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."

Thursday, June 19, 2014

Review Of The Ongoing Post - Budget Controversy 19th June 2014. It Is Sure Going On and On!

Budget Night was on Tuesday 13th May, 2014 and the fuss has not settled by a long shot.
Here are some of the more interesting articles I have spotted this fifth week since it happened. Since the budget was handed down all hell has broken out in the Health Sector and has been continuing.
We have both the Senate and the House of Representatives sitting in the 2 weeks starting 16th June - so it will be very interesting to see just what the debate on specific health measures looks like.
We sure do live in interesting times!
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General.

Hockey's budget is unsustainable

Date June 9, 2014

Ross Gittins

The Sydney Morning Herald's Economics Editor

Coalition governments have been banging on about the need for ''smaller government'' since Malcolm Fraser started echoing Maggie Thatcher and Ronald Reagan. They've talked without doing anything. Until now.
Few have noticed, but the goal of this budget is to reduce government spending by 1.1 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP), from 25.3 per cent this financial year to 24.2 per cent in 2024-25.
If that doesn't impress you, this may: Joe Hockey's plan is to cut government spending to 0.7 percentage points below its 30-year average of 24.9 per cent.
That makes this the most ideologically driven budget we've seen - not that Hockey or Tony Abbott will admit it. They claim the budget's harsh measures are needed simply to get the budget back to surplus and start paying down the public debt.
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More vision on healthcare needed to rein in costs

Date June 9, 2014 - 12:07AM

Kim Oates

Better doctor-patient communication, as per the Open Notes project, could save billions of dollars and improve health in Australia.
Let’s have a more visionary approach to reducing health costs. While most see the need to reduce health costs, wouldn’t it be refreshing if our politicians and their advisers looked at more visionary ways of cost reduction instead of a $7 co-payment, a scheme which will become a cost-shifting exercise as patients reluctant or unable to pay this amount will just turn up at already overburdened emergency departments?
While it’s true that health costs are rising as the population ages, we aren’t all that different from other developed countries. At 9.5 per cent of GDP our health expenditure is a little above the OECD average of 9.3 per cent and well below the US at 17.9 per cent, the only OECD country without universal health coverage and with a strong focus on privatisation.
Tom Delbanco, a Harvard professor, has helped to reduce costs. He had the audacity to suggest patients have access to their medical notes. His colleagues were aghast, saying this would be time consuming for doctors and cause anxiety in patients. Delbanco persisted.
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Is this the end of Medicare?

Date June 10, 2014
A national institution, Medicare turns 40 this year. But are budgetary changes such as the doctor co-payment the beginning of the end for universal healthcare? Michael Green reports.
Medicare was always a dogfight. It became law in the most extraordinary circumstances: one of a handful of bills passed during the only joint sitting of Federal Parliament in the nation's history, after the double dissolution election in 1974.
As the Whitlam government prepared to introduce the system - then known as Medibank - its opponents rallied. The Australian Medical Association marshalled a million-dollar ''Freedom Fund'', donated by members. Determined to stop bureaucrats interfering with patients, it hired a former Miss Australia to front its publicity campaign. The General Practitioners' Society of Australia circulated a poster depicting social security minister Bill Hayden dressed in Nazi uniform.
Dr Anne-marie Boxall, co-author of Making Medicare, says Whitlam had little support, even from within the Labor Party. The party platform advocated a fully nationalised model, along the lines of the British National Health System. By contrast, Whitlam's plan was for a public insurance scheme. Health services would be delivered by a mix of public and private providers, paid for by taxpayers and guaranteed for everyone.
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Hospitals voice worries for homeless as services receive $5 million cut

Date June 11, 2014

Amy Corderoy

Health Editor, Sydney Morning Herald

EXCLUSIVE
Hospitals and police will be left bearing the brunt of a $5 million cut to inner-city homelessness services and the safety of vulnerable people put at risk, health experts say.
The Australian Medical Association NSW fears the decision, combined with cuts to federal homelessness funding and mooted GP co-payments, poses a threat to the health of the homeless community.
St Vincent's Hospital in the inner city is already seeing patients evicted from refuges that are closing under a new government policy, called ''Going Home, Staying Home'', which is shifting resources from the city to the suburbs.
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More to public's dislike of the budget than simple selfishness

Date June 11, 2014 - 5:12AM

Ross Gittins

The Sydney Morning Herald's Economics Editor

Tony Abbott has turned out to be a chameleon. Before the election, he took the guise of a populist, opposed to all things nasty and in favour of all things nice. Since the election, he's revealed himself to be a hard-line ideologue, intent on reshaping government to suit the interests of big business and high-income earners.
Before the election, he was the consummate vote-seeking politician. Since the election, he has transformed into an inflexible "conviction politician" who doesn't seem much worried about whom he offends.
Dr Mike Keating, former top econocrat, says the budget is always the clearest guide to a government's priorities and values. That's certainly true this time.
This budget scores high marks for its efforts to get the budget back on track. As almost every economist will tell you, there is no "budget emergency". But there would be problems if we allowed the budget to stay in deficit for another 10 years, which was a prospect had Abbott failed to take tough measures (all of which were in marked contrast to his sweetness and light before the election and many of which were in direct contradiction to his promises).
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Abbott government cuts Red Cross $5 million grant

