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."

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

This Is A Pretty Sad Story With An Important Lesson Or Two Regarding Use Of Prescribing Systems.

This very sad story appeared a little while ago.

Censured GP blames lack of 'red flag' alerts for script errors

| 6 July, 2016
A country GP who prescribed contraindicated antihypertensives to a pregnant woman whose baby died has put the error down to 'red flag' alerts being switched off on his software.
Dr Sunil Kumar Dan, a 73-year-old GP who has practiced in Moree in NSW for more than 30 years, has been found guilty of unprofessional conduct over the treatment of a patient during several antenatal visits in 2012 in a decision of the Medical Council of NSW’s Professional Standards Committee.
The woman was nine weeks pregnant during the first antenatal visit in July 2012 with Dr Dan, her GP of over 20 years who had been treating her for hypertension since 2009.
At the appointment, the woman presented with a BP reading of 115/79mmHg and left-sided chest wall pain, and Dr Dan noted she would stop taking Caduet due to pregnancy.
But when the woman returned one month later, the GP prescribed Micardis Plus despite recording her BP as 101/67 and the drug being contradindicated in pregnancy.
On 21 September, the woman returned at 17 weeks gestation, when Dr Dan recorded a BP of 100/50 and chest wall pain, and prescribed Caduet.
In November, Dr Dan prescribed the woman with a third contraindicated medication, Celebrex, for a knee complaint.
He later told the professional standards committee he had known at the time that this would mean she was now taking the so-called “triple whammy” combination of an ACE inhibitor, thiazide diuretic and NSAID which can result in renal failure, but he felt a short course of Celebrex was “preferable to doing nothing”.
The woman returned at 26-weeks gestation and again the GP prescribed Micardis Plus and Caduet.
The woman’s baby later died; however, it is not detailed in the decision whether this was in utero or following birth.  
In its finding, the professional standards committee said the death was "likely to have been associated with the Micardis Plus and Caduet Patient A was inappropriately prescribed".
Lots more discussion here:
As you read the rest of the report it becomes clear that the GP was relying on the drug alert system in his practice system to make sure he was warned if he was prescribing medications which were not appropriate in pregnancy.
He claimed that the warning system had been turned off but surely that can’t be true. I can’t imagine any reason why, once a patient is recorded as being pregnant, anyone would not want to be warned if a drug was unsuitable for the pregnant and that any software provider would enable such a setting. For mine I would prefer to be warned if prescribing for women ‘of possible child bearing age’ if I was planning any medication that might threaten the child – so I could ask a few direct questions regarding pregnancy risk, and go from there.
This has to be one of a range of design decisions for practice / prescribing software that really must be carefully thought through to ensure patient safety, which is, after all the purpose of clinical software.
That said, we have to be clear it is the prescriber is ultimately responsible for all prescribing decisions and need to exercise more than due care at all times!
David.

Monday, July 18, 2016

Breaking News - Ms Sussan Ley Continues As Commonwealth Health Minister.

David.

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 18th July, 2016.

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

An interesting week with a fair bit of activity in the private and academic sector. Useful to see some stats on use of the myHR.
All seems to be very quiet on the ADHA front this week.
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8 July, 2016

GPs warming to e-health records

Posted by julie lambert
The financial pinch on GPs is clearly sharpening interest in electronic health records.
According to the latest figures, 1085 general practices uploaded health summaries to the My Health Record system in the week to 19 June, more than 2.5 times the weekly average of 400 a week during April.
In the same period, the number of health summaries uploaded has jumped from 2000-3000 per week to more than 8000, while the number of views by healthcare providers has shown a similar increase from around 400 per week to almost 1100.
The spurt in activity is clearly linked to the threatened loss of the eHealth Incentive PIP for practices that fail to upload a quota of shared health summaries under new rules adopted on 15 May.
“Following the implementation of these changes to the eHealth Incentive, use of the system by general practitioners has increased significantly,” a Health Department spokeswoman said.
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HealthTech makes a difference

Hello HealthTech — a technology challenge to improve Australia’s health care sector — is in full swing and iTWire readers can vote for the people’s choice.
Westpac’s head of healthcare, Leon Berkovich, said this year’s Innovation Challenge had attracted more than 250 applications from start-ups and entrepreneurs across Australia in just three weeks. It has announced the five finalists for its Innovation Challenge, a platform for entrepreneurs to put forward innovative solutions to further improve Australia’s healthcare sector.
“The quality and number of entrants have been fantastic, with ideas ranging from mobile health management applications to hospital and practice communication tools, data management solutions and modern diagnostics capabilities,” Berkovich said.
“I’d like to thank all of the entrepreneurs for submitting their ideas and congratulate this year’s finalists on being recognised among such a strong field of applicants. It’s fair to say there’s no shortage of innovative ideas on how to leverage technology to further improve the healthcare industry,” he added.
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Why 'medjacking' is a real and present danger

8 July 2016
MEDJACKING was thrust into the global consciousness when the US vice-president, no less, was assassinated before our very eyes, with his pacemaker being remotely ramped up to initiate fatal cardiac arrest. 
The demise of vice-president William Walden — okay, this was the TV drama Homeland, but obviously as close to real life as it comes — could have been brushed off as the stuff of fantasy.
But the fact that the then real holder of that office, Dick Cheney, reacted to the story by disconnecting the wireless function of his heart defibrillator suggested the cyber attack scenario was not too far-fetched.
And several years on, and the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) deemed it necessary to issue guidelines on the management of cybersecurity in medical devices.
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Vic Human Services under data protection probe

By Paris Cowan on Jul 15, 2016 11:17AM

State privacy commissioner steps in.

