Quote Of The Year

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

or

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

Monday, October 26, 2015

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 26th 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

A quieter week, with ongoing stuff happening behind the scenes.
The Senate Estimates did show us how detached the DoH is with its e-Health expectations etc.
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Your safety can't be guaranteed in the use of IT for healthcare

Monday 19 October 2015 5:30PM (view full episode)
When you think of medical risk you might assume that the most harm would arise from surgery or multiple x-rays.
But what if the use of IT systems was causing you more harm than any visit to the GP?
Farah Magrabi says that this area of healthcare needs to be more thoroughly researched.
She has advised governments on IT-related patient harm in the US, UK and Australia.
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It’s all elementary for IBM supercomputer Watson

Chris Griffith

IBM’s supercomputer Watson became famous in 2011 after it beat humans in the US quiz show Jeopardy! but we can rest assured it’s unlikely to make us redundant anytime soon. If anything, we are increasingly putting Watson’s immense powers to greater use.
Peter Haggar, an IBM master inventor and technical leader of the Watson runtime platform, says it’s unlikely Watson would become more intelligent than ­humans in the near-term.
“I know that with Watson, some people have raised that concern but I don’t know if that’s likely in our lifetime and the way we’re positioning it is as a partner, as an enhancer,” Dr Haggar told The Australian. “Is Watson going to be making decisions about my health? The answer is ‘no’.”
Dr Haggar’s involvement began after Watson’s triumph at Jeopardy!. With the super computer pushing the boundaries of natural language processing and computer science at the time, Dr Haggar’s main job was to commercialise the technology, taking it out of the realm of pure research and into IBM’s product groups.
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Will doctors' diagnoses be obsolete in 20 years?

Paul Smith | 16 October, 2015 | 
The diagnostic skills of doctors will be obsolete in 20 years according to a politician responsible for the UK’s National Health Service.
While the debate rages in Australia over the future of Medicare, the UK's health minister has taken the argument one-step further by suggesting that it’s the future of doctors that is at stake.
Jeremy Hunt has claimed that doctors of the future will not have to make diagnoses due to increasingly powerful diagnostic tools, and the NHS must position itself to be ready for the technology when it becomes available. 
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Former e-Health chief dismisses privacy concerns

16 October 2015
THERE is no foundation to concerns that automatically signing up patients to the personally controlled e-health records scheme risks breaching human rights laws, says former eHealth policy chief and ex-AMA president Dr Mukesh Haikerwal.
The Melbourne GP, formerly Chief Clinical Lead at the National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA), says privacy safeguards are some of the strongest elements of the existing system.
Dr Haikerwal, a harsh critic of the progress of the e-Health uptake, says the unique Health Identifier fundamentally protects individuals and their health data.
“Of all the negativity around the tragic PCEHR – and a name change doesn’t help – the changes to the laws of privacy to allow the still poorly used but excellent ‘unique Health Identifier’ are very strong and protective of the rights of all Australians, and are the most robust aspect,” he says.
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Hundreds could be victim of identity theft scam targeting Medicare system, estimates hears

By political reporter  Stephanie Anderson
Posted yesterday at 11:29pm
Hundreds of Australians could have had their identity stolen as part of a scam targeting the Medicare system, Senate estimates has heard.
There have been 369 cases of potential identity theft in the two years to June 2015, prompting the establishment of a police strike force to investigate whether the personal information of customers had been accessed and altered to obtain the sham payments.
No confirmation on any cases has been given by the Department of Human Services.
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New website empowers patients

16 October, 2015 Clare Pain 
A new website from Arthritis Australia aimed at patients aged 18-49 with inflammatory disease should be a boon to patients and doctors alike.
Professor Michelle Leech, who was not involved in the development of the website, told Rheumatology Update: ”The EMPOWERED website has only just launched, but I’ve already recommended it to many patients.”
It provides information for patients at various stages of inflammatory arthritis, with much of the content as video interviews. The site is aimed at people with rheumatoid arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis and psoriatic arthritis.   
Prof Leech says she has treated many young patients. “I think young people with arthritis are deeply fearful and worried that they are going to be crippled and that they are going to lose their livelihood, their function and their relationships.”
She says patients who might get arthritis in their 30s are fearful of how they will be in their 70s and imagine they will be in a wheelchair.
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Online medical workers change the way we see, hear and feel

