Quote Of The Year

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

or

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

Friday, October 23, 2015

The RACGP Has More To Say On The Failure Of The Present Management Of E-Health. Not Happy Jan!

This appeared late last week:

RACGP disappointed with ACeH committee structure

16 October 2015
The newly established Australian Commission for e-Health (ACeH) Implementation Taskforce Steering Committee must include medical organisation representation, not just individual appointments, if it is to succeed.
The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP) President Dr Frank R Jones said it was disappointing the committee, which will oversee the My Health Record system, did not include RACGP representation or any representative group.
“Appointments to the ACeH Implementation Taskforce Steering Committee should have been an inclusive process featuring stakeholder representative groups, not just individuals,” Dr Jones said.
“As the peak representative body for 31,500 GPs working in or towards a career in general practice with a history of being at the forefront of innovation, standards and education in the health sector, it is unacceptable that we and others have been excluded from the taskforce.
“This is regrettable. We have always stated we wish to work in collaboration with government.
“I do acknowledge there are clinician representatives on the committee, however they have been appointed in a personal professional capacity and not as a representative voice.”
The RACGP has been an advocate for a national shared electronic health record system, recently welcoming the commitment made by the Government in its 2015-16 budget to strengthen the national e-Health system.
Dr Jones said there were significant problems with the design and functionality of current My Health Record (previously known as the personally controlled electronic health record, or PCEHR), that required meaningful engagement between the Federal Government and general practice if it were to be a success and drive adoption amongst GPs, who will be the main users of the system.
The full release is here
Like the AMA, the RACGP has continued to be polite and tolerant of all the obvious missteps.
Surely the time to amp up the pressure has arrived - even if it is in private. However, results are needed soon or the mess will get worse I believe and we really could do without that!
David.

Thursday, October 22, 2015

The Macro View - General And Health News Relevant To E-Health And Health In General.

October 22 Edition
Well this is the week when we see the Government back in Parliament again and trying to keep up the positive momentum the new PM while the Opposition tries to re-set its approach to become seriously competitive again. The Opposition has gone mad on the ‘rich dude’ while the Government is watching what is going on at the Union Royal Commission.
Elsewhere we have all sorts of changes emerging with the funding of railways and so on - as opposed to the previous administration. Just how real any innovation agenda we will have to wait and see about.
As always politics and policy inevitably get mixed up in all this so a wide range of views get canvassed.
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Here is some other of the recent other news and analysis.

The Political Scene.

Half-truths obscure the debate over superannuation tax breaks

Date October 14, 2015 - 12:00AM

John Daley and Brendan Coates

Most of those who benefit from super tax breaks are high-income earners, not those in the so-called "middle".
The superannuation debate is plagued by myths. This month, the super industry lobby group the Australian Superannuation Fund Association issued a report to bust these myths and defend the existing tax breaks for superannuation. Unfortunately, the report replaces many of the myths with half-truths – which can be even more dangerous.
The most blatant half-truth is the ASFA's claim that three-quarters of the benefits of superannuation tax breaks go to middle-income earners. The ASFA defines middle-income earners as those earning between $37,000 and $180,000 a year. That enormous spread includes those just outside the top 3 per cent. Those people who earn more than 19 in 20 Australians may be surprised to find themselves described as "middle-income earners".
And then the ASFA glosses over the bottom 40 per cent of income earners, with incomes less than $37,000, who benefit very little from super tax breaks.
A more sensible definition of "middle-income" would start with those who are actually in the middle. In 2012-13, the median taxable income in Australia was $41,561. If we include, say, the 30 per cent of taxpayers on either side of this figure, the share of super tax breaks going to "middle-income" earners drops to less than half – nowhere near the three-quarters claimed by the ASFA.
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Turnbull, Shorten and aides to tackle policy challenges

David Uren

Malcolm Turnbull has promised new economic leadership but confronts the same old problems that bedevilled his predecessor: a budget in need of repair, an inefficient tax system, poor productivity and a fractious federation.
The Senate, which cruelled the aspirations of the Abbott government, remains as obstructive as ever. Labor, the Greens and assorted independents show no sign of shifting from their insistence that none but the wealthy may be left worse off by new legislation.
There has been an immediate shift in rhetoric with the new leadership. Turnbull summons excitement in the potential for inno­vation and the transformation of our cities, while declaring the cabinet will be open to all ideas free of ideological preconceptions.
New ministers are learning their briefs, making their first tentative forays into their policy areas and establishing taskforces to tackle a variety of issues.
With an election due within 12 months, the new cabinet is under pressure to clarify its mission and provide some detail of the policies that will differentiate it from Labor and from the Abbott government.
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Turnbull government revives Harper review, Professor Harper welcomes the news

Date October 17, 2015 - 12:15AM

Gareth Hutchens

Australia's retail trading hours could be radically overhauled, and ride-share services such as Uber more readily welcomed into the country, after the Turnbull government said it will launch an "enthusiastic response" to the Harper review of Australia's competition laws.
It means the long-standing monopoly-power held by existing taxi services could be broken up, and traditional retail hours loosened dramatically, while road transport regulations could be significantly modernised.
It also means laws governing where pharmacies can be located will be reconsidered, as will aggressively competitive behaviour from big businesses looking to expand.
Treasurer Scott Morrison says the Harper review has the potential to unlock "enormous opportunities" for the economy and Australians can expect an enthusiastic response to it from the Turnbull government.
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General Budget Issues.

