care to understand anything about software in healthcare. In a nutshell, many of the “behind‒the‒scenes” software standards and techniques that we all take for granted as part of our online web experiences (like shopping, travel and banking) are making a kind of formal debut in healthcare.
FHIR is the “HTML” of healthcare. It’s based on clinical modeling by experts but does not require implementer’s to understand those details. Historically healthcare standard were easy for designers and hard for implementor’s. FHIR has focused on ease of implementation. John Halamka ‒ CIO at Harvard and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
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GS1 Recallnet Healthcare goes live to streamline total recall process in the Australian Healthcare Industry

Created on Tuesday, 01 April 2014
The recall process for therapeutic goods in the Australian healthcare sector is set to become streamlined with GS1 Recallnet Healthcare going live on Tuesday 1 April 2014.
 Developed over four years by GS1 Australia in association with the National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA), the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA), state and territory health departments and a number of medical device and pharmaceutical suppliers and industry associations, GS1 Recallnet Healthcare is an electronic product recall notification management system for therapeutic goods.
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Net’s forever: protect your integrity

1st Apr 2014
THE pace of technological advancement in healthcare has been phenomenal in my professional lifetime.
I am not just talking about PET scans, MRI and robotic surgery, but the everyday accessible desktop-type technology that has transformed clinical practice and practice management. Being a reasonably early adopter, I remember the installation of our new state-of-the-art fax machine.
For the first time, with this magical technology we could instantly send and receive letters and results over the phone. What we did not realise was that the images on thermal paper faded within a few years and so faxes were useless as a long-term record and we would need a more durable format.
I also remember the first computers we installed in the clinic. Our secretaries loved them because they no longer had to bend and stretch to retrieve and file those heavy paper folders and managing the appointments became much simpler.
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Paraplegic walks tall with bionic backpack

Date April 1, 2014 - 3:42PM

Kate Hagan

Radi Kaiuf was confined to a wheelchair for 20 years after being shot in the spine while fighting for the Israeli army in Lebanon in 1988.
But a chance meeting with Israel computer scientist Amit Goffer at a rehabilitation centre in Tel Aviv changed all that.
Dr Goffer, who became a quadriplegic in a car accident in 1997, asked Mr Kaiuf if he'd like to try something new - a bionic walking machine that he had developed.
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Analytica delivers positive usability trials for e-health treatment system

Monday, March 31, 2014 by Proactive Investors
Analytica has successfully completed phases 1 to 3 of the usability trials for the PeriCoach system.
Analytica's (ASX: ALT) shares are expected to open firmer this morning following the successful completion of phases 1 to 3 of the usability trials for the PeriCoach system.

PeriCoach is an e-health treatment system for women who suffer Stress Urinary Incontinence, which is a very large market considering 1 in 3 women worldwide are affected.

The incontinence pad market in the U.S. is $5 billion, and forecast to grow to $7 billion by 2017.

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Fiona Coote celebrates life 30 years since her first heart transplant

Date April 4, 2014

Rachel Browne

Social Affairs Reporter

When Fiona Coote had a heart failure in 1984, a transplant was the only option. Three decades later, one of the surgeons who operated on the teenager believes heart transplants will soon be a thing of the past.
The director of heart-lung surgery and transplantation at St Vincent's Hospital, Phillip Spratt, says technological advances in artificial heart pumps will make transplant surgery redundant.
Almost 40 per cent of patients at the hospital's heart-lung transplant unit have the devices implanted, which keep them alive for years, in some cases until they undergo surgery.
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Windows 8.1 Update: Microsoft Hits Reverse, Adds Windows 7 Features

With its Windows 8.1 Update, announced today, MicrosoftMSFT -0.17% is looking in the rearview mirror—and putting the car in reverse. But for all the people who have wanted Windows 8 to work more like Windows 7, that’s the right direction.
On April 8—coincidentally the same day that Microsoft cuts off Windows XP support—a free Windows 8.1 Update will bring mouse and keyboard users some much needed relief with some small but useful system tweaks.
“Our goal is to bring back the familiar,” Chaitanya Sareen, Microsoft Principal Program Manager Lead on Windows, told me as he demonstrated some of the new features last week.
There are three that I think will significantly aid people making the transition from a traditional version of Windows, including XP or 7, to Microsoft’s now slightly-less-brave new world.
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Microsoft unveils Cortana digital assistant, reinstates Start menu