A Melbourne company has combined audiology and information and communication technology in a service selling do-it-yourself hearing aids online.
The iHearYou service — offered by Blamey Saunders hears — bypasses audiology clinics, saving clients thousands of dollars, the company’s executive director, operations Peter Blamey says.
He says: “iHearYou reduces common barriers to getting hearing aids, such as cost and distance from service providers.”
Blamey and his team have made the finals of the Health category of The Australian Innovation Challenge awards with iHearYou.
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'No bungle' over PCEHR rebrand, declares Govt

Serkan Ozturk | 22 October, 2015 | 
Only months after its high-profile rebranding of the PCEHR, the Federal Government is denying it has been involved in another “bureaucratic bungle" over its new name.
The name of the moribund PCEHR has been changed to myHealth Record as part of a multimillion dollar attempt to breathe life into a system that most doctors do not use.
It was dubbed the myHR for short, but it turned out the acronym had already been trademarked 15 years ago by AON Hewitt, one of the world’s largest financial services firms.
Last December, the government launched legal proceedings in the Federal Court of Australia to use the letters as part of its e-health revamp.
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Media release
Tuesday 20 October, 2015

eHealth can deliver better health, and protect privacy

An effective national eHealth system would deliver significant benefits to patients and taxpayers and it would be concerning if solvable concerns over privacy created unnecessary hurdles to the full development of eHealth, the Consumers Health Forum says.
Parliament’s Joint Committee on Human Rights has raised concerns about “limitations” to the right to privacy under the Government’s proposed change to an “opt out” system.  The opt out change would ensure all Australians were automatically included in national electronic patient records system unless they requested not to be part of the system.
Currently the eHealth system is based on an opt-in approach under which individuals have to take active steps to sign on to the system.  “The result has been lacklustre, with only about 10 per cent of Australians joining over the past three years ” says CHF Chief Executive Officer, Leanne Wells.
“We would be concerned if the new MyHealth Record project was weighed down over concerns with privacy of the kind raised by the Committee in such a way as to hinder progress of this long-awaited reform..
“”Patient and system benefits far outweigh privacy concerns although that is not to say that patient privacy does not need active management safeguards.  The choice to opt out of the scheme would remain available for people who have privacy concerns.
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App Review: Evidence-based information on tap

20 October 2015
DYNAMED is a point-of-care reference tool aimed at the primary care practitioner. Founded by a family physician, Dr Brian Alper, it is a direct competitor to the better known UpToDate. It covers more than 3200 topics and monitors more than 500 journals.
DynaMed is available online and now as an app which comes free with the online subscription. I road-tested the new DynaMed Plus app, which is an upgrade from the basic DynaMed app, which is still available.
The main page of the app has a search function which is the key to unlocking the extensive information available in the app. The search function can also be used to search for images and calculators, as well as drug information.
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Case study - ACT Health’s use of IHIs to reduce duplicate records

Created on Wednesday, 21 October 2015
The Healthcare Identifiers (HI) Service and National Authentication Service for Health (NASH) are key foundations of the national eHealth system.
The HI Service ensures that individuals, healthcare providers and healthcare organisations are identified consistently and securely, despite changes in demographic details over time.
NASH enables secure transfer of electronic health information and authentication of senders and receivers of information.
An issue of growing concern for jurisdictions and healthcare organisations is duplicate patient records.  A duplicate patient record occurs when a single patient is associated with more than one patient record. The ability to associate patient records to the correct patient has become increasingly complicated as healthcare organisations use multiple systems for clinical, administrative, and specialty services.
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Turnbull promises national digital identity, fintech committee

Government tables long-awaited response to FSI report.

The federal government has adopted the majority of recommendations made in last year's financial systems inquiry report, promising to deliver a national federated digital identity framework and a public-private sector innovation committee for the financial sector.
In its long-awaited response to the December 2014 report, tabled today [pdf], the federal government also said it would ask the Productivity Commission to review options to improve data-sharing within the sector, and remove regulatory impediments to modern product information disclosure.
By the end of next year, the government also intends to consider how to amend priority areas of regulation to make it technology neutral.
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Orwell returns: Government promises to implement digital ID for all