Australia’s future must come before playing politics around the Budget

  • TERRY McCRANN
  • Herald Sun
  • October 10, 2015 9:00PM
JOE Hockey’s first Budget was all blood, sweat and tears and broken promises — although not nearly as many as the media (and the opposition) hysteria suggested.
His second Budget earlier this year was almost the exact opposite. Hockey stressed “jobs, growth and opportunity”. The highlights were not the cuts or the tax hikes of 2014 but a $5.5 billion package for business and a $4.4 billion one for families.
Obviously, there now won’t be a third Hockey Budget. So what will the First (Scott) Morrison Budget look like?
The answer to that depends on whether we get it before or after the election. That timing might also determine whether it’s both the first and last Morrison Budget.
And that after that it would be back to a Wayne Swan big deficit future with the treasurer, Chris Bowen, in a Shorten (or Albanese? Or Plibersek?) Labor government.
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Scott Morrison is staring down the barrel of a future of deficits

David Uren

The debate between Scott Mor­rison and his opposite number Chris Bowen about whether the budget faces a spending problem, as the Treasurer asserts, or a revenue problem, as Labor prefers, brings to mind Mr Micawber’s ­famous advice to Charles Dickens’s David Copperfield: “Annual ­income twenty pounds, annual expenditure nineteen pounds nineteen and six, result happiness. Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure twenty pounds nought and six, result ­misery.”
It is the gap between the government’s spending (too high) and its revenue (too low) that is the problem. It has been intractably stuck at about $40 billion for four of the past five years.
Research presented by the International Monetary Fund to finance ministers and central bank governors last weekend undermines the key assumption on which Treasury’s forecast of a return to budget surplus by 2019-20 is based.
The IMF has been troubled over the failure of world growth to meet its forecasts. Every time the fund has looked at world growth in the past five years, it has had to downgrade its forecasts. If the world economy had grown in line with the forecasts it made five years ago, the economies of the advanced world would be 14 per cent bigger than they are while those of the developing and emerging world would be 23 per cent bigger. But the forecasts of employment the fund makes for advanced countries have been much closer to the mark. Indeed, for a range of countries, including Germany, Japan, South Korea and Britain, employment growth has been better than the IMF predicted, although output growth has been worse. More workers are producing less output than was expected.
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Fact check: Do eight out of 10 taxpayers pay for Australia's social services bill?

October 14, 2015
Newly appointed Treasurer Scott Morrison has declared that Australia has a spending problem, not a revenue problem.
  • The claim: Treasurer Scott Morrison says that there are "eight in 10 income taxpayers required to go to work every day to pay for the $154 billion social services bill".
  • The verdict: In 2015, tax paid by fewer than the top five out of 10 income taxpayers is sufficient to fund Australia's social services bill. Furthermore, social services are paid from the consolidated revenue fund, which comprises all taxes raised by the Federal Government, with personal income tax providing just under half the total. Mr Morrison's claim is misleading.
Mr Morrison told ABC's 7.30 that while revenue as a proportion of GDP was within long-term averages, spending is at peak levels not seen since the Global Financial Crisis.
He illustrated the extent of Australia's spending problem by saying that most income taxpayers work every day to fund social services in Australia.
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The glaring hole in Scott Morrison’s plan

11:15pm, Oct 15, 2015
Rob Burgess  Economics commentator
ANALYSIS: Australian workers don’t just ‘work, save and invest’. They also ‘spend’ … or at least they used to.
All week, Treasurer Scott Morrison has been leaping to his feet in Question Time to tell Labor that “you can’t tax your way to surplus”, and that the choice at the next election is between steady or falling taxes with the Coalition or rising taxes with Labor.
On Wednesday, the “work, save and invest” Treasurer explained that his plan was to cut spending from 25.9 per cent of GDP this year, to 25.5 per cent next financial year and 25.3 per cent next year.
Low taxes and a slow reduction in spending will, so he says, eventually bring the federal budget back into balance and with luck allow the government to pay down the current debt – net federal debt is expected to peak next year at 18 per cent of GDP.
There is one big flaw this plan, however.
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Budget 2015-16: Revenue problem for Treasurer Scott Morrison as takings fall short

Date October 16, 2015 - 6:16PM

Peter Martin

Economics Editor, The Age

Weeks after Treasurer Scott Morrison declared his budget had "a spending problem, not a revenue problem", new finance department figures show revenue falling short.
The figures for the first two months of the financial year show revenue of only $61.113 billion in July and August, well short of the $63.336 billion expected when the budget was delivered in July.
Tax revenue is down $1.7 billion down on the budget forecast due to both slower than expected wage growth and weaker than expected dividend payments.
Superannuation tax receipts are about 20 per cent short of expectations and the resource tax has brought in less than half of what was expected due in part to the lower oil price.
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No longer a nation of home owners, now we're renting

Date October 17, 2015 - 5:20AM

Peter Martin

Economics Editor, The Age

Analysis
Once a nation of homeowners, we are becoming a nation of renters.
It's been two years since the latest update on housing occupancy and the one released on Friday show the proportion of households renting has edged up to 31.4 per cent. The proportion owning outright is only a point or two in front, at 32.5 per cent. Around 35 per cent of homes are mortgaged.
Back before the tax change that ignited negative gearing at the end of the 1990s around 40 per cent of households owned outright, and only 28 per cent rented.
It's the flipside of the boom in second properties that has made Australia a nation of landlords. The Bureau of Statistics says an extraordinary 1.5 million households now own properties they don't live in. Among high earners 39 per cent own a second, third or fourth property.
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Health Budget Issues.