Date April 3, 2014

Dina Bass, Ian King

  • Windows 8.1 reinstates the Start menu
  • Windows Phone gets Siri-like assistant
  • Windows Phone free to handset makers
Microsoft has renewed its push to catch up with Apple and Google in mobile devices, unveiling updated Windows Phone software with voice-search features and offering it for free to makers of smartphones and tablets.
Microsoft, which previously charged a licensing fee of $5 to $15 per device, will offer it without charge to makers of smartphones and smaller tablets with screens of less than nine inches, the company revealed at its Build developers conference in San Francisco on Wednesday (Thursday morning Australian time).
The new Windows Phone 8.1 software for smartphones and tablets includes a voice-controlled digital assistant called Cortana, similar to Apple's Siri, and will be rolled out to existing Windows Phone 8 users over the coming months.
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Enjoy!
David.

Sunday, April 06, 2014

It Appears There Are Some Significant Security Issues With The PCEHR. I Wonder When There Will Be An Official Comment?

The following appeared in the last day or so.

Security vulnerabilities in C-CDA Display using CDA.xsl

Apr04
TL;DR: If you’re using XSLT stylesheets to render C-CDAs in your EHR, make sure you understand the security implications. Otherwise you could be vulnerable to a data breach.
This blog post describes security issues that have affected well-known 2014 Certified EHRs. Please note that I’ve already shared this information privately with the Web-based EHR vendors I could identify, and I’ve waited until they were able to investigate the issues and (if needed) repair their systems.
Last month I observed a set of security vulnerabilities in XSLT “stylesheets” used to display externally-supplied C-CDA documents in many EHRs. To be specific: the CDA.xsl stylesheet provided by HL7 (which has been adopted by many EHR vendors) can leave EHRs vulnerable to attacks by maliciously-composed documents.
I plan to follow up with posts describing:
  • a real-world case where a vendor was affected by these issues
  • a set of security best practices that can help avoid these and other issues
  • the unfortunate state of EHR vendor security vulnerability reporting protocols

Three fundamental attacks

Many vendors appear to be using (slightly tweaked versions of) the CDA.xsl that comes with HL7′s C-CDA release. This provides potential attackers with a highly visible, leveragable target.
My analysis revealed at least three ways to craft a malicious C-CDA. The first two vulnerabilities allow the execution of arbitrary JavaScript code within the C-CDA viewer. For example, an attacker could steal browser cookies and application state, and post them back to an external server. The third vulnerability allows the C-CDA viewer URL to leak to an external server.
All the technical details of the three issues can be found here:
I was alerted to this blog post by a technical guru who said there were significant issues to be addressed both by the PCEHR Program and NEHTA as well as some of the GP system providers who used CDA Stylesheets.
I am sure there is significant effort being put into working out what exactly to do right now.
This is clearly an evolving story and I suggest people keep an eye open for information from Government and NEHTA and the mainstream press.
I also look forward to more posts from the US blogger explaining what he is recommending as appropriate fixes etc.
David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 212 – Results – 6th April, 2014.

Here are the results of the poll.

Does The Current Government Have A Plan To Deliver An E-Health Framework Over The Next Few Years That Will Improve The Efficiency, Quality and Safety Of The Health System?

For Sure 0% (0)

Probably 1% (1)

Neutral 0% (0)

Probably Not 37% (26)

No Way 56% (40)

I Have No Idea 6% (4)

Total votes: 71

A very clear outcome with more than 90% thinking the Government seems to be lacking a plan that might deliver what is intended. Hardly good news for the future.

Again, many thanks to all those that voted!

David.

Saturday, April 05, 2014

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links - 5th April, 2014.