COMMENT: After being returned to office in 1987, Prime Minister Bob Hawke triumphantly announced that he now had a mandate to introduce an ID card for all Australian residents. Such was the outcry, that Hawke backed down and talk of the card disappeared into the ether. In 2015, the Orwellian Australia Card has returned in the form of a digital ID.
Buried deep in the bowels of the 32 page Government Response to Financial System Inquiry report by former Commonwealth Bank CEO David Murray, were some chilling sentences that confirmed the Government’s intentions to figuratively stamp the biblical mark of the beast’ on every Australian residents’ foreheads.
In actual fact, the ‘mark of the beast’ happens to be a national system to implement a digital identity for all individuals, which was recommended by Murray in his report.
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The 'uberisation' of medicine is underway

John Kron | 21 October, 2015 |
Tech experts claim healthcare is ripe for 'disruption'. And it is already happening. Australian Doctor investigates.
At his first press conference as Prime Minister that Malcolm Turnbull made his statement about "disruption".
"We cannot be defensive, we cannot future-proof ourselves," he said. "We have to recognise that the disruption that we see driven by technology, the volatility and change is our friend ... if we are agile and smart enough to take advantage of it."
This volatility has been seen everywhere — as friend and foe — in the media, in the travel business, in publishing, and even in the taxi business.
And if you have been hit by the blizzard of medical media stories with a tech theme in recent months, you'll know that now it's hitting general practice.
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New openEHR Whitepaper – for an open platform future

Posted on by wolandscat
Today saw the release of a new openEHR whitepaper, which provides a nice summary of open platforms thinking for e-health. From the executive summary:
The key elements of openEHR’s strategic value to future development are:
  • Technically it is a platform approach, rather than a ‘set of standards’ or monolithic specification or product;
  • It offers the most comprehensive semantic framework available in e-health, combining formal clinical modelling, terminology, and a services infrastructure;
  • It deals directly with the very difficult challenges of e-health, including semantic scalability – handling complex and constantly changing information and clinical workflows, forever;
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The device that stops diabetics dying in their sleep

October 21, 2015 5:39am
Sue Dunlevy News Corp Australia Network
EXCLUSIVE
DANIELLA Meads-Barlow died in her sleep in the week she was to start the HSC because she couldn’t access technology that would have managed her diabetes and saved her life.
Now her mother Donna is fighting to get a government subsidy for a $5,000 continuous blood glucose monitoring device for the 130,000 Type 1 diabetes patients at risk of dying in the same way.
“She went to bed a happy, healthy 17 year old with a blood sugar level of 12.2, which is safe to go to bed,” says Ms Meade Barlow.
“When I went to wake her at 6.30am to go to school she had passed away during the night.”
Daniella’s blood glucose level had dropped so quickly she had experienced a seizure and gone into a coma.
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Health Informatics New Zealand Conference, Christchurch

Tuesday, 20 October 2015, 10:18 am
Speech: New Zealand Government
Hon Dr Jonathan Coleman
Minister of Health
20 October 2015
Speech
Health Informatics New Zealand Conference, Christchurch
Opening
Thank you for inviting me here today to open the 2015 Health Informatics New Zealand conference – the most important fixture on the health IT calendar.
It’s great to be in the South Island – the first time in 14 years the conference has been held here.
I’d like to acknowledge Liz Schoff, HiNZ chair, and David Meates, chief executive of Canterbury DHB.
Attending the HINZ conference in Auckland last year was one of my first speeches as a Minister of Health. I am pleased to be part of your conference again this year. You have chosen a highly relevant and important theme - Collaborate: Share. Solve. Achieve. Measure.
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E-health records in Government's sights again after 2014 target missed

Health Minister Jonathan Coleman says information technology has a 'crucial role' in making the health system more 'sustainable'.
Electronic health records are back on the Government's agenda after it missed a target of introducing them by 2014.
A government source said without electronic health records, patients could not assume healthcare providers would always have access to key clinical information about them, such as whether they were allergic to a common drug such as penicillin.
Health Minister Jonathan Coleman told a conference in Christchurch that the Government had commissioned consultants Deloitte to undertake a study into the benefits of electronic health records.
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NZ announces plan for single national e-health record

Thursday, October 22, 2015 - 14:21
The New Zealand government has announced plans to build a single, national electronic health record (EHR) able to be accessed via portals and apps running on a variety of devices.
Minister of Health Dr Jonathan Coleman said a report on the benefits of an electronic health records had been commissioned from consulting firm Deloitte which found that there is growing international support for adopting a “Hybrid/Best of Suite strategy for Electronic Health Records, where a ‘single’ EHR is introduced to join up information held in a smaller number of Electronic Medical Record systems.”
The Deloitte report will be published shortly on the Ministry of Health website
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Social media usage linked to kids’ mental health