Date June 11, 2014 - 12:47PM

Dan Harrison

Health and Indigenous Affairs Correspondent

The Red Cross will have to find $5 million in savings after the Abbott government ceased an annual grant to the organisation.
The former Howard government started paying a $5 million grant to the Red Cross in 2006 and the Rudd and Gillard governments continued the grant. But Health Minister Peter Dutton has notified the Red Cross that the government would not pay the grant from this year.
In a email to staff, volunteers and members, Australian Red Cross chief executive Robert Tickner wrote that the news was "especially hurtful" as the organisation prepared to celebrate its centenary "after 100 years of service to the people of Australia".
"This will inevitably have a significant, but limited, impact on services, programs and support functions and on staff and volunteers in specific areas," wrote Mr Tickner, who was a minister for indigenous affairs in the Hawke and Keating Labor governments.
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Dentist costs deter patients

Date June 11, 2014 - 10:52PM
Poorer Australians are putting off going to the dentist because it costs too much.
New data shows that people living in the most disadvantaged areas of the country are twice as likely to put off or not go to a dentist compared to the richest Australians.
Nationally, one in five people put off caring for their teeth, the COAG Reform Council report shows.
Council chairman John Brumby says governments need to deal with this problem because poor dental care can result in major health problems and affect quality of life.
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Hate The Budget? A Punter's Guide To Responding

By Mark Chou and Jean-Paul Gagnon
Joe Hockey is out overnight defending the federal budget. Dr Jean-Paul Gagnon and Dr Mark Chou provide a beginner's guide to being heard.
May 13 saw the Coalition hand down its first budget. In response, the last week has been one long story of protest, criticism and opposition. Even State Premiers have banded together over the weekend to reject the proposed changes. It's now looking likely that Premiers will ask Senators to staunchly oppose the bill.
The budget, it's been argued, is heavy-handed, unjust and illogical. Most Australians don't want the budget to pass in its current form. Nor do a number of elected representatives, including several Liberal MPs.
But so far it's primarily been opposition parties making their case about how they plan to block the budget. Is there anything that we, as citizens, can do to block the budget in our own right?
12 June 2014, 2.55pm AEST

Did the health reform process fail? Now we’ll never know

Director, Health Program at Grattan Institute
Yesterday was a sorry day in the long history of health reform in Australia. The Council of Australian Governments (COAG) Reform Council issued its five year score-keeper’s report on health reform progress. It will be the last such report, since the COAG Reform Council has been sacrificed on the altar of savings in the May budget, and we will no longer know how our governments are performing.
The COAG Reform Council paints some lipstick on the pig but overall reform results are poor in the health system. Compared to last year, Australians are waiting marginally longer for elective surgery, longer for community support in the home, and dramatically longer to get into residential aged care.
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Hidden Medicare changes in Federal Budget: Medical scans could cost you up to $1,000

  • 11 hours ago June 13, 2014 12:00AM
  • SUE DUNLEVY NATIONAL HEALTH REPORTER
  • News Corp Australia
PATIENTS will have to pay up to $1,000 upfront to get medical imaging such as CAT scans, MRIs and X-rays as a result of a budget nasty that doctors fear could delay diagnosis.
And even after they get a Medicare rebate back the out of pocket costs patients face for scans could be more than $160, not the $7 implied in the budget.
Diagnostic Imaging Association CEO Pattie Beerens says radiologists fear “patients may be put off imaging if the costs are too high”.
Australian Medical Association president Dr Brian Owler says if a woman with a breast lump delays a scan because of the cost and the lump turns out to be malignant “that could be the difference between life and death”.
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Elective surgery waiting times still too long, says COAG Reform Council

Sean Parnell

Health Editor
Brisbane
AUSTRALIANS are still waiting too long for elective surgery despite Labor’s much-vaunted health reforms, the COAG Reform Council has warned.
In its five-year review of the health system, the council has highlighted how median waiting times rose for 14 out of 15 selected surgical procedures during that period, driven largely by significant increases in NSW, despite the former government’s promise to improve outcomes.
It also noted with concern the rise in potentially preventable hospitalisation rates for vaccine-preventable and acute conditions, and the rise in obesity and diabetes, which will add pressure on the health system in future.
The Abbott government has torn up Labor’s agreement for the federal government to provide a greater proportion of public hospital funding from 2017-18, and also scrapped the national partnership agreement on improving public hospital services due to the states’ poor performance. Preventive health funding has also been slashed.
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Dutton on the sustainability of Medicare

11th Jun 2014
The Health Minister says there's been a 42% growth in Medicare spending over the past five years. Is he right?
Peter Dutton's claim: “[On] the sustainability of Medicare... there’s been 42% growth over the last five years alone.”
HEALTH spending must be reined in before it overwhelms the federal budget. That’s the core argument for the government’s health platform, including its embattled $7 Medicare co-payment.
Health Minister Peter Dutton told ABC News on 23 May: “[On] the sustainability of Medicare... there’s been 42% growth over the last five years alone.”
That sounds alarming. And health department Medicare data supports the figure. From the 2007–08 financial year to 2012–13, spending went up to $18.6 billion from $13 billion. Using more recent calendar year data, the increase is lower – at 36%.
But those numbers leave out much of the story, experts say.
Health economist Dr Stephen Duckett from the Grattan Institute said Medicare spending was rising, but Mr Dutton had cherry-picked the highest possible figure.
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Medical Research Fund.