Victoria's Department of Health and Human Services says it welcomes impending scrutiny from the state’s privacy watchdog, after newspaper reports exposed serious shortcomings in the way the agency treats sensitive data.
The state's Commissioner for Privacy and Data Protection is preparing to launch a wide-ranging review of information controls at the DHHS.
A spokesperson for the office confirmed to iTnews that the commissioner had "served notice on DHHS to produce documents and information relating to the review".
"The commissioner urges all who consider that the security of their personal and sensitive information may have been compromised to contact our office on 1300 666 444," the spokesperson said.
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National Clinical Terminology Service Connectathon: 5-6 July 2016

Created on Friday, 15 July 2016
The Australian Digital Health Agency, HL7 Australia and CSIRO, gathered more than 40 national and international software developers and implementers in Sydney for the third National Clinical Terminology Service (NCTS) Connectathon.
Building on the previous two Connectathons (February and  May), the two-day session provided a further update on the NCTS and its use of the Health Level Seven (HL7) Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resource (FHIR®) specification.
The Connectathon was invaluable in providing further input into the development of the specifications and infrastructure for the NCTS, ahead of the upcoming public launch. This included specific discussion and feedback in relation to the specifications as well as understanding the priority functionality that implementers require.
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Google's AI is learning how to save your life

Health care is the next frontier for DeepMind, says researcher David Silver
AlphaGo's uncanny success at the game of Go was taken by many as a death knell for the dominance of the human intellect, but Google researcher David Silver doesn't see it that way. Instead, he sees a world of potential benefits.
As one of the lead architects behind Google DeepMind's AlphaGo system, which defeated South Korean Go champion Lee Se-dol 4 games to 1 in March, Silver believes the technology's next role should be to help advance human health.
"We'd like to use these technologies to have a positive impact in the real world," he told an audience of AI researchers Tuesday at the International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence in New York.
With more possible board combinations than there are atoms in the universe, Go has long been considered the ultimate challenge for AI researchers. AlphaGo was trained first on expert human moves, then on millions of games of self-play. In its victory against Se-dol, its moves were described by experts as "creative" in that they obviously didn't derive strictly from its training materials.
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What do some doctors have against smartphones?

12 July 2016

Used appropriately, smartphones and tablets can be a powerful adjuncts to learning, writes James Lawler. 

I’VE been warned by academics at my university multiple times before about using a smartphone or tablet during clinical placements, especially in general practice where I’ll soon start another rotation:
"It’s rude to use a mobile phone in General Practice."
"You might be looking up drug names to help your understanding, but the GP will think you are texting your friends and they will be offended."
"Use a clinical handbook instead if you want to read up whilst on placement."
Let me be clear – it is would be rude of me to be using my phone while someone – doctor or patient – was talking to me. It might also be rude to be constantly on my phone during consultations. But I’d argue it is only as rude as using the Oxford Handbook of Clinical Medicine in the same way.
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Federal election 2016: Medicare payments dated, says ex-AMA head

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM July 14, 2016

Sarah Elks

The Medicare payment system is antiquated, complicated and needs to be fixed, according to a former head of the Australian Medical Association.
Practising GP Steve Hambleton, deputy chairman of the Medical Benefits Schedule Review Taskforce, said the remit of the taskforce should be broadened to investigate an overhaul of the payments system.
“Anything that’s 30 years old needs to be fixed,” Dr Hambleton told The Australian. “By definition, it’s out of date … it’s all very complicated and antiquated. We (have) a Medicare Benefits Schedule Taskforce that’s looking at the whole schedule (to target obsolete rebate items), so it’s a good opportunity to have a look at the rest of the activity as well.”
The review, launched in April last year and headed by former Sydney Medical School dean Bruce Robinson, is examining the evidence base and usage of about 5700 items on the $21 billion MBS.
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To remain relevant, doctors should learn to write computer code

14 July 2016
COMMENT
Learning how to write Java, C or Python is no less important than learning about medians, modes and confidence intervals, writes cardiology registrar and software developer Dr Jerome Goldstein.
I WAS always certain my experience would be different to the factory workers replaced by cheaper and more efficient computerised machinery. But technology is changing the face of medicine so quickly that nobody is safe. Doctors included.
Doctors are naturally a conservative bunch. So it hardly surprises that it has taken the medical community some time, two decades to be exact, to embrace the wired world. But, on the whole, we are still bystanders.  So my question is, should we speed up our involvement? 
Here is your answer. Last month my hospital held its inaugural “hackathon”. Doctors and computer programmers sat together and collaborated. Congratulations to the organisers. It may have been the first of its kind in an Australian public hospital. But it is at least 10 years overdue.
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Is e-health contributing to doctor burnout?