  • AAP
  • October 22, 2015 12:00AM
Children who spend more than three hours a day on social media websites are twice as likely to suffer mental health issues, according to a new study.
The websites were blamed for higher levels of emotional problems, issues with other children and hyperactivity.
A report from Britain’s Office for National Statistics found 37 per cent of children spent no time on social networking websites while 56 per cent spent up to three hours. About 8 per cent of schoolchildren spent more than three hours on sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest and Snapchat on a typical day in 2012-13.
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New skin to give amputees full range of touch

John Ross

Researchers have moved bionics to the next level with an electronic “skin” that could be pasted on to prosthetic limbs, giving amputees the full range of touch.
Stanford University scientists have developed an organic electronic circuit that mimics the sensory mechanisms of living skin.
The breakthrough, reported in  Science, could overcome a key ­failing of artificial limbs. Lack of tactile feedback ­limits what people can do with their prostheses.
The new technology could also remove the need for convoluted wiring as well as eliminate the traumatic phantom limb pain that afflicts about four out of five amputees.
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NSW government signs Microsoft for cloud services

Five state government departments will gain access to Microsoft Office 365 and the tech giant's other cloud and mobility services under the deal.
By Corinne Reichert | October 22, 2015 -- 01:19 GMT (12:19 AEDT) | Topic: Cloud
The New South Wales government has announced a cloud computing contract for an undisclosed amount with Microsoft, aimed at digitising services and improving efficiency and productivity across agencies.
The agreement, announced by the state government on Thursday morning, will see Microsoft provide cloud and mobility services including Office 365 through its local datacentres to 130,000 employees across five departments: The Department of Health; the Department of Finance, Services, and Innovation; the Department of Family and Community Services; the Department of Planning and Environment; and the Department of Justice.
According to NSW Minister for Finance, Services, and Property Dominic Perrottet, using the suite of collaborative technologies will break down agencies' silos, encouraging departmental information sharing, as well as improving efficiency.
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Enjoy!
David.

Sunday, October 25, 2015

I Wonder Do Consumers Know Just What Nonsense About e-Health Is Being Spoken In Their Name?