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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Latest ICD-10 one-liner is no joke

Posted on Mar 28, 2014
By Tom Sullivan, Editor, Government Health IT
ICD-10 has been the butt of countless jokes during the last several months but none so surprising as the latest one-liner. Only this isn’t funny.
Whether you’re on that chair edge hoping President Obama gets a chance to sign the provision pushing ICD-10 back within the Sustainable Growth Rate fix into law, or crossing fingers that the Senate kills it come Monday, no matter.
The reality is that a code set conversion simply should not be about politics.
Other than lazily dumping ICD-10 and the SGR process for determining how much to pay doctors who treat Medicare patients under the umbrella term of healthcare reimbursements, the tie between them prior to the now infamous Section 212 bomb within the bill, ICD-10 and SGR have almost nothing to do with each other.
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Data-sharing cuts unnecessary ER visits by 10 percent

March 28, 2014 | By Susan D. Hall
A data-sharing initiative among emergency departments in Washington reduced ER visits by Medicaid patients by 10 percent in the program's first year, according to a report from the Washington State Health Care Authority.
It hasn't been a completely voluntary effort, reports Bloomberg Businessweek. After attemts to cap reimbursement for non-emergency visits to ERs led to outcries from providers, the state, hospitals, and physicians came together to create what they call their "Seven Best Practices"mainly that doctors need more information in the ER and afterward to provide the most effective care in the least-costly setting.
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HHS unveils security risk assessment tool

March 28, 2014 | By Ashley Gold
A new security risk assessment (SRA) tool aimed to help healthcare providers in small to medium sized offices conduct risk assessments of their organizations is now available from the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services. The tool was first mentioned at a session during HIMSS14 in February.
"Protecting patients' protected health information is important to all health care providers and the new tool we are releasing today will help them assess the security of their organizations," National Coordinator for Health IT Karen DeSalvo said in announcement. "The SRA tool and its additional resources have been designed to help health care providers conduct a risk assessment to support better security for patient health data."
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Increased Use of Health IT Equates to Less Face-Time with Patients, Says Report

Written by Ayla Ellison (Twitter | Google+)  | March 27, 2014
A new trend report has confirmed increased use of health IT by healthcare providers results in a decrease in face-to-face interactions with patients.
The newly released report is part of an ongoing series that analyzes the results of the third bi-annual Health IT Survey. The survey was conducted in 2008, 2010 and 2012 to identify primary trends in health IT systems as well as current and emerging software applications.
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Agencies See Big Data As Cure For Healthcare Ills

3/26/2014 12:25 PM
Federal healthcare agencies believe big data will improve the nation's health -- but few are prepared to use it, a study finds.
Two-thirds of federal executives working in healthcare-focused agencies believe that big data will improve population health management and preventive care. But even though feds report in a new study that they must tap into emerging technologies such as wireless health devices and machine-to-machine monitoring systems, only a small percentage of government agencies have implemented them.
According to the findings, 63% of federal IT professionals feel that big data will help track and manage population health more efficiently, 62% view big data as a way to significantly improve patient care within military health and Veterans Affairs (VA) systems, and 60% believe big data will improve how preventive care is delivered.
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eHealth Initiative to lay out healthcare roadmap for 2020

March 27, 2014 | By Susan D. Hall
The eHealth Initiative has set out to create a vision for healthcare through the end of the decade through a public-private collaborative effort called the eHealth Initiative 2020 Roadmap.
Though meetings with a wide range of stakeholders, it plans to make key policy recommendations to implement at a federal level and propose actions for the private sector to spearhead to transform care delivery through data exchange and health information technology (IT), according to an announcement.
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IT leaders stressed about project money