Antony Scholefield | 12 July, 2016 | 
Health technology is supposed to make doctors’ work easier, but according to a US study, it could lead to higher rates of professional burnout.
Researchers from the Mayo Clinic found doctors who used electronic health records, and ordered medications and issued instructions electronically were generally less satisfied than those who did not.
Those using electronic systems were less likely to think the time they spent on clerical tasks relating to patient care was reasonable, and most didn’t think the systems increased their efficiency.
More worryingly, doctors using e-health systems had a 30% higher risk of burnout even after adjustments for hours worked, specialty, setting, sex and age.
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Censured GP blames lack of 'red flag' alerts for script errors

Tessa Hoffman | 6 July, 2016 |
A country GP who prescribed contraindicated antihypertensives to a pregnant woman whose baby died has put the error down to 'red flag' alerts being switched off on his software.
Dr Sunil Kumar Dan, a 73-year-old GP who has practiced in Moree in NSW for more than 30 years, has been found guilty of unprofessional conduct over the treatment of a patient during several antenatal visits in 2012 in a decision of the Medical Council of NSW’s Professional Standards Committee.
The woman was nine weeks pregnant during the first antenatal visit in July 2012 with Dr Dan, her GP of over 20 years who had been treating her for hypertension since 2009.
At the appointment, the woman presented with a BP reading of 115/79mmHg and left-sided chest wall pain, and Dr Dan noted she would stop taking Caduet due to pregnancy.
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Could visual analytics be the cure for Australia’s healthcare?

  • Charlie Farah
  • The Australian
  • 11:18AM July 11, 2016
Healthcare has always been an expensive necessity and remains a top priority, even if it is a strain on the wallet. As the world continues to age, we need to swallow an even more bitter pill: healthcare costs are only going to increase. With the Australian government cutting funding to services such as pathology and imaging, healthcare organisations are facing increased costs and several healthcare companies intend to pass these onto an ageing population. As life expectancy increases, so too does the amount we have to pay in order to sustain a good, healthy quality of life.
Healthcare wastage costs $20 billion a year in Australia, according to the government’s Health Safety and Quality Commission. There is the potential to cut 15 per cent off the $150 billion national health bill if health efficiency is improved and entrenched waste is eliminated. To reduce costs, organisations must find ways to be more efficient in their daily operations. Visual analytics — which helps us see the whole story in the data — can allow us to make and identify better business decisions and opportunities.
Visual analytics: A prescription for smart healthcare to reduce costs
With Australia’s healthcare system undergoing major reviews this year ahead of the upcoming budget, there is a growing need to optimise efficiencies in order to maintain high standards of performance and patient care services in the face of rising costs. Health fund members are bracing for premium hikes four times the inflation rate this April, as the government subsidy for health insurance falls from 30 per cent to 25 per cent. On average, health insurance premiums have been growing about 6 per cent a year.
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eHealth Queensland appoints former staffer Malcolm Thatcher as interim CEO/CIO

Queensland Health on the lookout for CEO/CIO to lead the IT and eHealth agenda
Jennifer O'Brien (CIO) 14 July, 2016 09:54
Long-time CIO of Mater Health Services, Malcolm Thatcher, has accepted the interim CIO/CEO position at eHealth Queensland, a seat vacated by Colin McCririck who left the position in January after reportedly being linked to a corruption scandal.
McCrinick, who was reportedly caught up in a nepotism scandal and stood aside for four months while the state’s Crime and Corruption Commission (CCC) investigated, was reinstated after the CCC made no findings against him.
However, he decided to quit the agency and ventured overseas to work for IBM in the United States.
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GP suspended after accessing wife's medical records

11 July 2016
A DOCTOR accused of domestic violence by his wife has been suspended after trawling through her medical records without her consent.
The wife of Dr Tahir Shah claimed their marriage was increasingly volatile and eventually led to a death threat against her.
She complained in June 2012 that he was looking through her medical records without permission.
In a sworn affidavit she said he replied to the effect: “Why not? You are mine, everything of yours is mine … I am your husband … I can check anything I want”.
He was then alleged to have described the Privacy Act as “westernised … rubbish”.
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Ursys Signs Capacity Deal with Optus Satellite

 [Via Satellite 07-12-2016] Optus Satellite has announced a new wholesale relationship with Ursys, a designer and provider of satellite based voice and data communications, specifically for complex networks in remote and rural areas.
Ursys will use dedicated satellite capacity on Optus’ D2 satellite, stationed at 152 degrees east, and will also have access to third party international satellite providers. In addition, Ursys will use Optus’ teleport facilities at Belrose, north of Sydney, and the wider Optus infrastructure.
A current initiative of Ursys is Remote Outback Satellite Infrastructure e-Health (ROSIE), a tele-health network for 23 remote health clinics across North Western Australia, the Northern Territory and South Australia. ROSIE uses commercial grade communications services to enable health applications normally only available in city or regional clinics. These applications allow direct access between remote clinicians and city specialists in real time.
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New e-health centre opens