This appeared during the week:
Media release
Tuesday 20 October, 2015

 eHealth can deliver better health, and protect privacy

An effective national eHealth system would deliver significant benefits to patients and taxpayers and it would be concerning if solvable concerns over privacy created unnecessary hurdles to the full development of eHealth, the Consumers Health Forum (CHF) says.
Parliament’s Joint Committee on Human Rights has raised concerns about “limitations” to the right to privacy under the Government’s proposed change to an “opt out” system.  The opt out change would ensure all Australians were automatically included in national electronic patient records system unless they requested not to be part of the system.
Currently the eHealth system is based on an opt-in approach under which individuals have to take active steps to sign on to the system.  “The result has been lacklustre, with only about 10 per cent of Australians joining over the past three years ” says CHF Chief Executive Officer, Leanne Wells.
“We would be concerned if the new MyHealth Record project was weighed down over concerns with privacy of the kind raised by the Committee in such a way as to hinder progress of this long-awaited reform..
“”Patient and system benefits far outweigh privacy concerns although that is not to say that patient privacy does not need active management safeguards.  The choice to opt out of the scheme would remain available for people who have privacy concerns.
“The Consumers Health Forum has strongly supported an opt out approach, with rigorous privacy and security safeguards, because we believe a population-wide eHealth system will deliver substantial advantages to patient care and a cost effective health system.
“It is remarkable that the health system so often remains blinkered by 20th Century paper-based communications.  In an era when much of everyday life is assisted by information technology, the health system which itself is so dependent on accessible, accurate and speedy information, is still often depending on insecure and inefficient faxes.
“Australia needs to move to population-wide eHealth so that everybody can benefit from fewer mistakes, less duplication of tests and scans and a vastly improved, de-identified population health information system that can reveal the strengths and weaknesses of the system and guide better treatments and consumer knowledge.
“Experience in countries like the United Kingdom and New Zealand has found that an opt-out approach has been well-received.  It’s time for Australia to move on,” Ms Well said.
The Consumers Health Forum has written to the chairman of the Joint Committee on Human Rights, Mr Philip Ruddock, expressing its concerns about the report which can be found at: http://www.aph.gov.au/Parliamentary_Business/Committees/Joint/Human_Rights/Completed_inquiries/2015/Twenty-ninth_Report_of_the_44th_Parliament
ENDS
The release will be found at their website - when they actually put it on their site.
This is a classic example of the ‘magical thinking’ we see from non-technically sophisticated organisations who seem, for reasons that are not clear, to take the view that ‘more ehealth is good’ and less ehealth is bad!
First - take this paragraph:
“It is remarkable that the health system so often remains blinkered by 20th Century paper-based communications.  In an era when much of everyday life is assisted by information technology, the health system which itself is so dependent on accessible, accurate and speedy information, is still often depending on insecure and inefficient faxes.
I assume this means that their view is that most GPs are running their practices on paper and are not using electronic communications to and from pathology and radiology providers. That is just plain wrong for most! They just have zilch interest by and large in the flawed PCEHR
Second - take this paragraph:
“Australia needs to move to population-wide eHealth so that everybody can benefit from fewer mistakes, less duplication of tests and scans and a vastly improved, de-identified population health information system that can reveal the strengths and weaknesses of the system and guide better treatments and consumer knowledge.
All this requires GPs with even more improved quality systems - not a secondary PCEHR. Worse, of course we see the Government agenda (the CHF gets lot of government funding)  and of course what is wanted by the CHF is a huge data-base to mine.
Third the CHF would do well to investigate the fate of the care.data system in the UK. Given it was opt-out and public concerns had it deferred / shut down maybe it is not time to ‘move-on’.
Fourth just what justifies the CHF trying to just shut down discussion when even the Labor inventors of the PCEHR plan a Senate enquiry to look at the matters raised by the Committee.
There are a lot of people who have health information privacy concerns and just imagining that DoH will address the complex issues raised by the Committee to everyone’s satisfaction is fantasy - on the basis of their track record to date.
The PCEHR is a system which lacks evidence for both clinical utility, value and safety and was ill conceived. With opt-out there is also a significant risk it will become even more privacy invasive. Until clear and valid responses to all the concerns raised by the HR Committee are made available and seen to be reasonable, the evidence free assertions of the CHF are frankly just insulting.
David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 293 – Results – 25th October, 2015.

Here are the results of the poll.

Will The Move To Opt-Out Patient Enrolment Into The PCEHR Make The System A Positive Clinical Success?

Yes 5% (6)

Undecided 1% (1)

No 92% (105)

I Have No Idea 2% (2)

Total votes: 114

As decisive a poll as we have ever seen on the little poll. Opt-Out not such a good idea!

Good to see such a great number of responses!

Again, many, many thanks to all those that voted!

David.

Saturday, October 24, 2015

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links -24th October, 2015.

Note: Each link is followed by a title and few paragraphs. For the full article click on the link above title of the article. Note also that full access to some links may require site registration or subscription payment.
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IBM Says Watson Poised to Make Medical Breakthroughs

OCT 16, 2015 7:53am ET
The crush of Big Data in healthcare is creating information overload challenges that can only be solved by the cognitive computing capabilities of IBM’s Watson supercomputer, one of the company's executives contends.
By quickly identifying patterns and insights from the tsunami of data, Watson is designed to find the proverbial needle in a haystack that will lead to medical breakthroughs and better patient care.
So says Mike Svinte, vice president of global client engagement for IBM Watson Health, a business unit launched in April to help physicians, researchers, insurers and patients leverage big data, analytics and mobile technology to achieve better outcomes.
“Each one of us in this room will generate the equivalent of 300 million books of data—the challenge is how do we take advantage of that data,” said Svinte on Thursday during a keynote session at the MedTech 2015 conference in Buffalo, N.Y. “A vast amount of untapped data could have a great impact on our health yet it exists outside medical systems.”
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CIOs share meaningful use concerns at CHIME

Posted on Oct 16, 2015
By Bernie Monegain, Editor-at-Large
To say the final rule on Stage 2 of meaningful use and, the accompanying Stage 3 requirements work for CIOs who have to help implement them at their hospitals and health systems, would be a stretch.
Two separate sessions at the CHIME15 Annual Forum on Thursday indicated there remained ambiguity, anticipated difficulties and a short window for attesting to having met the measures.
Liz Johnson, RN, CIO of acute care hospitals and applied clinical informatics at Tenet Healthcare, and Pam McNutt, senior vice president and CIO at Methodist Health System teamed up Thursday morning to highlight some of the potential pitfalls to avoid.
"You guys really care about meaningful use to be here at 7 a.m.," Johnson remarked. "We feel your pain, and we'll try to share with you our insights."
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Global health IT market to reach $104B+ by 2020: 7 key trends