NSW to push treasurers on GST increase to meet federal health cuts

Date October 15, 2015 - 6:31PM

Sean Nicholls

Sydney Morning Herald State Political Editor

NSW Treasurer Gladys Berejiklian will continue the push to increase the GST from 10 to 15 per cent to address a looming health funding gap at a meeting of her state and federal counterparts in Sydney on Friday.
The meeting with new federal Treasurer Scott Morrison is expected to cover implementing the abolition of the $1000 GST-free threshold for online purchases from overseas and establishment of a national register of foreign ownership of land titles.
Mr Morrison has also placed the recommendations of the Harper review of competition ­policy on the meeting agenda.
The review urged reforms across government sectors including health and education to which Mr Morrison has said he is keen to have the states and territories respond.
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Health funds lobby to lift fees

  • The Australian
  • October 17, 2015 12:00AM
Health fund members are set to be slugged with higher premiums, with insurers warning the federal government the private system is buckling under the pressure of rising costs and wasteful healthcare.
Despite regulators and Health Minister Sussan Ley ­acknowledging affordability is an issue, health funds are preparing to make ­applications in the coming weeks for premium ­increases that will flow through to members in April.
The managing director of Bupa’s health insurance business in Australia, Dwayne Crombie, yesterday said the erosion of the federal insurance rebate exacerbated any decision to pass on costs. Labor means-tested the ­rebate, reduced its scope and ­indexed it to inflation rather than the cost of premiums, prompting some members to ­reduce their level of cover or dump their policy completely ­because of the cost.
“The consumer is certainly looking a bit distressed,” Mr Crombie said. “We desperately need to figure out how we can slow down the rate of growth in the system, how we can make it more affordable and how the ­private system can complement the public system and still be sustainable.”
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Homeopathy Plus! director Fran Sheffield banned from promoting 'vaccines'

Date October 14, 2015

Amy Corderoy

Health Editor, Sydney Morning Herald

A homeopath who has repeatedly claimed to be able to prevent whooping cough with homeopathic "vaccines" has been banned from selling the products for five years and she and her business fined $138,000.
Central Coast homeopath Fran Sheffield is an advocate of alternative medicines who authorities have apparently been unable to prevent from making misleading claims about the benefits of homeopathy in contravention of federal medicines laws.
But the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission took Ms Sheffield to federal court, claiming she was misleading consumers with her business Homeopathy Plus! and its promotion of supposed whooping cough vaccines.
In December, the court found Homeopathy Plus! was making unreasonable and untrue claims that conventional whooping cough vaccines were ineffective, and homeopathic vaccines were a safe alternative.
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It has been an interesting time with the new Government settling in and all sorts of options now back on the table, including the Harper Competition Review - pharmacy might be worried. Health is also clearly under review as far as its budget is concerned. Lots to keep up with here! The next few weeks in Parliament will be telling as we run up to Christmas.
Enjoy.
David.

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Notes From Community Affairs Committee - Senate Estimates of 21 October 2015 - Late Afternoon.

October 21, 6:12pm

Sen McDonald - Clearly a regulation clown.

Total idiot asking about e-cigarettes - total FW

A collection of e-health irrelevant people are wasting vast time on rubbish wrt. medical cannabis!!!!

How is that e-Health?

There are some grandstanders who just chatter away and waste time….

Move to e-Health @ 7:40pm after dinner

Madden , Fleming

Looks like some funding and scope changes in 17/18 after trials of various PCEHR Trials

Has been very long funding….2012-2017

Budget has been cut - matter for Department of Finance - not clear where the money went. Maybe the Medical Future Fund

Bowles does not know what is happening…no idea how much has been cut.

From July 2018 - No commitment - have funded the trials etc. up until June 2018.

Trials will decide what funding will happen. Funding depends on opt-out outcomes.

Advance Monies will be held by Dept. of Finance.

Matter for Government to make final decision.


Current Funding

For 2016 $26.5M

For 2017 $15.5M

Are now trialling both opt-in and opt-out!

PHNs are in as trial mediators etc. Who knows Metro or Remote.

Trials will be everywhere. Target to have evaluation by early 2017.

Human Rights Committee

Madden has noted what is going on and will provide submission.

Current records 2,442,824

1350 registrations per week in tax time - people using My Gov.

PCEHR signed up - 7090 organisations

PIP catches 75% of GP practices.

State data - on notice.

Hospitals - 452 Hosp. and Community centres - very little progress.

Crap chatting about ‘meaningful use’. Have no idea of concept.

Have 16 submissions on ePIP - will send paper to Govt next week.

Active use is looking at record and adding stuff.