Posted on Mar 27, 2014
By Bernie Monegain, Editor
Not having enough money to complete a successful IT implementation is the top worry of participants in the 25th Annual 2014 HIMSS Leadership Survey. The survey examines a wide array of topics crucial to healthcare leaders including IT priorities, issues driving and challenging technology adoption and IT security.
While a majority of the survey participants -- 65 percent -- reported IT budget increases, which is likely a contributing factor to the transition to a paperless environment, HIMSS officials noted in a news release, a lack of adequate financial resources now tops the list of barriers to successful IT implementation. This is a shift from the past two years when the primary IT challenge was insufficient and untrained staffing resources.
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Unlocking the Power of Health Data

by David Harlow Thursday, March 27, 2014
In this day and age, with fewer and fewer exceptions, each of us has a digital footprint as a patient. Each of us has an intentional digital footprint, created by each of us directly and by the trusted others with whom we interact in the real world and online -- through electronic health records, personal health records, personal tracker data, blogs, tweets, etc.
Each of us also has a trail of additional information that is a by-product of our online existence, our digital exhaust, which is out there to be mined for data. All of these data sources -- individually or, more likely, when aggregated with that of others -- may turn out to be usable as information, or perhaps even knowledge.
That is the promise of EHRs, and one key policy argument behind the federal government incentive program promoting their adoption: that health data writ large -- big data -- when properly analyzed will yield medical insights not otherwise accessible to us; that evidence-based medicine will be advanced immeasurably and that the dissemination of best practices will be tremendously accelerated.
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Growing Beyond Yesterday's Population Health Management

3/26/2014 09:06 AM
Data can transform healthcare, but not with just any ordinary analytics.
Analytics -- the mathematical savior of oh-so-many population health management (PHM) programs -- is all the rage in health IT marketing circles these days. As the electronic medical records gold rush slowly ebbs over the next few years, attention is gradually shifting to approaches we can use to fundamentally change the cost and quality of care... and what we should do with all this data.
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HHS Health Information Exchange Strategy Lacking, Says GAO

MAR 25, 2014
Health information exchange technology has the potential to bring patient information directly from an electronic health record to a provider delivering care.
However, a new Government Accountability Office report has found that providers and stakeholders in four states are facing several challenges with ongoing electronic health information exchange efforts. Barriers include insufficient standards, concerns about varying privacy rules among states, difficulties in matching patients to their records, and costs.
The problem, GAO says, is that the Department of Health and Human Services and its various units lack specific prioritized actions and milestones to address obstacles to successful information exchange. In particular, several providers told GAO that they have difficulty exchanging certain types of health information due to insufficient health data standards. 
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AHIMA Warns About Use of EHR Copy and Paste Practices

MAR 26, 2014
The American Health Information Management Association has issued a position statement warning industry stakeholders about the risky practice of copy and pasting within an electronic health record.
"Use of the copy and paste functionality in EHRs can result in redundant, erroneous, and/or incomprehensible health record documentation," states the document. "Misuse of this functionality has the potential to result in or contribute to several overarching challenges, with implications for the quality and safety of patient care, medical-legal integrity of the health record, and fraud and abuse allegations."
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Virtual doctor visits take off at Kaiser

Posted on Mar 24, 2014
By Jeff Rowe, Contributing Writer
In 2013, Kaiser Permanente conducted 10.5 million patient-doctor visits via e-mail, telephone or video tools, and in a new report the organization discusses some of the ways those visits took place.
For example, a secure e-mail service allows users to attach images (such as a digital picture of a rash, for instance) in a message to a Kaiser dermatologist. In 80 percent of those cases, the dermatologist was able to offer a definitive diagnosis and prescribe without an office visit.
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Blowing in

The government is confident that cloud-based services are the future of IT in the public sector; and many suppliers agree with it. The NHS is not convinced, although primary and community services are starting to put a finger in the wind. Fiona Barr reports.
Two years ago, the head of the government’s G-Cloud programme predicted that cloud computing would cut government IT costs by up to 75%.
For a cash-strapped NHS that probably sounded like an appealing hypothesis; although it is one many healthcare organisations have seemed reluctant to put to the test.
Security concerns
The reasons for that reluctance are likely to be multi-faceted. One obvious barrier to adoption is a lack of confidence about the security of identifiable patient data held in the cloud.
Organisations are nervous about losing control of their data, in much the same way that many were concerned about moving from organisation-based to hosted solutions a decade ago.
In primary care, most GP practices had servers in their practices ten years ago, but since then hosted solutions have become the norm - and the cloud is now taking over.
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Study: Bedside sensor reduces length of stay in hospital and ICU