CSIRO chairman Simon McKeon bemoans political fight over funding of $20b medical research fund

Date June 12, 2014 - 10:11AM

Dan Harrison

Health and Indigenous Affairs Correspondent

CSIRO chairman and former Australian of the Year Simon McKeon says it would be a ''tragedy'' if opposition to the proposed $7 Medicare co-payment prevented the creation of a $20 billion medical research fund.
The Abbott government is proposing a medicare research fund to be funded by a range of health savings, including the $7 Medicare charge, a $5 increase in patient payments for pharmaceuticals, and reductions in public hospital funding.
But with Labor, the Greens and the Palmer United Party fiercely opposed to the $7 fee, the proposal appears unlikely to pass Parliament.
Addressing the National Press Club in Canberra on Wednesday, Mr McKeon, who also chaired a strategic review of health and medical research for the Gillard government, backed the assessment of Health Minister Peter Dutton that change was necessary to control growth in health spending.
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GP Co-payment.

Bulk-billing figures deemed 'diversion'

Date June 10, 2014

Dan Harrison

Health and Indigenous Affairs Correspondent

The federal government has been accused of operating in an ''evidence-free zone'' by introducing a $7 fee for Medicare services in the absence of data about how many people are bulk-billed.
The Department of Human Services, which owns Medicare data, last week refused a freedom-of-information request from the Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association for data on the number of people who are bulk-billed, on the grounds the information does not exist.
The refusal came after Health Department officials told a Senate estimates hearing last week it had not modelled the impact of the $7 charge on hospital emergency departments and follows National Commission of Audit chairman Tony Shepherd conflating visits to the doctor with Medicare items.
In a letter refusing the association's information request, the Department of Human Services said while it could be possible for it to produce such data, this would require computer programming, which would constitute ''a substantial and unreasonable diversion of the department's resources''.
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Co-payment FOI request denied

10th Jun 2014
THE architect of the government's controversial co-payment plan has backed a thwarted Freedom of Information (FOI) request to release more detailed Medicare data into the public domain.
Speaking to MO, Tony Abbott's former advisor Terry Barnes said his co-payment model, and criticisms of it, are based on "educated guesswork" until the information is released. 
The request was made by the Australian Health and Hospitals Association (AHHA) to the Department of Human Services and asked for detailed data on the number of people who are bulk-billed, as distinct from the number of services that are bulk-billed. It was knocked back on two grounds. 
The first was that no document existed which contains the information, and the second was that to produce it would require a "substantial and unreasonable diversion of the department's resources", and the "development of specific coding". 
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Health system deserves keener scalpel than GP co-payments

Adam Elshaug
The Abbott government is weathering a storm of opposition to its proposed budget items that would see the introduction of co-payments for GP consultations, pathology and radiology test orders, and pharmaceutical prescriptions. Even the most centrist of commentators are expressing concerns that the risk of unintended consequences of these measures are a real and present danger to the health of Australians.
Co-payments might add revenue and demand, and hence Medicare expenditure, in the short term at best. However, had the proposal been submitted as an assignment by a student of macro accounting, it might scrape in a pass grade. It represents a fail, however, of sound health economic policy, for it is too blunt a tool to reduce with scalpel precision those supposed “unnecessary” GP visits, tests and medicines.
Instead, we know from international evidence that necessary care will drop, and with it will go opportunities for ­prevention and low-cost disease management. That other advanced economies, with high performing efficient health care systems, are moving in the opposite direction and strengthening the foundations of access to primary health care should be strong cause for modest, impartial reflection.
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Co-payments will spark competition

12th Jun 2014
ANALYSTS expect the business environment for GPs will be increasingly fragmented and competitive in the brave new world of the co-payment.
With the AMA now working out its preferred co-pay model as an alternative to the government’s proposed $7 slug for GP visits and medical services, the end of free Medicare for most Australians seems all but assured.
Analysts at investment bank UBS speculate that in a scenario where a co-payment is part of the landscape, GPs will move to distinguish themselves in terms of price and could charge what the market will bear.
“Where a GP has a concession/non-concession patient mix
 of 50:50, it is untenable to not charge the $7 co-pay,” a UBS report says.
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COAG report highlights co-payment dangers: AMA

12th Jun 2014
THE final COAG Reform Council report on healthcare shows the cost of seeing a GP is not currently a barrier for most people, but the AMA and Opposition argue this will change if the co-payment is implemented.
During 2012–13 just 5.8% of people delayed or did not see a GP due to cost and 8.5% did not fill a prescription for the same reason. 
But those figures balloon to one in eight and one in three for Indigenous Australians aged 15 years or older, and the Indigenous child death rate remains twice as high as the non-Indigenous rate. 
One in four Australians reported waiting more than 24 hours to see a GP for an urgent appointment, while two in three reported access in under four hours. 
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GP college says $7 co-payment could force doctor retirement