Bureaucrat recognises GP is central and have not made much progress with them.

Bureaucrat is in denial that GPs might not press on with ePIP.

Madden understand GPs fundamental - ‘ really need to inspire GPs’

Thinks system is now usable for GPs - he is on another planet!!!

ACeH transition has been in operation for 6-8 weeks.

Looks like most of NEHTA will slip over to DOH and ACeH on basis on comments.

End about 8:10pm

Peter Fleming also answered a few questions

What was amazing was no talk of Strategy and how the 2 Labor Senators were desperate to convince all that the whole thing was wonderful. This thing now seems to have commitment from the utterly conned by DoH/NEHTA. Just awful!
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Again very disturbing nonsense. Sorry if anyone offended!

E & OE

David.

Now This Might Have The Effect Of Focussing The Mind Of Some GPs!

This appeared last week:

GPs face massive fines over PCEHR privacy breaches

| 16 October, 2015 |  
GPs and practice staff face jail and fines of up to $108,000 for misuse of the PCEHR system under controversial new laws being pushed through the Federal Parliament.
There have been long-running fears across the medical profession about the scale of civil sanctions for unauthorised use or disclosure of information on the controversial system which was launched three years ago.
But under the new regime the Federal Government is pushing to introduce, civil penalties will increase five-fold. 
Any health practitioner who “recklessly” flouts the system's privacy provisions will be fined up to $108,000 for each offence.
For so-called body corporates - such as a GP practices - a single breach will trigger civil fines of up to $540,000.
In a further tightening of the screw, the government plans for the first time to introduce criminal penalties of up two years in jail for privacy abuse of the PCEHR - although fines will be limited to $21,600 per offence.
The government argues the measures are necessary given the potential sensitivity of medical information held on the system.
But the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights says the fines are so high that the government is in danger of using civil law to impose “criminal” sanctions on those it prosecutes.
In a report released on Tuesday, the committee said proof of criminal offences had to be “beyond reasonable doubt”.
But under the government’s proposed regime, prosecutors would be imposing the sanctions based only on the “balance of probabilities” that wrong-doing had occurred.
This would breach article 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights which mandates the right to a fair trial, the committee's report stated.
“The objective behind including civil penalties…substantially more than the penalty available under the criminal offence provision, without the usual protections available to those charged with a criminal offence...has not been explained [by the government],” the committee said.
The committee, chaired by former attorney general Philip Ruddock, also warns that using civil law provisions means the burden of proof can shift from prosecutors to defendants, undermining the presumption of innocence applied in criminal cases.
The AMA has said it is alarmed at the government’s move to protect privacy on the PCEHR system, claiming the sanctions are excessive.
More here:
I would suggest this is a very good reason to have nothing to do with the system unless it is much more useful and provides clear assurances that only deliberate actions can trigger penalties.
Yet again I would suggest this is another example of the out of touch bureaucrats in Canberra just going feral!
David.

Senate Estimates Covering E-Health Due After 4:30pm Today.

Here is the link to the Programme:

http://www.aph.gov.au/~/media/02%20Parliamentary%20Business/25%20Senate%20Estimates/supp1516/ca.pdf?la=en

Instructions on how to watch in the .pdf or use this link.

http://www.aph.gov.au/News_and_Events/Watch_Parliament

David.

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

I Wonder What The AMA And The RACGP Are Going To Do To Have The Government Actually Deliver A Working, Useful PCEHR.

We have had two lead organisations working with GPs come out and express considerable concern regarding the future of the PCEHR.
First from the AMA we have had this:

AMA blasts “half-baked” MyHealth medical records plan

Friday, October 16, 2015 - 10:21
Claiming that “forcing GPs to adopt half-baked e-health record [is] a dud idea,” the Australian Medical Association (AMA), has opposed government plans to link GP incentive payments to the adoption of the scheme.
The Government has proposed that Practice Incentive Program e-health payments be tied to doctor use of the MyHealth Record (MyHR) system being developed to replace the $A1 billion Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record scheme. The PCEHR has been dumped amid dismal take-up rates among patients, doctors and medical practices.
But AMA President Professor Brian Owler said the MyHR system was far from fully developed, so using PIP incentives to get doctors to sign up was ill-considered and premature.
“The MyHealth Record is not at a stage where it can be adopted by practices, so it should not be linked to the PIP scheme,” Professor Owler said. “There are fundamental issues with the design of the MyHR that are yet to be fully addressed.”
The AMA has detailed a long list of problems with the current version of the system in a submission to the Health Department, including:
  • the ability of patients to remove information from view, making the record potentially incomplete and of no clinical value;
  • no flags to indicate if information has been removed from view;
  • radiology or pathology results are not yet included;
  • the shared health summaries are not automatically updated, rendering them quickly out-of-date; and
  • inaccuracies occur in the upload of data.
In addition MyHR, in its current iteration, remains an ‘opt-in’ system.
Lots more here:
From the RACGP we also have:

RACGP urges Federal Government to dump proposed changes to PIP e-Health

14 October 2015
The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP) strongly opposes proposed reforms to the PIP e-Health that would see payments linked to meeting targets for uploading shared health summaries (SHS).
This week the RACGP has responded to the Department of Health (DoH) Practice Incentives Program (PIP) e-Health Incentive discussion paper, which was released as part of the consultation process to revise the current PIP e-Health Incentive eligibility criteria to encourage ‘active and meaningful use’ of the My Health Record (formally PCEHR).
Increased uptake of My Health Record will be achieved by addressing the fundamental usability issues as raised by the profession, rather than implementing misaligned financial incentives.
RACGP President Dr Frank R Jones said proposed changes to the PIP aimed at encouraging practitioners’ participation were futile.
“The proposed changes to the PIP e-Health Incentive are misaligned, ill-timed, superficial, will not support meaningful use, and – as a result – will not improve patient care and safety”.
“When usability issues for the My Health Record have been addressed, additional MBS rebates or a Service Incentive Payment (SIP) would be a better approach to support practitioner uptake”, Dr Jones said.
The RACGP submission was based on member feedback, with many GPs expressing concern regarding the DoH’s proposals for the PIP e-Health requiring the uploading of shared health summaries (SHS) as the sole measure of ‘active and meaningful use’ of My Health Record.
More here:
The AMA is also unhappy re the ePIP plans:
Here is a good summary of their points:

8 reasons to avoid the latest e-health record system

15 October, 2015
……
The AMA says the model has eight flaws that must be fixed. These are:
·         Patients can remove information from view, making the clinical record potentially incomplete and of no clinical value;
·         Clinicians are unaware if information has been removed from view;
·         Radiology or pathology results are yet to be made available to the MyHR;
·         Shared health summaries are static documents and quickly go out of date;
·         Inaccurate data uploads present clinical risks;
·         Most patients don’t have a MyHR, and are unlikely to get one under opt-in arrangements;
·         Opt-out trials are yet to be conducted; and
·         Other medical specialists are not being supported to engage with the MyHR
Full article is found here:
The question is what all those who realise the PCEHR is a pile of crock is actually going to do to have DoH and NEHTA face up to the fact they have goofed and stop good money being thrown after bad.
A new realistic e-Health Strategy is needed - and not something just emitting from the DoH in Canberra. The sooner the AMA and the RACGP (among others) start to wind up the heat the better!
David.

Monday, October 19, 2015

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 19th October, 2015.

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

What an amazing week. To stay it is all happening would be an understatement. Sadly pretty much all that is happening is going backwards or sideways. Sad about that!
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GPs face massive fines over PCEHR privacy breaches

Paul Smith | 16 October, 2015 | 
GPs and practice staff face jail and fines of up to $108,000 for misuse of the PCEHR system under controversial new laws being pushed through the Federal Parliament.
There have been long-running fears across the medical profession about the scale of civil sanctions for unauthorised use or disclosure of information on the controversial system which was launched three years ago.
But under the new regime the Federal Government is pushing to introduce, civil penalties will increase five-fold. 
Any health practitioner who “recklessly” flouts the system's privacy provisions will be fined up to $108,000 for each offence.
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AMA blasts “half-baked” MyHealth medical records plan

Friday, October 16, 2015 - 10:21
Claiming that “forcing GPs to adopt half-baked e-health record [is] a dud idea,” the Australian Medical Association (AMA), has opposed government plans to link GP incentive payments to the adoption of the scheme.
The Government has proposed that Practice Incentive Program e-health payments be tied to doctor use of the MyHealth Record (MyHR) system being developed to replace the $A1 billion Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record scheme. The PCEHR has been dumped amid dismal take-up rates among patients, doctors and medical practices.
But AMA President Professor Brian Owler said the MyHR system was far from fully developed, so using PIP incentives to get doctors to sign up was ill-considered and premature.
“The MyHealth Record is not at a stage where it can be adopted by practices, so it should not be linked to the PIP scheme,” Professor Owler said. “There are fundamental issues with the design of the MyHR that are yet to be fully addressed.”
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'Misaligned and superficial': RACGP slams eHealth PIP proposals

14 October 2015
THE RACGP has issued a stinging rebuke of the government’s proposals to link PIP eHealth payments to the uploading of Shared Health Summaries (SHS), calling them “misaligned”, “ill-timed” and “superficial”.
It says the government must drop proposals, set out in a recent Department of Health discussion paper, that will not improve meaningful use and the care and safety of patients.
The discussion paper was released last month as part of the consultation process to revise the current PIP eHealth eligibility criteria. The aim is to encourage more active and meaningful use of My Health Record, formally known as the PCEHR.
The paper proposes that such use should be defined, in the first instance, by measuring SHS contributions.
But the RACGP says such an approach is too simplistic and fails to appreciate the crucial importance of GP autonomy in everyday practice.
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Mixed reaction to latest eHealth developments

13 October 2015
THE appointment of the eHealth implementation committee to set up the Personally Controlled eHealth Record (PCEHR) and My Health Record has been met by mixed reactions from the medical IT community.
While some hope progress will finally be made, critics fear a continuation of the same problems that have plagued it from the outset. 
The 11-person eHealth Implementation Taskforce Steering Committee will establish the Australian Commission for eHealth (ACeH). This follows a review of the National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA), which called for NEHTA to be dissolved.
Two members of the new committee — current NEHTA chairman Dr Steve Hambleton and UnitingCare Queensland executive director Richard Royle — were involved in the NEHTA review, which was ordered by then health minister Peter Dutton almost two years ago.
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Opt-out e-health records may violate privacy: MPs

Parliamentary committee investigates My Health Record bill.