Laura Pedulli
Mar 24, 2014
A sensor placed under a hospital bed that continuously monitors a patient’s heart, respiratory rate and movement was shown to significantly reduce patients’ total length of stay in a hospital and intensive care unit (ICU).
Harvard University Medical School researchers conducted a controlled 7,643 patient outcome study of EarlySense’s monitoring system, in which they compared a 33-bed medical-surgical unit (intervention unit) to a sister control unit for a 9-month pre-implementation and a 9-month post implementation period.
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Mobile health market projected to surge

By AuntMinnie.com staff writers

March 25, 2014 -- The market for global mobile health (mHealth) technologies is expected to grow at a five-year compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 55% to reach $21.5 billion in revenues by 2018.
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More Medical Interoperability Could Lead to Big Savings

March 25, 2014
Medical interoperability could be a source of more than $30 billion a year in savings and improve patient care and safety, according to a new white paper released by the La Jolla, Calif.-based Gary and Mary West Health Institute and the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC).
The white paper, summarizing the HCI-DC 2014: Igniting an Interoperable Healthcare System conference, features lessons learned and synthesizing findings into a call for action to achieve an interoperable healthcare system. The West Health Institute’s HCI-DC 2014, which took place Feb. 6, 2014 in Washington D.C., and was co-hosted by ONC, brought together experts from across the healthcare community to consider how interoperability can cut costs, improve efficiency, reduce errors, and improve health .
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HHS lays out 4-part health IT strategic plan

By Diana Manos, Senior Editor
The Department of Health and Human Services has named health information technology as key to the “modernization of the American health care system” in its latest strategic plan.
The plan has four major goals, which include:
  1. Strengthen health care
  2. Advance scientific knowledge and innovation
  3. Advance the health, safety, and well-being of the American people
  4. Ensure efficiency, transparency, accountability, and effectiveness of HHS programs
And to that end, the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology plays a big part, according to HHS. ONC "pursues the modernization of the American health care system through a collaborative framework that addresses critical health information technology (IT) challenges by supporting the adoption of common policies and standards that support the meaningful use of health IT,” the plan says.
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4 ways to high performing supply chain

Posted on Mar 25, 2014
By Todd Ebert, Contributing Writer
The supply chain represents about 25 percent of a healthcare facility’s operating budget, and industry trends strongly indicate that this percentage will continue to grow. Thus, supply chain optimization is not an option, it's a must.
Here are some solid best practices that can help your facility build a “new” supply chain focused on efficient processes and maximized outcomes.
Obtain senior management commitment
Continual commitment from senior management helps keep projects moving and demonstrates their importance to all hospital staff. Even if the project originates in materials management, the materials manager should win executive team support before engaging physicians and surgeons. Senior leadership must be willing to support the process, stay with it through difficult moments and see it through on an ongoing basis.
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Health IT leaders must 'adapt or die'

March 25, 2014 | By Ashley Gold
Healthcare organizations struggling with information technology must "adapt or die," according to a recent article in CIO magazine.
Thanks to electronic health records, patient data is now in repositories, and CIOs must make sense of all that data and protect it.
Skip Snow, a senior analyst with Forrester research and advisory firm, told CIO about five technology imperatives for U.S. healthcare providers--here are three:
  1. Clean up data: Snow says organizations must at least be able to import and export HL7 continuity of care (CCD) files; they also should consider creating an infrastructure that safeguards protected health information (PHI).
  2. Invest in customer and patient insight: This means investing in clinical, operational and financial data management tools and establishing a common vocabulary for shared business entities.
  3. Embrace mobile: mHealth, among many other uses, can be used as a bridge between remote monitoring and EHR systems, easing patient concerns about telehealth.
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Kaiser informatics director: IT must be about continuous quality improvement for nurses

March 25, 2014 | By Dan Bowman
No one IT system is perfect for improving care, according to Ann O'Brien, RN, director of clinical informatics at Oakland, Calif.-based Kaiser Permanente. Rather, she said, continuous performance improvement should be the primary goal of technology use in healthcare.
"You have to look at what can enable small amounts of change" as it relates to a larger goal of better quality for patients, O'Brien (pictured) said, speaking last Friday at an IT summit for nurses held by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT, the American Nursing Informatics Association and the American Nurses Association at Baltimore Washington Medical Center in Glen Burnie, Md.
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Hot stuff