Valerina Changarathil, The Advertiser
July 11, 2016 12:30am
RESEARCH into the use of digital technology to deliver positive outcomes for the sick and aged will be at the heart of the Flinders Digital Health Research Centre to be launched today.
Based at Tonsley, the centre will be headed up by digital healthcare experts Professor Anthony Maeder and Professor Trish Williams as co-directors.
Mr Maeder is currently chair of Digital Health Systems and joined Flinders in April this year from the Western Sydney University, where he founded the Telehealth Research and Innovation Laboratory.
Professor Trish Williams, Cisco Chair and Professor of Digital Health Systems is internationally recognised for her medical information security expertise, wrote the first clinical record system for Australia in 1986 and is an expert in e-health informatics standards.
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By comparing data on the genes involved in patients' cancers with data on genes from lab-based cancer cell lines, researchers have begun to predict, on a large scale, which drugs will best fight various cancers. Scientists are starting to accumulate huge datasets on which genes mutate during cancer, allowing for a more systematic approach to “precision medicine”. In a study published in Cell, researchers from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in the UK compared genetic mutations in patient tumours to those in cancer cell lines and then tested the cell lines’ responses to therapeutic compounds. By analysing where these datasets overlap, researchers can begin to predict on a large scale which drugs will best fight various cancers. The researchers analysed data from two public datasets, the Cancer Genome Atlas and the International Cancer Genome Consortium, and other studies, gathering genetic information for more than 11 000 tumour samples. The team then compared these tumour samples to about 1000 cancer cell lines used in labs, looking for lines that had the same types of mutations as the patient samples, and which therefore might more closely mimic patient responses. Once they mapped the tumour mutations onto the cell lines, the researchers looked for the genetic mutations that could best predict the cancer cells’ response to 265 different anti-cancer compounds at various stages of development. The drugs covered a range of mechanisms, including chemotherapeutics, small-molecule inhibitors, epigenetic modulators, and cell death regulators. Many of the mutations that occurred both in tumour samples and cell lines did signal whether the cancer cells would be sensitive or resistant to different compounds, largely depending on the type of tissue in which the cancer originated.
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Microsoft cloud chosen to drive New Zealand’s electronic health systems

"It comes at exactly the right time, as globally we are at an inflection point"
For many, the next phase of computing involving dynamic cloud processing symbolizes nothing more than a place to store old smartphone photos, tax documents, and college reports perhaps mixed with an occasional voice query of the internet. Where businesses and large enterprises have been chided for their pace of consumer-facing trends of adoptions, they are using the cloud at a much more sophisticated level.
Microsoft New Zealand confirmed in an announcement today, that “Microsoft’s core cloud services Azure, Office 365 and Dynamics CRM Online, have met the Ministry’s requirements for storage of personal health information.”
Clearing the regulatory bar, Microsoft has now been given the green light to become the public cloud and back-end support for the eHealth agenda in New Zealand.
For Microsoft’s part, the company is pleased to offer its cloud platform for health care to the area.
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Scientists confirm first instance of water clouds outside our solar system

Date July 11, 2016 - 10:18AM

Carli Velocci

A cloudy day here on Earth might be a sign for gloom, but elsewhere in the universe, to behold one is a scientific achievement. In this case, a team of researchers from UC Santa Cruz announced that they have detected water clouds for the first time outside our solar system on a brown dwarf known as WISE 0855, which is around 7.2 light-years away from Earth.
The study was published back in May in Astrophysical Journal Letters and updates what we currently know about the dwarf, which was discovered in 2014 by NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE). Scientists had detected tentative water clouds back in the original study, but had limited photometric data and needed a deeper infrared image to confirm.
Using the Gemini North telescope in Hawaii, they were able to use spectroscopy to gather more information. Researchers confirmed that the dwarf's atmosphere is "dominated by water vapour and clouds."
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Enjoy!
David.

Sunday, July 17, 2016

It Looks Like The Stick Is Working Well On The GPs As Far As The myHR Is Concerned. Not That The System Is Actually Being Used Much!