Jessica Gardner and Joanna Heath
Doctors fear the Abbott government’s proposed $7 fee for visits will prove a boon to corporate medicine.
Liz Marles, the president of the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners, said in areas like western and south-western Sydney where doctors are solo and older than average, the change encourages them to opt out.
“Given 41 per cent of GPs in urban areas are over 55 anyway, these guys are probably more like 60-plus, and so they, I think that if you squeeze them. . . or require them to go through a lot of change in order for them to be able to continue to provide a service then they’ll just choose retirement,” she said.
“We don’t want to see people pushed into retirement, and we believe that the doctor-patient relationship is critical to good outcomes,” Ms Marles said. “I think it will probably lead to increased corporate medicine in those areas.”
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5 ways to rescue the co-pay plan: Terry Barnes

10 June, 2014 Paul Smith
A five-point plan to rescue the Federal Government's maligned co-payment plan has been drawn up by the man who inspired the policy.
Terry Barnes (pictured), the former health advisor to Tony Abbott, said the proposals — which cut nearly $2 billion in Medicare rebates for patients to see their GP and may result in significant cash losses for doctors who bulk-bill vulnerable patients — were doomed.
But he suggested recently in the Australian Financial Review  there was a "fairer and less regressive" co-payment option for general practice, with five key points.
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Hospital Impacts.

NSW budget must address $200 million health shortfall, AMA warns

Date June 12, 2014

Lucy Carroll

Health Reporter

NSW stands to lose almost $200 million in health funding due to federal cuts, a shortfall the Australian Medical Association warns will be detrimental to emergency departments already struggling to cope with demand.
AMA NSW head Saxon Smith has called for at least 9 per cent - or $1.4 billion - increase in funding in next week's state budget in order to ''keep the NSW health system going''. ''Anything less than that will cause a standstill,'' Dr Smith said.
''We need $191 million to fill the gap left by federal cuts and 7 per cent growth to cover inflation and patient demand. Without it there will be a massive strain on the health system and a bottleneck in emergency departments.''
He said NSW had been the hardest hit by the federal budget, with the government pulling out of national partnership agreements that funded sub-acute beds for rehabilitation, mental health and aged care, and scrapping reward payments for meeting emergency department and elective surgery targets.
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Commonwealth agrees to share budget info

Date June 12, 2014 - 8:30PM

Natasha Boddy

Canberra Times reporter

The federal government looks set to hand over financial data to the ACT in a bid to quell a disagreement over whether health funding is facing cuts under the budget. 
Federal Health Minister Peter Dutton made the commitment during a meeting in Sydney with state and territory health ministers after ACT Chief Minister Katy Gallagher raised concerns about funding for the territory's health system.
The ACT government estimates federal budget cuts will rip about $240 million from the territory's health system over the next four years. But the federal government disagrees, with Mr Dutton saying budget papers show funding for ACT hospitals would increase from $272 million in 2013-14 to $328 million by 2016-17.
Ms Gallagher said it was pleasing that Mr Dutton had agreed to share the federal financial data. 
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Pharmacy.

The Pharmacy Guild of WA asks Curtin University to teach pharmacists to administer vaccines

  • EXCLUSIVE KARA VICKERY Health Reporter
  • PerthNow
  • June 14, 2014 8:00PM
WA pharmacists are moving to vaccinate customers under a plan the top doctors group warns would have people immunised next to “jelly beans and sanitary pads”.
The Pharmacy Guild of WA has asked Curtin University to make vaccination training part of its undergraduate pharmacy course.
It follows the start of a two-year pharmacy immunisation trial in Queensland and comes amid a national turf war over who should be able to administer the jabs.
Pharmacy Guild of WA branch committee member Paul Rees said the body had held early discussions with the university about launching an accredited training program.
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Comment:
It seems the fuss is not yet settled - to say the least. Will be fascinating to see how all this plays out. Parliament this and next week will be very interesting indeed! It is clear the GP co-payment issue is red-hot and right now it is hard to see how this measure will pass.
To remind readers there is also a great deal of useful health discussion here from The Conversation.
Also a huge section on the overall budget found here:
Enjoy.
David.

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

I Am Not Sure Why Commentators Don’t Stick To What They Really Know. Really Does Not Help Their Arguments!

This appeared last week.