An electronic check list to help GPs identify patients at risk of stroke and get them the right treatment was a winner at the EHI Awards in 2013. Fiona Barr reports.
25 March 2014
A simple IT solution that enables the delivery of gold standard care for patients time after time is the Holy Grail for those working with NHS technology.
One such solution, an electronic checklist for patients who have suffered a transient ischaemic attack (TIA), has been developed in Essex; and scooped  the award for ‘clinical treatment and care’ at the EHI Awards 2013 in association with CGI.
The hyper-acute online TIA (HOT-TIA) referral form automatically calculates a patient’s risk of stroke for GPs, creating a red alert for immediate admission if the patient is at high risk and enabling those at low risk to be seen within seven days.  
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Interoperability Needs More Than Fired-Up Buyers

Scott Mace, for HealthLeaders Media , March 25, 2014

Health information technology buyers have been demanding interoperability for some time, yet too many IT vendors have too often kept the door to interoperability locked tight, denying the industry $30 billion in potential savings.

On his first comedy album, Bill Cosby did a timeless bit called The Pep Talk where a football coach gets his team all fired up in the locker room before game time and then sends them forth… only to be stopped by a locked door.
This bit came to mind as I read a new report from the Gary and Mary West Health Institute, which along with the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, held a one-day conference on healthcare IT interoperability last month.
In the report, the authors urge all buyers of healthcare IT, that's healthcare systems, hospitals, practices and patients, to insist that technology vendors make their products work well with each other, share data, and support open standards.
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The Use and Misuse of Information Technology in Health Care: Several Doctors Reply

One of them writes, "There is a very American tendency to look for technological fixes for significant problems.  In general, technological fixes only work in the context of appropriate institutional structures."
James Fallows Mar 24 2014, 5:00 AM ET
Our new issue has an interview with Dr. David Blumenthal about why it has taken the medical system so long to adopt electronic record-keeping, and what it will mean when the switch occurs. (Blumenthal led the Obama administration's effort to encourage that change.) On Friday several technology experts and doctors weighed in with responses. Here are a few more.
1) "Give us a cotton gin." Creed Wait, a family-practice doctor in Nebraska does not like the mandated shift to electronic records, at all. [I've added his name, as he sent permission to use it. Also he has moved from Texas to Nebraska.] For now, I am sharing his detailed complaint in full, rather than interspersing comments or "Yes, but" queries:
The saying is, “Build a better mousetrap and the world will beat a path to your door. “
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Tripathi: Health IT and HIE Starting to ‘Take Off’

MAR 21, 2014
The changing market climate has improved incentives for the adoption of healthcare information technology and health information exchange and as a result HIT and HIE are “beginning to take off,” according to Micky Tripathi, president and chief executive officer of the Massachusetts eHealth Collaborative.
“Up until five years ago, the healthcare system had notably underinvested in electronic health records and health information exchange compared both to other sectors in the economy and other industrialized countries,” said Tripathi. “But, we’ve made a tremendous amount of progress based on the Meaningful Use program over the last few years.”
Tripathi, who gave the industry perspective March 20 at a Federal Trade Commission workshop in Washington, argued that Meaningful Use Stage 1 has been “an enormous success” and “now what we are seeing is a lot of tension in what’s the appropriate role of government” in Stage 2 and Stage 3.
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Arizona to study best practices for patient matching

March 24, 2014 | By Susan D. Hall
Arizona plans to explore best practices and alternative approaches to correctly match patients to all of their available records across multiple organizations.
The effort is part of the Health IT Roadmap 2.0 from the state's Strategic Enterprise Technology Office, which describes 19 key initiatives to advance health information technology and health information in Arizona.
"It is a controversial issue," Arizona Health-e Connection CEO Melissa Kotrys told Healthcare Informatics, "but when we convened stakeholders to talk about key issues, this topic of the difficulty of patient identification came up, even with master patient index solutions. So there was enough interest to explore this topic further."
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How nurses can maximize technology use for better patient care