This appeared a few days ago.
8 July, 2016

GPs warming to e-health records

Posted by julie lambert
The financial pinch on GPs is clearly sharpening interest in electronic health records.
According to the latest figures, 1085 general practices uploaded health summaries to the My Health Record system in the week to 19 June, more than 2.5 times the weekly average of 400 a week during April.
In the same period, the number of health summaries uploaded has jumped from 2000-3000 per week to more than 8000, while the number of views by healthcare providers has shown a similar increase from around 400 per week to almost 1100.
The spurt in activity is clearly linked to the threatened loss of the eHealth Incentive PIP for practices that fail to upload a quota of shared health summaries under new rules adopted on 15 May.
“Following the implementation of these changes to the eHealth Incentive, use of the system by general practitioners has increased significantly,” a Health Department spokeswoman said.
Some doctors are unhappy about the use of financial incentives to promote the system, saying privately the rule could amount to coercion of GPs who are strapped financially by the four-year freeze on Medicare rebates.
But others see a lot more carrot than stick in adopting the new system, which is an “opt-out” model for patients which replaces the failed “opt-in” Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record.
“From my personal point of view I can only see the advantages,” says Dr Chris Goodall, a GP in Cairns, part of the north Queensland PHN area where one of the two MHR trials is getting under way.
In the tropical city, with a large itinerant population, the ability to share and view patients’ health records will save huge amounts of time and avoid duplication of tests, he says.
“At this time of year, 10 to 20% of our business is travellers and holidaymakers,” Dr Goodall told The Medical Republic.  “There are lots of grey nomads and people escaping the southern winter, and all of them are on a white tablet with a line down the middle and they can’t remember the name of it.
“It will be massive for us that we don’t have to send faxes down to their local GPs asking for a fax back with their medication summaries and that sort of thing.  It will save us a lot of time. That’s the principal reason why I am interested.”
Dr Goodall, an early user of the PCEHR, said colleagues who had had concerns about the system tended to be less well informed.
“A lot of my colleagues probably weren’t aware of what was going on and were quite worried. I think they’re now starting to see the advantages. Once you know what you are doing, uploading takes three clicks of a mouse.  You click on the health summary and upload what you want.”
Another Cairns GP, Dr Peter Vanrietvelde, says he is very positive about the concept but is concerned about the heavy cost of the e-health system development while rebates remain frozen and the advantages remain far in the future.
There is a lot more here:
What I found interesting here – other that just how effective the ePIP payments were being were the statistics on the myHR.
There is a useful, pretty current page on the statistics the Government is releasing on the myHR.
Here is the link:
So what we have, after one million people where opted in to the system, we have a total of 16% of the population registered. It has taken now over four years to get to this point.
However the total number of shared health summaries held is all of 166,000.This means that only 4.3% of enrolled people and less than 1% of the total population have a shared health summary.
Each shared summary seems to have cost $7,200 which really does make one wonder about the value for money we are receiving – especially given that the expenditure is still running at $100M p.a. ongoing.
Note also there is absolutely no information on how often anyone has actually looked up a Shared Record. I wonder just why that is?
So we seem to have a pile of hard to search documents masquerading as an usable electronic health record. What a money wasting joke!  I also feel sorry for the GPs forced to use this awful ill-conceived system for the ePIP payments.
David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 328 – Results – 17th July, 2016.

Here are the results of the poll.

With The Election Over, Should Ms Sussan Ley Continue On As Health Minister?

Yes 24% (28)

No 52% (60)

I Have No Idea 24% (28)

Total votes: 116

It seems a small majority are in favour of a change. To whom one may wonder?

A great turnout of votes.

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

David.

Saturday, July 16, 2016

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links – 16th July, 2016.

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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Declining number of public HIEs raises concerns about interoperability

Jul 8, 2016 10:56am
The number of public health information exchanges (HIEs) has dropped, raising concerns about the ability to achieve widespread clinical data exchange, according to a new study in Health Affairs.
The study, conducted by researchers at the University of Michigan, found an 11 percent drop in state and community HIEs from 2012 to 2014, from 119 to 106. It’s the first decline in HIEs in the history of such surveys, which began in 2007. It’s also the first measurement of the number of HIEs since federal funding aiding their development ended.
The HIEs that were still operational reported that only half of them were financially stable, and all of them were running into problems that affected their success, such as an unsustainable business model, lack of integration of the HIE into provider workflow and lack of funding. Key stakeholder participation was also low, which indicates that the HIEs may hold limited value.
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Data quality issues bog down use of analytics

Published July 06 2016, 3:16pm EDT
Key data performance management issues challenge the IT executives in organizations of all sizes, and resolving problems wastes time and delays the use of data, many in the industry believe.
Prime challenges for organizations range from stopping bad data to keeping data flows operating effectively, according to a new survey by Dimensional Research.
The vast majority (87 percent) of the 300 data management professionals surveyed report that they’ve added bad data into their data stores, while just 12 percent consider themselves good at the key aspects of data flow performance management.
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Researchers: Doc note accuracy higher on paper records vs. newly implemented EHRs

Jul 7, 2016 6:54am
Physician progress notes tend to be more accurate in paper records than in newly implemented electronic health records, but there is more information omitted in paper notes, according to a new study in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association.
The researchers reviewed the initial progress notes of patients admitted to Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Michigan, between August 2011 and July 2013. They retrospectively reviewed 500 notes, some before implementation of the EHR in 2012 and some after implementation, and studied five specific diagnoses with invariable physical findings: permanent atrial fibrillation, aortic stenosis, intubation, lower limb amputation and cerebrovascular accident with hemiparesis. 
They found that overall accuracy of documentation was “poor”, with 54.4 percent accuracy of documentation of physical exam findings in paper records and 58.4 percent in EHRs. However, the rate of inaccurate documentation was “significantly” higher with EHRs (24.4 percent v. 4.4 percent). When it came to missing information, expected physical exam findings (such as the presence of a murmur) was more likely to be omitted in the paper notes (41.2 percent v. 17.6 percent).
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Doctors make more note-taking mistakes with EHRs than paper records, JAMIA study finds

New research published in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association research found that inaccuracies within electronic health records are significantly higher than those in paper records. 
July 08, 2016 07:58 AM
A study of medical reporting at a Michigan hospital found that doctors’ progress notes in the initial implementation of electronic health records contained more inaccuracies compared to paper charts.
The Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association report found that the rate of inaccurate documentation was significantly higher in the EHRs compared to the paper charts: 24.4 percent versus 4.4 percent. 
Researchers examined initial progress notes of patients admitted to Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Michigan between August 2011 and July 2013. They reviewed 500 notes, some before implementation of the EHR in 2012 and some after implementation, and examined five specific diagnoses with invariable physical findings: permanent atrial fibrillation, aortic stenosis, intubation, lower limb amputation and cerebrovascular accident with hemiparesis. 
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HL7, NATE offer advice for working with patients who want EHR data downloaded to their health app of choice