More vision on healthcare needed to rein in costs

Date June 9, 2014 - 12:07AM

Kim Oates

Better doctor-patient communication, as per the Open Notes project, could save billions of dollars and improve health in Australia.
Let’s have a more visionary approach to reducing health costs. While most see the need to reduce health costs, wouldn’t it be refreshing if our politicians and their advisers looked at more visionary ways of cost reduction instead of a $7 co-payment, a scheme which will become a cost-shifting exercise as patients reluctant or unable to pay this amount will just turn up at already overburdened emergency departments?
While it’s true that health costs are rising as the population ages, we aren’t all that different from other developed countries. At 9.5 per cent of GDP our health expenditure is a little above the OECD average of 9.3 per cent and well below the US at 17.9 per cent, the only OECD country without universal health coverage and with a strong focus on privatisation.
Tom Delbanco, a Harvard professor, has helped to reduce costs. He had the audacity to suggest patients have access to their medical notes. His colleagues were aghast, saying this would be time consuming for doctors and cause anxiety in patients. Delbanco persisted.
In 2011 he persuaded over 100 doctors to participate in the Open Notes project. Despite initial anxiety, by the end of the trial there was overwhelming support by participating doctors. They found it made doctor-patient communication more effective and actually saved time as better-informed patients did not make unnecessary visits.
Patients liked it too. Sometimes they were able to point out that their notes did not accurately reflect what they’d told the doctor, resulting in better treatment and often fewer tests. Most felt empowered by the trust and respect that came with having access to their personal information.
The recent Australian patient controlled electronic health record is an important step in this direction, giving people a summary of their health records, but the Open Notes concept shows patients exactly what the doctor has written. This makes doctors write better notes, avoids confusing abbreviations, makes patients partners in their own care and according to Delbanco, reduces the cost of care.
.....
Kim Oates is an Emeritus Professor of Paediatrics at Sydney Medical School, University of Sydney
Two much better other ideas from Professor Oates (who is a certified good guy) are here:
The paragraph in italics is the problem. I am entirely comfortable with the Open Notes idea, indeed it sounds like a very sensible thing to do, but the PCEHR is NOT, in any way, a step in that direction in my view. The Open Notes approach is dynamic and interactive and the PCEHR - as presently conceived - is quite the reverse.
My advice - stick to what you know when providing comment and leave commentary on the PCEHR to those who are rather closer to e-Health.
David.

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

I Wonder How I Missed This Little Gem. It Was Hardly Well Publicised I Guess!

I noticed this a day or so ago, when reviewing the PCEHR Review site on the DoH site.

Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record System Operator: Annual Report 2012-2013

The Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record (PCEHR) System Operator (Secretary of the Department of Health) has prepared an annual report for 2012-13 period in accordance with section 107 of the Personally Controlled Electronic Health Records Act 2012. The report includes information on the operation and security of the PCEHR system, the volume of registration and use of the system, activities undertaken by the System Operator and the operation of the advisory committees - the Jurisdictional Advisory Committee and the Independent Advisory Council.

Table of contents

Here is the link:
The Executive Summary makes interesting if old reading:

1. Executive summary

The personally controlled electronic health (eHealth) record system commenced operation on 1 July 2012 and provides secure, national infrastructure to support a shared electronic health record which can be viewed by patients and their authorised healthcare providers.
The PCEHR can include information on medications, allergies, Medicare Benefit and Pharmaceutical Benefit claims data, organ donation status, location of advance care directives, emergency contacts, and for children – immunisations and early development. Patients can keep a private health diary through the PCEHR if they wish. A child development mobile app is also available.
Clinicians in healthcare organisations involved in a person’s care can upload, view and download clinical documents including:
                        Shared Health Summary – including medications, diagnosis and treatments
                        Event summary – to record a particular visit, diagnosis or treatment
                        Discharge summary – from hospitals including medications
                        Specialist letter – recording medications, treatments
                        Referral – including details required by the specialist
                        Prescription and medication dispense record – from pharmacies.
Privacy and security features include audit trails of access to the record, ability for consumers to create access controls, requirements for digital signing of clinical documents, and a multi-layered ICT system of firewalls, gateways and portals to ensure only authorised users can access the system.
During the year, 397,742 people registered for an eHealth record. 58% of these were assisted to register by healthcare providers, with the remainder registering online, by phone, mail or face-to-face. Healthcare provider organisations have been able to register since August 2012 and 4,310 organisations were registered during the year.
Over 6,000 clinical records, 2,328 prescriptions and dispense records and around 29.5 million Medicare held records have been uploaded to patient’s records in the system.
Signed Jane Halton.
Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record System Operator.
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I will leave it to the reader to note the way some items are put rather cleverly - we all know, for example, that clinicians - as opposed to providers which might be paid recruiters - undertook only very few registrations. The sudden spike in the last 2 months of the year when the recruiters were in the field is revealing! (See page 8)
The governance comments are interesting:

Governance

The eHealth record System Operator is the Secretary of the Department of Health and Ageing (DoHA). The System Operator works with a range of agencies and organisations to deliver the eHealth record system. Many of the System Operator’s functions are delivered by Accenture, contracted by the System Operator as the eHealth record system’s National Infrastructure Operator (NIO), and the Chief Executive Medicare, Department of Human Services (DHS).
In performing functions the System Operator must have regard to the advice and recommendations given by the Jurisdictional Advisory Committee and the Independent Advisory Council. These committees ensure that the operation of the system reflects key expertise and the involvement of states, territories and key stakeholders.
The eHealth record system framework is found in legislation, contracts and agreements.
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At 30 June last year - there were over 29 million documents held in the record - of which only 31,000 were patient provided or clinician provided  (0.1%).
So the system was just not really being used!
The financial statement is also interesting:
The total cost was claimed to be $81 million and the operational contractors seem to have scooped up over $45 million. Seems like a lot to just operate a system! (200 staff at $200,000 p.a.!)
That is a lot of money for not much use and even less benefit.
At the very end of the document there is this:
All information in this publication is correct as at November 2013
I wonder why it has taken so long for it to be released.
Glad we now have this is the public domain!
David.