Written by Anuja Vaidya | October 15, 2015
The global healthcare IT market is set for rapid growth in the near future, according to a new report by Grand View Research.
Here are seven key trends:
1. The market is expected to reach value of $104.5 billion by 2020.
2. Increasing demand for enhanced healthcare facilities and introduction of technologically advanced systems are expected to boost market growth.
3. Electronic health records are expected to reach up to $26.72 billion in 2020.
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Seizures and Mosquitoes: The Rewards of Working Smarter With Data Science

by Ray Guzman Friday, October 16, 2015
Big Data has been defined as the oil of the 21st century. Just as crude oil must be refined into gasoline to power our cars, the large, complex data sets big data comprise aren't much use until they're honed into actionable insights. Data science deploys a range of tools --- from crowdsourcing to visualization -- to capitalize on the promise of big data.
Until recently, the U.S. health care system has been less than immersed in the big data revolution. What drives most providers are issues of compliance or the avoidance of financial penalties, such as those associated with readmission.
But the landscape is changing. Instead of looking at a population of diabetics and asking retrospective questions, such as "What percentage required hospitalization? For how long?," big data can help answer specific questions around a given population, diagnosis or risk factor. This intelligence is the fuel that providers need to produce the most effective, personalized intervention.
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HIT Vendors Seek Clarification of Info Blocking

OCT 15, 2015 7:55am ET
With much fanfare, the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology in April sent a report to Congress on the problem of electronic health information blocking.
Now, the HIMSS Electronic Health Record Association is taking ONC to task for its definition of information blocking.
“We believe that information blocking definitely needs to be addressed where it occurs if it’s intentional and unreasonable, based on the current ONC definition,” says Sarah Corley, M.D., EHRA vice chair and chief medical officer for NextGen Healthcare. “Where we need clarity is more examples of what is information blocking, because the devil is in the details.”
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Behavioral health data 'burdens EHRs'

Posted on Oct 15, 2015
By Mike Miliard, Editor
We've heard often lately that for population health to truly live up to its promise, behavioral health data will need to be much better integrated into the care process. But in their current state, at least, EHRs still might not be the best tools to help.
A recent study led by University of Colorado researchers and published in the Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine suggests that integration of behavioral health and primary care is still somewhat problematic thanks to EHR limitations.
"Almost half the U.S. population will meet the criteria for a mental health disorder during their lifetime," researchers write in the report, Electronic Health Record Challenges, Workarounds, and Solutions Observed in Practices Integrating Behavioral Health and Primary Care. "However, less than two thirds of these individuals will receive treatment. The prevalence and need for treatment of behavioral health disorders, which affect a broad percentage of the population, makes the case for integrated care."
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NHS e-Referral Service fails to report

Rebecca McBeth
12 October 2015
The NHS e-Referral Service is not producing any reports for users nearly four months after go-live.
Users of the electronic booking service were told that reports would not initially be available for the go-live of the new service in June of this year, but that they would be up and running in August.
However, the Health and Social Care Information Centre says it has been focusing on ensuring the service is running effectively and is, “now progressing towards making reports and extracts available”.
The information centre could not provide a date for the reporting function to start working again, but said it will, “provide an update on timings in the near future”.
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Patient data: not sharing a 'breach'

Thomas Meek
14 October 2015
GPs could be investigated for failing to share patient data when there is a duty to do so, according to the Information Commissioner’s Office.
Speaking at the recent Healthcare Efficiency Through Technology event in London, Dawn Monaghan, group manager for public services at the ICO, said that any GP who steadfastly refuses to share data with other health and care professionals at the point of care could be in breach of the Data Protection Act.
“What we would do actually is hold GPs to account if they were absolutely, categorically not sharing any data whatsoever when there should be times they are sharing,” she said.
“If that is the case, that might be considered unfair and a breach of principle one [of the Data Protection Act] depending on the circumstance. If that was brought to us as a complaint we would look at it.”
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NHS 24 IT system £41m over budget