Doctors are required by law to allow patients to view, download and transmit data and that new reality is giving rise to many hesitations. Here’s a look at pressing issues to understand before proceeding. 
July 07, 2016 07:18 AM
National Association for Trusted Exchange CEO Aaron Seib said that sharing data with patients is unsettling for many doctors accustomed to protecting it under HIPAA. 
Meaningful use and more recently the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA) rules call for doctors to enable patients to view, download and transmit their electronic health record data.  
And some patients are beginning to inquire about adding that information to various healthcare apps that range from blood pressure monitoring to fitness trackers to glucose reading software for diabetes, among others.
The thorny part: Doctors have had it drilled into their heads for years that under HIPAA they need to protect the data, but that was when records lived on paper.
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11 million patient record breaches make June worst month for information security in 2016

The high number of breaches span payers, providers and an NFL team and prove just how vulnerable the industry is, the new Healthcare Breach Barometer from Protenus and Databreaches.net said. 
July 07, 2016 09:55 AM
The number of healthcare security attacks continues to grow with breaches of over 11 million patient records in June, more than any other month this year, according to a report from security firm Protenus and DataBreaches.net
The June breaches totaled 11,061,649 patient records, representing 23 of 29 incidents for which exact numbers were available. Most of the breaches are attributable to a single hack that included a large insurer database (10.3 million records).
“The impact and rate of breaches illustrate how vulnerable the healthcare industry remains, as well as the need to proactively protect patient privacy and data with new technologies,” the report said. 
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Tough penalties and better data control - Caldicott

Ben Heather
6 July 2016
Dame Fiona Caldicott’s latest review of information governance and security in the NHS says trusts should make security control as high a priority as financial control, and recommends a tougher IG Toolkit for trusts.
The national data guardian’s long awaited report was released on Wednesday morning, after the 'purdah' restrictions that prevent civil servants from making politically controversial statements was lifted following the EU referendum.
“The leadership of every organisation should demonstrate clear ownership and responsibility for data security, just as it does for clinical and financial management and accountability,” the report says. "People’s confidential data should be treated with the same respect as their care."
This would include using a “redesigned” IG Toolkit and giving the Health and Social Care Information Centre the ability to report organisations with poor data controls to the Care Quality Commission.
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Care.data dumped after Caldicott review

Ben Heather
6 July 2016
The controversial care.data programme has been killed off following the release of Dame Fiona Caldicott's latest report on security and information governance in the NHS, which recommends sweeping changes to NHS data protection.
A statement from the Department of Health and minister for life sciences George Freeman, released on Wednesday afternoon, said: “NHS England has taken the decision to close the care.data programme” in light of the report.
While no specific alternative has been offered, the statement said the government remains “committed to realising the benefits of sharing information, as an essential part of improving outcomes for patients."
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US Government Issues Call for Blockchain Healthcare Research

Stan Higgins | Published on July 6, 2016 at 21:01 BST
News
The US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is soliciting research papers related to blockchain applications in healthcare and health research.
According to a notice published in the Federal Register, HHS is seeking white papers that explore how the technology can be leveraged for healthcare purposes. The submission date is 29th July, with the winners set to be announced late next month.
The only stipulations, the notice states, is that papers shouldn’t be longer than 10 pages and that no more than three papers should be submitted by any one researcher or group.
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Researchers look to biosensors as way to monitor opioid use

Published July 05 2016, 6:35am EDT
Faced with a national opioid epidemic, researchers have found that wearable biosensors hold great promise for detecting episodes of drug use in real time with the potential for keeping opioid users on track with substance abuse treatment programs by triggering interventions in the event of a relapse.
The sensors, developed by Waltham, Mass.-based Affectiva, detect and record physiological signs of opioid use. A University of Massachusetts Medical School team tested the use of these wristband sensors worn by patients in an emergency room who were receiving opioids for severe pain relief.
“Our goal was to see if mobile biosensors could indeed identify when someone used an opioid drug,” says Stephanie Carreiro, MD, a fellow in the Division of Medical Toxicology, Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.
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EHRs combined with precision medicine can improve depression treatment

Jul 6, 2016 9:11pm
Using genetic information in a patient’s electronic health record can help pinpoint which antidepressant drugs should be prescribed and in what amounts, according to a new article in Mayo Clinic Proceedings.
There are more than 20 Food and Drug Administration-approved treatments for depression. However, genetic variations among patients may contribute to the effectiveness of different treatments and to adverse events. For example, cytochrome P4502D6 (CYP2D6) and cytochrome P4502C19 (CYP2C19) are subject to genetic variation and metabolize differently with different selective serotonin reupdate inhibitors (SSRIs). However, many clinicians are not familiar or comfortable with pharmacogenetics, despite growing evidence of its clinical importance.
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Telehealth sweet spot? Remote monitoring of patients with cardiovascular or respiratory disease, AHRQ says