Monday, June 16, 2014

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 16th June, 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

A really, really quiet week indeed.
To me the news regarding success of a system in meeting the Turing Test is the most interesting with the discussion of HP’s ‘The Machine’ coming a reasonably close second.
What I also find interesting is the total silence on the Government response to the PCEHR Review. I wonder why it is taking so long? Can it really be so hard to realise that the whole thing is a fiasco and needs to be totally rethought?
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10 June 2014, 2.17pm AEST

Will Apple’s HealthKit and Health app empower or frustrate?

Suneel Jethani

Lecturer and PhD Candidate Media and Communications at University of Melbourne
If you thought that self-tracking and the collection of personal health and fitness metrics was just a fad then an announcement last week by Apple CEO Tim Cook at the annual Apple Worldwide Developers Conference might suggest otherwise.
A Health app and a developer tool named HealthKit, which is designed to serve as a hub to allow various health apps and fitness tracking devices to “talk” to one another, have been included in iOS 8.
But are these “new” developments from Apple really all that new – and do they indicate that matching hardware in the form of wearables is next on Apple’s launch list?
What Apple and partners such as the Mayo Clinic envisage is, for example, an app that monitors heart rate, blood pressure, blood sugar or cholesterol. It would then be able to seamlessly share data with a hospital app or directly with healthcare professionals.
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Research into why some people are more emotionally resilient in the face of adversity than others has won a Sydney medical researcher two national awards.
Dr Justine Gatt has received the $50,000 Commonwealth Health Minister’s Award for Excellence in Health and Medical Research for her research into the role of emotional resilience to adversity in optimal mental health and wellbeing.
Tonight (June 11), Dr Gatt will also receive a National Health and Medical Research Council Research Excellence Award for being the top-ranked Career Development Fellowship scheme applicant in the Industry category.
Dr Gatt, who is Senior Research Fellow at the University of Sydney and conducts her ground-breaking research at the Westmead Millennium Institute’s Brain Dynamics Centre, aims to promote resilience in low-resilient individuals using e-health online training tools.
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June 5, 2014

How Durable Are the Strong Recommendations Made in Practice Guidelines?

Harlan M. Krumholz, MD, SM reviewing Neuman MD et al. JAMA 2014 May 28.
Many Class I recommendations don't survive to the 10-year mark — especially those based merely on opinion or observational data.
Class I recommendations proclaim which practices should be followed in given clinical situations, and they are the strongest made within the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guideline framework. Investigators assessed the durability of Class I recommendations to provide a perspective on how often actions that are deemed mandatory become less enthusiastically endorsed as more evidence emerges.
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Quiet achiever - QLD Telepaediatrics turns 14

Over the last fourteen years, the Queensland Telepaediatric Service (QTS) has linked patients in regional and remote Queensland with specialists at the Royal Children’s Hospital (RCH) in Brisbane, and last month celebrated its 20,000th consultation.
Associate Prof Anthony Smith is Deputy Director and co-founder of the University of Queensland’s Centre for Online Health and is now helping to establish a similar telemedicine service at the Princess Alexandra Hospital in Brisbane, this time serving adult patients in regional and remote Queensland.
“We have been able to demonstrate this as one of the more sustainable models of telehealth, by having it provided through a central facility where multiple specialties access the telehealth service,” he says, adding that currently there are 37 different paediatric specialties at the RCH actively engaged in the service.
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National E-Health Security & Access Framework v4.0

Created on Friday, 13 June 2014
The National E-Health Security & Access Framework v4.0 (NESAF) is a risk-based approach identifying 11 key security and access areas relating to eHealth, providing healthcare organisations with the necessary security processes, tools and information to enable them to adjust to the eHealth environment.
 The model is based on Australian Standards for information security management, and information security management in health.  This release consolidates stakeholder feedback from independent reviews by reputable security firms and updates from lessons learned.
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Security tool to break ground in medicine

Jennifer Foreshew

Technology Reporter
Sydney
A large-scale security simulation tool for supervisory control and data acquisition systems could be adapted for the medical field.
Melbourne’s RMIT University has developed the prototype tool, known as SCADASim, and is speaking with industry in a bid to see it commercialised.
Project leader Zahir Tari said there were very few SCADA simulators around. “The problem with typical systems at power plants is you cannot test the vulnerability of a system when it is working,’’ he said.
SCADA systems control infrastructure such as electricity, gas, water, waste management, railways and traffic.
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Parent info: is it ‘catching’?