By Allie Coyne
Oct 16 2015 9:24AM
A joint parliamentary committee has written to Health Minister Sussan Ley to express concerns about the "significant" effect the government's planned introduction of opt-out e-health records could have on an individual's privacy.
In September the government introduced a bill that would amend the existing personally controlled electronic health record (PCEHR) law to enable it to boost its stalled e-health records scheme by creating a record for every Australian by default.
Despite the bill achieving bipartisan support in the parliament, the committee - chaired by Liberal MP Phillip Ruddock - has raised a number of concerns about the implications of the reforms.
Currently, an individual must proactively register for a PCEHR account before their medical records are uploaded.
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8 reasons to avoid the latest e-health record system

15 October, 2015
It is unreasonable to expect GPs to use the proposed MyHealth Record (MyHR) system because it is not fit for purpose, says the AMA.
The organisation has rejected the Federal Government’s plan to link GP incentive payments to MyHR, describing the proposal as poorly thought out and premature.
AMA president, professor Brian Owler says there are fundamental issues with the design of MyHR that are yet to be fully addressed, and it is not at a stage where it can be adopted by practices.
The AMA says the model has eight flaws that must be fixed.
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'Significant privacy concerns' over myHealth Record system

Date October 15, 2015 - 6:49PM

Harriet Alexander

Health Reporter

New laws to give doctors and pharmacists instant access to medical records may pose a risk to human rights by violating privacy.
A parliamentary joint committee on human rights has called on Health Minister Sussan Ley to explain what safeguards are in place to protect Australians' privacy when their health records are uploaded onto a central electronic database, under the new myHealth Record system.
Currently, Australians' health records are only included on the database if they choose to register.
Longstanding Liberal MP Philip Ruddock, who chairs the committee, told Parliament the e-health bill raised "significant privacy concerns".
It was questionable whether the bill's objective - to drive increased use of the database by health professionals - justified the potential privacy breach, Mr Ruddock said.
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Human rights warning over PCEHR 'opt out' plan

Paul Smith | 15 October, 2015 | 
Automatically signing patients up to the personally controlled e-health records scheme risks breaching international human rights law, a top parliamentary committee is warning.
In an attempt to breathe life into the PCEHR system, the Federal Government is pushing through legislation to make it “opt-out” only, where patients must declare they do not want their medical records automatically uploaded onto the system.
This is a shift from the current process where patients 'opt-in' to the scheme.
But the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights has warned that this approach could fall foul of international law.
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RACGP urges Federal Government to dump proposed changes to PIP e-Health

14 October 2015
The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP) strongly opposes proposed reforms to the PIP e-Health that would see payments linked to meeting targets for uploading shared health summaries (SHS).
This week the RACGP has responded to the Department of Health (DoH) Practice Incentives Program (PIP) e-Health Incentive discussion paper, which was released as part of the consultation process to revise the current PIP e-Health Incentive eligibility criteria to encourage ‘active and meaningful use’ of the My Health Record (formally PCEHR).
Increased uptake of My Health Record will be achieved by addressing the fundamental usability issues as raised by the profession, rather than implementing misaligned financial incentives.
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AMA Rejects MyHealth Record Link to PIP Payments

15 Oct 2015
In a submission to the Department of Health, the AMA has rejected a Government plan to link general practice Practice Incentive Program (PIP) e-Health Incentive payments to the adoption of the MyHealth Record (MyHR) by GPs.
AMA President, Professor Brian Owler, said today that the Government proposal was poorly thought out and premature.
“Until now, the PIP e-health incentive has focused on building the capacity of practices to embrace various e-Health technologies to enhance the efficiency of patient care,” Professor Owler said.
“The MyHealth Record is not at a stage where it can be adopted by practices, so it should not be linked to the PIP scheme.
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Govt's life support plan for e-health records slammed

Paul Smith | 14 October, 2015
The RACGP has slammed the push to save the beleaguered personally controlled e-health records system from oblivion by pressuring GPs to populate it with clinical information.
Last month, the Federal Government released a consultation paper suggesting future e-Practice Incentive Program payments should be linked to doctors’ “meaningful use” of the PCEHR.
A key suggestion is that doctors create a fixed number of shared health summaries — a list of diagnoses, medications and allergies — to upload onto patients' health records.
The paper also suggests that payments would become dependent on doctors creating and curating health summaries for patients claiming rebates for MBS care plans.
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Commission for eHealth taking shape


A Steering Committee has been set up to oversee the establishment of the new Australian Commission for eHealth and the personalised My Health Record system for patients and doctors.
Minister for Health, Sussan Ley announced the appointment of Robyn Kruk as the Independent Chair of the eHealth Implementation Taskforce Steering Committee responsible for the establishment of the Australian Commission for eHealth.
“It is essential Australia has a national digital health system and My Health Record makes up an important part of this system,” Ms Ley said.
“Ms Kruk has held several significant Public Service positions at the State and Federal Government level in health and environment, most recently as Chief Executive of the National Mental Health Commission.”
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MEDIA RELEASE
Monday, 12 October, 2015