March 24, 2014 | By Dan Bowman
Nurses looking to get the most out of healthcare IT for their patients would be wise to adopt such tools in their own everyday lives, according to Patricia Sengstack, Chief Nursing Informatics Officer at Bon Secours Health System, a Baltimore-based system with 18 acute-care hospitals that spans seven states.
Speaking last week at an IT summit for nurses held by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT, the American Nursing Informatics Association and the American Nurses Association, Sengstack (pictured)--who also serves as ANIA president--outlined several tips for nurses who want to embrace their role in health IT.
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Med device recalls double

March 24, 2014 | By Susan D. Hall
Recalls of medical devices have doubled in the past decade--the number of recalls grew from 604 in 2003 to 1,190 in 2012, an increase of 97 percent, according to recent a U.S. Food and Drug Administration report.
The rate actually lags the rate of growth in the med tech market overall, as FierceMedicalDevices points out.
Class I recalls-the FDA's most serious category, reserved for potentially deadly defects--rose from seven in 2003 to 57 in 2012.
Meanwhile, U.S. medical device expenditures climbed from $73.7 billion in 2001 to $156.3 billion in 2010--an 112 percent increase. What's more, the number of medical devices on the market grew by 25 percent from 2008 through 2012 alone.
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ONC corrects 2015 Edition proposed rule

Beth Walsh
Mar 23, 2014
The Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC) has made corrections regarding four certification criteria to its proposed rule for the voluntary 2015 Edition of EHR technology certification criteria.
ONC's Federal Policy Division Director Steven Posnack corrected the preamble text and gap certification table for the certification criteria that were omitted and provides information on inactive web links that appear in the proposed rule. "These errors are identified and corrected in this correction notice," Posnack wrote.
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Telehealth Gets New Momentum, Allies

by Rebecca Vesely, iHealthBeat Contributing Reporter Monday, March 24, 2014
Health reform and improved technology are driving interest in telehealth adoption among providers and patients -- and policymakers are starting to get the memo.
It's a marked change since just a year ago, when policy momentum around the issue was somewhat stalled. Last March, just 13 states had legislation pending on telehealth. Today, 34 states and the District of Columbia have active telehealth legislation, with 44 statehouse bills addressing improved reimbursement for telehealth services, according to new data from the Center for Connected Health Policy in Sacramento, Calif.
"People are starting to recognize that telehealth has value in the context of health reform and the steep demands placed on providers to meet issues around timely access, especially to specialists," said Mario Guttierez, executive director of the CCHP, which is partially funded by the California HealthCare Foundation. CHCF publishes iHealthBeat.
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Brussels, 24 March 2014

eHealth in the EU: what's the diagnosis?

"Europe is facing a healthcare crunch as a result of our ageing population. By making the most use of digital tech, we can reduce costs, put the patient back in control, make healthcare more efficient and help European citizens to take an active part in society for longer. We have to keep our finger on the pulse!"– Neelie Kroes
What's the diagnosis?
According to two surveys in acute care hospitals (those intended for short-term medical or surgical treatment and care) and among General Practitioners (GPs) in Europe, the use of eHealth is starting to take off, with 60% of GPs using eHealth tools in 2013, up 50% since 2007. But much more needs to be done.
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'Wouldn't It Be Amazing If Everyone's Medical Records Were Available Anonymously To Research Doctors?'

Dylan Love Mar 23, 2014, 2:39 AM
Speaking at the 30th anniversary TED event in Vancouver earlier this week, Google co-founder and CEO Larry Page hypothesized a system that would make people’s medical records available anonymously to research doctors for the sake of having access to a wide pool of medical information.
He also used the idea to make a compelling point about how and why we share data online.
“Wouldn’t it be amazing if everyone’s medical records were available anonymously to research doctors?” Page said. “When someone accesses your record — a doctor — you could see which doctor accessed it and why. You could maybe learn about what conditions you have. I think if we just did that, we could save 100,000 lives this year.”
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Enjoy!
David.