4th Jun 2014
DEVELOPED by a not-for-profit organisation in the US, and overseen by a group of paediatricians, the aim of this app is to provide general information on an A–Z list of conditions.
The app provides far more information than simply whether or not a condition is contagious.
For each condition, listed under its medical as well as its popular name, it details symptoms, treatment, and prevention.
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Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record System Operator: Annual Report 2012-2013

The Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record (PCEHR) System Operator (Secretary of the Department of Health) has prepared an annual report for 2012-13 period in accordance with section 107 of the Personally Controlled Electronic Health Records Act 2012. The report includes information on the operation and security of the PCEHR system, the volume of registration and use of the system, activities undertaken by the System Operator and the operation of the advisory committees - the Jurisdictional Advisory Committee and the Independent Advisory Council.
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Deployment of a new form of information system for case management has enabled mental health services provider Richmond Fellowship Tasmania to achieve a range of financial and operational benefits that could point the way to a new era in managing mental health. Addressing delegates at a major disability services seminar in Sydney last week, Richmond Fellowship Tasmania CEO Danny Sutton said the VisiCase case management system, developed by Australian company FlowConnect, represented a significant advance on conventional information systems.
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See, sense, think, react: the robots are coming

Date June 13, 2014

Lia Timson

It can operate a normal power-drill, pick up screws as small as those in tiny watches and even check the quality of its work with its own eyes.
It's the yet-unnamed robot that Japanese electronics manufacturer Epson hopes to have thinking and performing high-precision tasks in Asian, European and American factories from 2016.
The company has made robots for its own manufacturing facilities since 1983 and currently leads the market of small 4-axis robots performing very repetitive moves on packaging lines worldwide. It also has a small share in the larger 6-axis market, where it trails Japanese robot giants Fanuc and Yaskawa and Swedish-Swiss ABB.
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Phones in pockets may harm male fertility

10th Jun 2014
MEN who keep a mobile phone in their trouser pocket could be inadvertently damaging their chances of becoming a father, according to a new study.
Scientists at the University of Exeter said their work suggested that exposure to radiofrequency electromagnetic radiation from mobile phones negatively affected sperm quality – but further research was needed.
Previous studies have suggested that radiofrequency electromagnetic radiation (RF-EMR) emitted by the devices can have a detrimental effect on male fertility.
Most of the global adult population own mobile phones, and around 14% of couples in high and middle income countries have difficulty conceiving.
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A computer passed the Turing Test - but does it matter?

Date June 10, 2014 - 7:53AM

Lance Ulanoff

A computer has finally passed the Turing Test. You may now commence the global panic.
Two years ago, Princeton University's Eugene Goostman, the artificial intelligence computer program that masquerades as a wise-cracking 14-year old boy, won the Turing Test contest, fooling the judges into believing the all-digital Eugene is a flesh and blood person 29% of the times they spoke to him.
In the latest contest, held this weekend, the Goostman program managed to accomplish the feat 33% of the time — not only winning the competition, but passing the official Turing Test threshold for the first time.
Back in 1950, famed computer scientist, mathematician and code-breaker Alan Turing posited in a now famous paper entitled Computing Machinery and Intelligence that by the year 2000 it would be possible for a computer to play what's known as "the imitation game" well enough that "an average interrogator will not have more than 70 per cent chance of making the right identification after five minutes of questioning."
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'Super computer' first to pass Turing Test, convince judges it's alive

Date June 9, 2014 - 7:01AM
A computer program has become the first to pass a Turing test by fooling 33 per cent of humans that it was a 13-year-old Ukrainian boy.
A "super computer" has duped humans into thinking it was a 13-year-old boy to become the first machine to pass the "iconic" Turing Test, experts say.
Five machines were tested at the Royal Society in central London to see if they could fool people into thinking they were humans during text-based conversations.
The test was devised in 1950 by computer science pioneer and World War II code breaker Alan Turing, who said that if a machine was indistinguishable from a human, then it was "thinking".
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Hardware

With 'The Machine,' HP May Have Invented a New Kind of Computer

June 11, 2014
If Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) founders Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard are spinning in their graves, they may be due for a break. Their namesake company is cooking up some awfully ambitious industrial-strength computing technology that, if and when it’s released, could replace a data center’s worth of equipment with a single refrigerator-size machine.
It’s basically a brand-new type of computer architecture that HP’s engineers say will serve as a replacement for today’s designs, with a new operating system, a different type of memory, and superfast data transfer. The company says it will bring the Machine to market within the next few years or fall on its face trying. “We think we have no choice,” says Martin Fink, the chief technology officer and head of HP Labs, who is expected to unveil HP’s plans at a conference Wednesday.
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Cloud storage: which service is best?

Date June 8, 2014

Adam Turner

As online storage prices plummet, it's never been easier to back up your entire digital life to the cloud.
If you're not making back-up copies of irreplaceable files such as family photos then you're sitting on a ticking time bomb. Between fire, flood, theft, computer virus, hardware failure and simple human error there's no shortage of disasters waiting to claim your files – whether they be business reports, school assignments, holiday snapshots or home movies.
You might keep back-ups on a USB drive or network-attached storage drive in the study, but a fire, flood or break-in which claims your computers and handheld devices could very well claim those back-up drives as well.
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Enjoy!
David.

Sunday, June 15, 2014

Australian E-Health Standards Setting Would Seem To Have Really Hit The Buffers. An Amazing Fiasco.