Thomas Meek
14 October 2015
A project to implement a new IT system at Scotland’s NHS 24 is now £41.6 million over budget and more than two years behind schedule, according to a report by the Auditor General for Scotland.
The cost of upgrading NHS 24’s core telephone and online technology as part of a 'Future Programme' is now estimated at £117.4 million, more than 55% higher than the original estimate of £75.8 million.
The inflated cost is primarily due to delays in implementing the new system at NHS 24, which provides online and telephone-based health information and advice to the public in Scotland.
The new technologies were meant to be rolled out in June 2013, but a series of failures has meant implementation has been pushed back until the end of this month.
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Theranos disputes former employees' claims about test inaccuracy

October 15, 2015 | By Katie Dvorak
Health startup Theranos Inc. has made a name for itself in the industry by offering lab tests that require just a few drops of blood, but four former employees have claimed that this highly touted technology is used for just a small portion of the company's tests, the Wall Street Journal reported.
According to the former employees of the California-based company, who remain unnamed, the technology was used for only 15 out of more than 240 types of tests in 2014.
Further, the four were unsure of the accuracy of the Edison machine, which is used to test the blood samples, they told WSJ. In particular, one employee complaint to regulators alleged that Theranos failed to disclose the results of a report that cast doubt on the accuracy of its system.
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Healthcare providers falling short with identity access management

Posted on Oct 14, 2015
By Erin McCann, Managing Editor
When it comes to identity access management, most hospitals and healthcare providers are doing it all wrong.
At least that's according to a new report, conducted by security software provider IS Decisions, which found that despite HIPAA security rule which requires covered entities to implement technical policies around access management the lion's share of staff are struggling big time.
In fact, some 63 percent of them say they are able to log on to different devices and workstations at the same time. About half of them are required to log off manually, and about 30 percent do not have unique login credentials.
What's perhaps even more concerning is that a staggering 82 percent of healthcare staff say they have access to patient data, but just under a third of them actually don't have unique logins for the access.
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Doctors Lack Basic Knowledge about Their Patients, Survey Finds

OCT 14, 2015 7:49am ET
More than half of patients report that their medical history is missing or incomplete when they visit their doctor, and nearly half say their physician is not aware of what prescriptions they are taking.
Those are some of the results of a recent survey from health information network vendor Surescripts, which links providers to pharmacies. Other findings: 61 percent of those surveyed indicate their doctor does not know their allergies, 44 percent of physicians are unaware of hospitalizations or visits with other doctors, and 40 percent do not know about recent surgeries.
“This is a particular problem for patients with multiple illnesses and multiple physicians,” says Paul Uhrig, chief privacy officer for Surescripts. “What we’re talking about are fundamental gaps in doctors’ knowledge of people’s medical histories.”
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Jeb Bush health plan would 'reboot' Meaningful Use

October 14, 2015 | By Dan Bowman
Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush, in unveiling his plan to reform the current healthcare system, said the electronic health record incentive program needs a "reboot," during a speech delivered Tuesday in New Hampshire.
President Barack Obama, through the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act and the Meaningful Use program, had a "golden opportunity" to make medical recordkeeping more efficient, shareable and secure, according to the former Florida governor. Instead, he said, more complexity has been created.
"The simple fact is that the information technology funding through the stimulus was not focused on creating a shared platform from all of us to benefit," Bush said.
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NIST: Patient safety risks stem from poorly designed EHRs

Jeff Rowe
Oct 13, 2015
Less than optimal design of EHRs doesn’t just make them harder to use.  It can make them dangerous.
So argues a recent paper from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), which was developed in order to provide an "empirical rationale" for standardized patient safety-focused usability guidelines. In order to capture a broad range of user expectations, knowledge and outcomes concerning EHRs, researchers used five different methods of empirical human performance data collection, including online surveys, on-site observations, follow-up interviews with users, usability testing of five different EHRs and expert reviews of those same EHRs.
According to the paper, “human factors guidelines for standardization . . . are provided to improve the safety-related usability of EHRs” in three different risk areas:
1) Consistently displaying information critical to patient identification in a reserved area to avoid “wrong patient” errors;
2) Providing cues to reduce the risk of entering information and writing orders in the wrong patient’s chart; and
3) Supporting efficient and easy identification of inaccurate, outdated or inappropriate items in lists of grouped information by having information presented clearly and in a well-organized manner.
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Deloitte: Consumers using more healthcare technology