My Health Record reboot must kick in with consumers

Consumers Health Forum welcomes the “rebooting” of the development of the My Health Record system and looks forward to active consumer involvement in its design.
“An effective eHealth system has the potential to transform health care in Australia, making it not only more safe and effective, but also enabling the development of more personally focused care,” the CEO of the Consumers Health Forum, Leanne Wells, said.
“We welcome the announcement by Health Minister Sussan Ley, of the eHealth Implementation Taskforce Steering Committee responsible for the establishment of the Australian Commission for eHealth. 
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Peaks angry aged care misses out on eHealth support

By Natasha Egan on October 12, 2015 in Technology Review
Aged care providers will not be offered any financial support by government to participate in the forthcoming trials of an opt-out eHealth system, Technology Review can confirm.
The revelation has drawn the ire of the aged care peaks, which have long been campaigning for the same kind of support other healthcare providers including GPs and private hospitals have received to connect to the eHealth system.
The government recently changed tack with the Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record (PCEHR) in response to a top-level review, allowing its $51 million trials to test opt-out arrangements for individuals, which would be rolled out nationally if successful.
The program also got a name change – to the My Health Record.
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Richard Royle named on My Health Record committee

October 12, 2015 | Posted in APHA News
Australian Private Hospitals Association (APHA) president Richard Royle has been named on the committee that will oversee the rebooted personalised My Health Record system for patients and doctors.
The My Health Record system is part of a $485 million package to strengthen and transform national digital health governance through an Australian Commission for eHealth.
“In this modern world where technology makes information sharing boundless, it is essential Australia has a national digital health system and My Health Record makes up an important part of this system,” Health Minister Sussan Ley said.
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Clinicians on FHIR

Posted on October 15, 2015 by Grahame Grieve
From very early in the FHIR project, we’ve been running Connectathons, where a group of people – mainly developers – gather to test one of a variety of exchange scenarios. The connectathons perform several key functions:
  • Build a community with practical experience using the specification
  • Accelerate the progress of specific functionality towards production
  • Provide detailed QA of the specification
However while these connectathons perform a thorough QA of parts of the specification, there’s others that they don’t check at all. Principally, this is whether the specification offers support for a broad – and realistic – set of clinical use cases. That’s because the developers involved in the technical connectathon pick simple data for the content that is not involved in their exchange concerns.
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Reducing the paperwork

14 October, 2015 Meg Pigram 
A majority of pharmacists see paper-optional prescriptions as key to preventing prescription fraud and misadventure, a new survey reveals.
More than half (62%) of respondents to the 2015 Pharmacy eHealth Survey saw e-scripts as a positive step for reducing crime and misuse, the survey revealed.
The survey, which was run on behalf of eRx Script Exchange, also found that 89% of respondents said that outside repeats and new patients are easier with e-scripts, while 87% said that dispensing is now faster and more accurate.
Just under half (46%) said dispensing efficiency and patient safety were major motivations for adopting the technology.
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Saluda spinal implant for pain relief heralded as 'breakthrough'

Date October 14, 2015 - 8:44PM

Harriet Alexander

Every minute of the night and day, for decades, Jaswir Grewal was in pain.
The constant ache in his back forced him to leave his jobs as a mechanic and banana grower. The pain troubled his sleep, made him irritable with his wife, depressed about his prospects and rarely left his thoughts. At times, he said, it felt like more than he could bear.
"It was like a bad toothache and a migraine all mixed in together. But those things are temporary and this was 24/7," he said.
"They put me on painkillers to stop the idea of depression or, dare I say, suicide, because something like that will push people to that point and I've been near there. It has been like that."
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Sonic buys stake in telehealth company

Serkan Ozturk | 14 October, 2015 |
Diagnostic and corporate giant Sonic Healthcare has taken a 12.5% stake in GP2U, the company that facilitates GP and other specialist consultations via Skype.
GP2U’s founder, Dr James Freeman, who now owns 40% of the business, said the move would allow a possible expansion of the business into services provided by Sonic in aged care and palliative care. 
“A lot of palliative care can be done by video without a doctor needing to be there for a physical home visit,” said Dr Freeman, a GP in Hobart.
“We could also have GPs who could check on residents of aged care homes via video and save on costs associated with transporting people to EDs when not required.”
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Carers struggle with technology demands, low incomes: survey

October 12, 2015
A carers' support group has warned against relying too heavily on technology to deliver aged care, disability and mental health services.
Carers SA said a range of changes at both state and federal levels could be making it harder rather than easier for people to get the support services they needed.
Carers chief executive officer Rosemary Warmington said the demand for carers was higher than ever but extra layers of complexity, such as a planned national carers digital gateway, might be unnecessary hurdles in what could already be a complex and stressful system to navigate.
"Carers have indicated that they want to access services from people and providers they trust and are familiar with," she said.
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Brand new eHealth strategy doomed to fail

I had an interesting experience recently. I participated in a webinar organised by the Department of Health. It was supposed to be a consultation of GPs about the uptake of eHealth.
It went something like this: “We want to gain feedback from GPs about how we can get you to use the eHealth. This is how we’re going to do it; we’ve already organised training and we’re kicking off after the Christmas break. But before we start this session you must know that we cannot consider other options or timeframes.”
I was speechless. Literally – as I was not allowed to speak. I could only send little text messages via the closed online question platform. I was unable to see the feedback from other online participants.