This summary of a major meeting held on June 3, 2014 - convened by Standards Australia - was made available a little while ago.
Standards Australia
Health Informatics Standards Development Forum
Meeting notes and outcomes
3 June 2014
Context
On 3 June 2014 Standards Australia held a Forum in relation to health informatics standards development. The purpose of the Forum was to:
·         Discuss the future plan in relation to health informatics standards development;
·         To allow Standards Australia to report on the status of the current work program which will end on 30 June 2014;
·         To allow Standards Australia to advise of operational and administrative changes which will be implemented post 30 June 2014.
The format of the Forum allowed for questions of the group following each presentation and an open discussion prior to the Forum concluding.
Session 1 – Standards Australia Presentation
Standards Australia opened with a presentation on its last 18 months of engagement in the sector. Standards Australia led the forum through some of the challenges that it had faced on this work program, and reported that despite these challenges published a record number of documents during this period. Standards Australia also reported on work that was expected to be completed by 30 June 2014.
Standards Australia advised that there was no forward work program agreed beyond 30 June 2014 and that it would take the opportunity, to review its committee structure with a view to ensuring that the committee structure would appropriately allow Standards Australia to continue to fulfil its international obligations as a participating member of ISO Technical Committee TC/215 Health informatics.
Stakeholders may also submit health informatics project proposals during the project prioritisation rounds. The projects will be assessed on the basis that they will be Standards Australia resourced.
Session 2 – Australian Information Industry Association
The Australian Information Industry Association, the peak body for ICT in Australia, presented on the importance of health informatics to its members
across the hardware, software and services sectors. The AIIA shared the perspective of its Special Interest Group (SIG) as to the trends and drivers within the sector, and the opportunities and challenges which its members saw in the sector today and into the future.
The AIIA spoke of the importance of technical standards and the potential cost for government and industry where standards are not in place, but equally that technical standards are part of a broader issue which includes market issues, policy, regulatory matters as well as issues in relation to the maintenance and relevance of technical infrastructure.
Session 3 – Royal Australian College of General Practitioners
The RACGP presented on its perspective as to the standards development activities that have been undertaken in this area, and spoke as to some of the challenges that the RACGP have with respect to standards development.
The RACGP spoke of some concerns that it had on behalf of its members around governance, voting requirements, resourcing and documentation.
The RACGP shared its views on how a work program may be formed in the future and spoke of its commitment to remaining engaged and to addressing what the RACGP sees as fundamental concerns.
Session 4 – HL7 Australia
HL7 Australia gave a very interesting presentation on the need for technical standards, Australia’s current international engagement and adoption footprint.
HL7 Australia spoke of the need firstly for cooperation in the sector but also of a need for trusted leadership which involved real collaboration, greater international alignment and adoption, a focus on core objectives of risk, security and clinical safety in the standards environment.
Session 5 – Engineers Australia
Engineers Australia presented similar themes to the other presentations but with a real focus on collaboration and strong alignment with international developments in eHealth standardisation. The point was made that the existing IT-014 model has a key role, but as part of a much wider discussion.
The PCeHR Review identified ACeH as having a key role in the future of health informatics. Although, this role it is yet to be fully defined.
Engineers Australia spoke of a need for flexibility in the Standards Australia approach and a need for a proactive and customer focused approach, and a broad stakeholder engagement strategy including government and individual contributors.
The need for IT-014 to continue to serve actively as the ISO/TC215 mirror committee was supported.
Engineers Australia also spoke of the great challenge in achieving a balance between the various competing interests in Australia and internationally.
Session 6 – Open Discussion
The Forum concluded with an open discussion.
It was clear from this that there was a general consensus as to what needed to be done in relation to developing a plan, making sure that the plan was integrated and focused beyond standards development to a wider e-health plan and that efforts put into standards development needed to be coordinated and aligned.
General questions were raised as to how standards development would align with other matters such as the NEHTA work program, and what would happen to projects which had been in development by Standards Australia but will not reach publication by 30 June 2014.
Standards Australia concluded the Forum by noting that it looked forward to continuing discussions with industry, with government and with the individual long standing contributors to technical standards development in relation to how stakeholders can collectively continue to develop technical standards in a coordinated, strategic and informed way.
- ACTIONS
a) SA to prepare Summary Document
b) SA to circulate slide pack
c) SA to update e-Health website to include slide pack and summary
d) Discussions to continue amongst all stakeholders as to next steps in continuing this agenda
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You can download this summary and the associated presentations from this link:
All the presentations are very much worth having a browse - to stay the least especially since the summaries produced above rather seem to underplay the scale of the issues!
What you will discover reading the presentations is that Government has stepped aside pretty much totally (i.e. stopped funding the forward work program.) and that organisations like the RACGP have already long ago stepped aside from the whole process.
This slide makes that totally clear.
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RACGP key issues re IT-014

1.Governance: Restructuring of committees to reflect technical and policy decision making.
2.Documentation: Provision of clear summaries of detailed technical documents to enable a move from a purely technical discussion to one which provides meaningful strategic and operational input.
3.Voting: The voting process needs to be clarified and clear guidelines provided as to what constitutes a vote including non-participation (abstinence) and blanket endorsement.
4.Resourcing: Ensure that appropriate resourcing can be applied most efficiently as volunteer organisations.
These need to be resolved before the RACGP can fully re-engage
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It is really amazing just how the Government and its agencies have destroyed the morale and interest of virtually all those who have volunteered to assist in the Standards setting process and how they have no apparent idea of what they will do next. Many of those who used to engage are basically so frustrated and 'pissed off' they will never come back. That is an incalculable loss to Australian e-Health.
This is Government, Jurisdictional and Agency mismanagement on a grand scale!
David.