Posted on Oct 13, 2015
By Bernie Monegain, Editor-at-Large
Americans are increasing their use of technology to improve their health, navigate the health system and flex their shopping muscles, according to a new report from The Deloitte Center for Health Solutions.
The report, "Health Care Consumer Engagement: No One-Size-Fits-All Approach," found that 22 percent of respondents used technology to access, store and transmit health records in the last year, up from 13 percent in 2013. Use was higher for those with major chronic conditions: 32 percent compared to 19 percent in 2013.
The study also shows that 16 percent of respondents who needed care went online for cost information, up from 11 percent in 2013. Millennials in this group increased the most, 27 versus 17 percent. Further, 71 percent of all those surveyed said they have not gone online for cost information but are "very" or "somewhat" likely to use a pricing tool in the future. 
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Why HIE design must focus on doctors' needs

October 13, 2015 | By Susan D. Hall
Health information exchanges hold the potential to improve clinical data sharing, yet many overlook an essential early step--understanding how clinicians use the information they're requesting.
A study published at BMC Medical Informatics & Decision Making highlights how a user needs assessment can help doctors make better use of information from outside sources.
The researchers found that 13.7 percent of hospitalizations generate at least one request for outside information, which takes, on average, 18 hours to receive. This information was coming by fax, which then was scanned into the electronic medical record, but also could be available on paper.
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5 ways hospitals can beat the 'weekend effect' in surgical outcomes

October 9, 2015 | By David Ferguson
Hospitals can take five actions to fight the higher rate of complications, mortalities and readmissions for surgical patients who undergo emergency procedures on the weekend, also known as the "weekend effect," according to a Loyola University Medical Center and Loyola University Chicago study.
That study found that "(t)he chance of death was 8 percent higher in 11 hospitals in England, 13 percent greater in five hospitals in the United States and 20 percent more likely in six Dutch hospitals."
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Health 2.0 Confronts Entrenched Health Challenges

by Rebecca Vesely, iHealthBeat Contributing Reporter Tuesday, October 13, 2015
What are the most difficult health problems facing communities today? Many speakers at the 9th annual Health 2.0 conference in Santa Clara last week pointed to the basics: safe streets, clean air and water, secure housing, nutritious food, companionship and access to primary care.
All affect health outcomes. And as providers increasingly are held accountable for the total health of their patients, new approaches,  including "population heath management" technology, are playing a bigger role.
While many said technology can be helpful to improve lives, some remain skeptical that digital innovators are aligned with patient and provider needs.
In a keynote address at the conference, U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy said that in his travels around the country he hears "a sense of disempowerment that is deeply disturbing to me." Technology has the potential to help create a culture of prevention by giving people the tools to help them regain that lost power over their lives, he said.
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NIST issues EHR guide to improve usability, patient safety

Posted on Oct 12, 2015
By Mike Miliard, Editor
Bad EHR design can lead to data entry errors and risky workarounds that could jeopardize patient safety, according to a new document from NIST, which outlines ways to spot critical areas of risk and methods for improving user-centered design.
Aiming to provide an "empirical rationale" to drive standardized patient safety-focused usability guidelines, the NIST report takes aim at so-called "never events," working proactively to mitigate root causes of electronic health record use errors caused by suboptimal design and implementation.
"The ultimate goal is to drive and empower effective and safe human performance in the use of EHRs," officials write.
Researchers looked at five methods of human performance data collection, drawn from "different disciplines, backgrounds and perspectives." Multiple forms of data were gathered from these varying user types, enabing a more comprehensive look at the many ways EHRs are used.
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Researchers: IOM recommendations could have altered course of Texas Ebola case

October 12, 2015 | By Susan D. Hall
In a call to action on the Institute of Medicine report "Improving Diagnosis in Health Care," authors of a new Health Affairs Blog post outline how its recommendations could have changed things when a patient with Ebola came into a Texas emergency department.
The authors--Dean Sittig, a professor in the School of Biomedical Informatics at the University of Texas, Health Sciences Center at Houston, and Hardeep Singh, chief of the health policy, quality and informatics program at the VA Health Services Research Center for Innovations--say that EHR design and competing demands, such as meeting quality measures, can make nurses more focused on flu shot status than on travel history. And vital information captured in nurses' templates often never makes it onto doctors' radar.
When Thomas Eric Duncan initially came into the Dallas ED, a triage nurse recorded his vital signs and travel history to West Africa using standard EHR-based nursing documentation templates. However, the ED physician did not see these notes. Duncan was prescribed antibiotics, told to take Tylenol and sent home. He later returned to the hospital and died of Ebola last October.
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Enjoy!
David.