Meaningful use?

For years health providers have repeated the same message over and over: if you want to make eHealth successful please take us with you.
The government is talking about new incentive payments to practices, ‘refreshed’ training programs and opt-out instead of opt-in, but there is little mention about improvements that make health providers want to use the PCEHR (now called ‘My Health Record’).
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Parker Magin: Human factor

Parker Magin
Monday, 12 October, 2015
SEEKING answers to clinical questions which arise directly from patient care is an important element of clinical practice.
Framing the most appropriate answer to these questions is a vital factor in individual patient care — it is a basic component of evidence-based medicine. It is also an ideal opportunity for the clinician to expand their knowledge and skills base.
Some questions that arise in a consultation can be followed up and answered post-consultation but many need to be answered in “real time” within the consultation. Obtaining the right answers to clinical questions is singularly important for generalists, as GPs generally will have questions about treatments and diagnoses than specialists.
GP vocational trainees (registrars) have particular information needs given their relative inexperience of the wide breadth of primary care medicine. Registrars function, in many respects, as independent practitioners in regard to ordering tests, prescribing medication, referrals, etc, but also have recourse to assistance and advice from experienced GP supervisors within an apprenticeship-style model.
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Is medicine really having an Uber moment?

There has been a lot of interest in telehealth recently. In July, Telstra launched its ReadyCare scheme, which allows patients to have “treatment from a GP wherever you are and when you need it”.
And earlier this month saw the launch of another new service called Teleconsult, set up by an Australian respiratory physician. It allows doctors and patients to register online and communicate securely. These services join others that have existed over time, such as OzDocs Online.
They all work on the premise that there is significant scope for patients to interact with doctors in a myriad of ways other than by simply walking through the front door of the surgery.
‘Telehealth’ seems to involve a broad church of methods, from full-blown teleconferencing, through to email and the use of POTS: the Plain Old Telephone System.
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Pharmacists weigh the benefits of eRx Script Exchange

eRx Script Exchange today launched the results of its 2015 Pharmacy eHealth Survey identifying the business impact of ETP (electronic transfer of prescriptions) on community pharmacy since eRx’s launch in 2009.

A total of 740 pharmacies, representing 14% of Australia’s community pharmacy sector, took part in the survey, which ran in the first half of this year.
The survey honed in on four key areas of dispensing and workflow, patient outcomes, challenges and priorities, and innovations for the future.
Of the pharmacies that took part, 75% said that they find eRx valuable or extremely valuable, highlighting these key areas of benefit:
  • 89% said that outside repeats and new patients are now easier;
  • 87% said that dispensing is now faster and more accurate; and
  • 46% said that dispensing efficiency was the major motivation for using eRx, followed by patient safety.
Pharmacies also identified four distinct ETP priorities needed to further advance health and safety outcomes for Australian patients over the short and longer term.
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DHS CIO appeals to tech grads with a social conscience

Pilot recruitment drive to lure high performers into public service.

By Paris Cowan
Oct 12 2015 5:09PM
Department of Human Services CIO Gary Sterrenberg is attempting to lure 150 of the country’s best tech graduates into a career in the public service.
As part of a new pilot grad program, the CIO group is taking applications from grads until October 23, for positions within the DHS' Adelaide, Brisbane and Canberra ICT hubs.
Sterrenberg today called on in-demand science, technology, engineering and maths (STEM) grads to consider the national importance of the DHS when weighing up their career options.
“Not many people realise how big the department’s ICT operations are – our in-house technology workforce plays a crucial part in delivering over $100 billion in welfare payments to 7.3 million Australians each year,” he said.
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House of Reps approves release of de-identified welfare data

Anonymous payments records could be made public.

By Paris Cowan
Oct 13 2015 10:05AM
The House of Representatives yesterday passed a bill that could see vast troves of de-identified data on Australia’s welfare recipients released to the public.
After a number of unsuccessful attempts, the lower house finally ushered through the government's autumn red-tape reduction omnibus, designed to strip redundant legislation and unnecessary bureaucracy out of Australia’s laws.
Should it clear the Senate, schedule five of the omnibus bill will change welfare legislation in a way that allow for the release of “de-identified, aggregated data” for the purpose of policy, research and public transparency.
The data due to be released is collected under the acts governing family tax benefits, paid parental leave, social security and student allowances.
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Telstra’s muted AGM reflects investor contentment

Tim Boreham

Maybe it was the tempting odour of savoury morsels wafting from the lobby area into the auditorium.
Or perhaps it was Telstra’s pre-emptive effort to dull protests about the remuneration report with a lengthy explanatory oration from “rem” committee head John Mullen.
(But not enough to prevent a stiff 11 per cent protest vote on proxies, compared with 2 per cent last year).
Or maybe it was the goodwill towards the board’s CEO transition process that saw a proposal to grant new CEO Andy Penn up to $4.2 million of long-term incentive rights passed with only token protest.
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Enjoy!
David.