The U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality pinpointed instances where telemedicine consults are most effective, though to date information is lacking about cost and utilization. 
July 05, 2016 02:20 PM
The U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality combed through 58 systematic reviews amid a substantial volume of research on telemedicine to pinpoint when telehealth interventions work best.
The data suggests telehealth improves outcomes such as mortality, quality of life and reductions in hospital admissions when used for remote patient monitoring for certain chronic conditions as well as for psychotherapy as part of behavioral health.
Top chronic conditions for telehealth success: cardiovascular and respiratory disease, according to AHRQ.
AHRQ noted, however, that information on how telehealth affects cost and utilization is currently limited.
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ONC identifies two core metrics to monitor MACRA progress

Jeff Rowe
Jul 06, 2016
After reviewing the comments received following the release of the proposed Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act (MACRA), the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC) has announced it will use two metrics to measure the interoperability of health information across the country.
In a July 1 post on ONC’s HealthIT Buzz blog, Seth Pazinski, director of ONC’s Office of Planning, Evaluation and Analysis, and Talisha Searcy, the office’s director of research and evaluation, wrote that “based on internal analysis, external feedback, and MACRA’s specific definitions of ‘widespread interoperability’ and the relevant population to be measured,” the two metrics that are most applicable to monitoring MACRA’s requirements are “the proportion of health care providers who are electronically engaging in the following core domains of interoperable exchange of health information: sending; receiving; finding (querying); and integrating information received from outside sources,” and; “the proportion of health care providers who report using the information they electronically receive from outside providers and sources for clinical decision-making.”
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Why simplified standards can boost widespread data exchange

Published July 06 2016, 3:25pm EDT
HITECH was specifically designed to facilitate better healthcare through EHR interoperability among providers. But, seven years and more than $30 billion in incentives later, meaningful interoperability is still lacking, according to the ONC’s report to Congress in December 2015.
Despite the near universal consensus that continuity of care is critical to better outcomes and reduced costs, effective information exchanges remain elusive. Of the five issues the ONC report cites, two stand out as principal obstacles.
  • Complex and changing standards. Albert Einstein once said, “If you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it well enough.” With that in mind, how easy is it to explain the difference between CDA, CCR, CCD, Green CDA, CCDA and C32 to the average health professional? It’s extremely difficult to understand how each one fits into the overall picture; worse, implementation of any standard demands specialized knowledge. Further, these standards are brittle, as each vendor may have their own interpretation of the specifications. The result is a time-consuming and difficult integration process, even though sending and receiving systems have been developed from the same specifications.
  • Security and privacy considerations. If no harm comes from unauthorized use of the data, the penalties for breach are still severe. Even after a vendor manages to work through a sea of standards and the related maze of specifications, exchanging information in compliance with state and federal regulation remains an issue. Security and privacy demands are very high and require even more specialized knowledge. Things such as VPNs, HISPs, DirectMessaging, SSL certificates, AES-256, encryption at rest and minimum necessary privilege present yet another barrier to the process. The penalties, damage to reputation and specialized skill sets needed for secure transactions discourage organizations from doing anything except meeting the bare interoperability requirements. It’s easy to see why some might find it simply not worth the effort or risk to break new ground.
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Predictive Analytics, Healthcare IoT Lead EHR Market Growth

By Jennifer Bresnick on July 05, 2016

Predictive analytics and the Internet of Things are at the top of the wish list for potential purchasers of new electronic health record offerings.

Electronic health record vendors looking to attract customers to the next generation of upgrades and installs will likely be relying on predictive analytics and the healthcare Internet of Things, according to a series of new market reports. 
The compound annual growth rate (CAGR) in the EHR marketplace will continue to rise at approximately 5.5 percent, says Research and Markets, as vendors begin to roll out a new set of integrated big data analytics offerings. 
Predictive analytics are in particularly high demand among the provider community, the report added, as healthcare organizations square up to the challenge of value-based reimbursements, population health management, and rising regulatory demands.
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Google Glass not a flop in the emergency room, doctor says

Tuesday, 5 Jul 2016 | 1:51 PM ET
The medical community is breathing new life into Google Glass.
The once-anticipated hot tech trend that consists of a pair of eyeglasses with a computer, microphone and camera built into the frame failed to catch on with the broader mainstream market when it debuted to select consumers in 2013. But now, the old technology is taking on a new function — serving as a tool for doctors in emergency situations.
"Consumers weren't ready for Google Glass," said emergency physician Dr. Peter Chai. "But the medical community has given it a second life."
Chai, who's also a toxicologist and assistant professor at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, says doctors are using Glass as a way to bring specialists to patients in a more efficient manner.
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Healthcare organizations lag in sharing cyber attack info

Published July 01 2016, 6:49am EDT
Through a presidential executive order and legislation enacted by Congress in 2015, the federal government set in motion procedures for healthcare organizations, companies in other industries and local governments to collect and share cyber threat information among themselves and with the government.
The federal initiatives included incentives to enable organizations to receive threat information not just from other organizations but from government agencies such as the Departments of Homeland Security and Health and Human Services.
However, threat data sharing in healthcare has gotten off to a slow start even as cyber attacks have accelerated. Many stakeholders are not aware of the initiative; others have needed time to develop arrangements for sharing with each other and to develop analytics capability to analyze threats and turn them into actionable alerts, says Lisa Gallagher, managing director of the healthcare cybersecurity and privacy practice at consultancy PricewaterhouseCoopers.
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How healthcare security strategies might not prevent patient harm

Jul 5, 2016 7:06am
The healthcare industry focuses its security strategy almost exclusively on protecting patient health records, yet rarely addresses potential patient harms from a cyberthreat perspective, Independent Security Evaluators’ executive partner Ted Harrington says in an interview with CSO.
Attackers targeting patient records are likely to go after different systems in different ways that those intending to do patient harm, he says, so for organizations to focus their resources only on protection of records increase the likelihood that patient harm will occur.
Vulnerabilities in medical devices such as pacemakers and even vital sign monitors could prove deadly in the hands of determined hackers, and protections aimed at patient data wouldn’t really help, Harrington says.
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Report: More research needed on emerging telemedicine models

Jul 5, 2016 10:38am
While evidence supports the use of telemedicine for a scenario like remote monitoring of patients with chronic conditions, there is little research to support its use in other areas, such as maternal health, according to a technical brief from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ).
The Pacific Northwest Evidence-based Practice Center in Portland, Oregon, analyzed 58 systematic reviews assessing the vast amount of research and conducted interviews with key stakeholders in the industry to create an “evidence map” for telemedicine for AHRQ. A draft of the report was released in December.
The work grew from a push by Sens. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.) and John Thune (R-S.D.) for evidence backing expanded access to telemedicine.
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CMS unleashes bigger trove of claims data to help hospitals improve care quality

New rules under MACRA mean that qualified providers can share or sell analyses of Medicare and private claims data, which the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services could be a boon to better care delivery.
July 05, 2016 10:48 AM
CMS Chief data Officer Niall Brennan said the new data will enable caregivers to make smarter clinical decisions.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is making more claims data and analyses available to help care providers, employers and others boost the quality of care across the country.
The goal is to help organizations and individuals make better informed decisions about care delivery and quality improvement.
The new rules required by the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act, or MACRA, allow organizations approved as qualified entities to confidentially share or sell analyses of Medicare and private sector claims data to providers, employers, and other groups that can use the data to support improved care.
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Mobile videoconferencing from ambulance speeds up stroke care

Published: Monday 4 July 2016
A study of a mobile videoconferencing system - where paramedics accompanying patients in ambulances confer with doctors through computer tablets - shows it can produce stroke assessments on a par with those done at the hospital bedside. Such a system could help stroke patients receive treatments more promptly and thus reduce the risk of disability and death.
The findings of the clinical trial, by researchers from the University of Virginia (UVA) Health System in Charlottesville, are published in the journal Neurology.
Andrew M. Southerland, assistant professor of neurology and head of the study team, says:
"Acute stroke is a very time-dependent illness. Specifically, in acute ischemic stroke, if you can remove the vascular obstruction and re-vascularize the injured part of the brain in a timely way, you can potentially prevent disability and death."
In the United States, stroke is a leading cause of serious long-term disability and is responsible for 130,000 deaths a year - that is one out of every 20 deaths.
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Jun 30, 2016 @ 08:00 AM

Telemedicine Companies See Mental Health As Next Frontier

Telemedicine companies that have been landing a flurry of new contracts with employers and insurers to provide less expensive and more convenient medical consultations with physicians are now adding mental health services for their customers.
MDLive, Teladoc and American Well are among the telehealth firms getting into the business of offering access to psychiatrists, psychologists and therapists via smartphone, tablet and computer as the nation grapples with a rising rate of suicides, opioid addiction and other mental health issues.
The companies see a huge growth opportunity, with more Americans suffering mental health conditions than common medical conditions like diabetes and heart disease. Meanwhile, less than 50% of Americans who are prescribed medications to treat mental health conditions take them as directed, if at all, according to industry reports and Walgreens Boots Alliance .
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Electronic health records can increase malpractice risks

NORTH BAY BUSINESS JOURNAL STAFF REPORT
July 4, 2016, 5:45AM
Widespread use of the electronic health record (EHR) in medical practices may be contributing to more errors and malpractice liability, according to a recent report by The Doctors Company, a Napa-based medical malpractice insurance company.
The Doctor’s Company closed almost 100 claims between January 2007 and June 2014 in which EHRs were a contributing factor. The top allegation among the 97 claims was for diagnosis-related errors, followed by medication-related errors, with the wrong medication, the wrong dose, or improper medication management given to the patient.
“It takes 4-5 years from the time a claim is filed until it is resolved one way or another. The study, tracking EHR errors, saw very few claims at the beginning, the speculation being that these kinds of malpractice risks are increasing,” said Denise Moore, public relations director at the Company, which is the nation’s largest doctor-owned medical malpractice insurer, with 78,000 members and $4.3 billion in assets.
From 2007-2010, two claims were closed in which the EHR was a contributing factor. In 2013 that number had increased to 28, and 26 claims were closed in the first two quarters of 2014.
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An EHR Tailored for Pediatricians Closes Some Gaps

Scott Mace, July 5, 2016

Modifying electronic health record software can help catch early signs of childhood obesity, problems with oral health, vision, and hearing, and the risk of developing autism, expert says.

Electronic health record software has not met some pressing needs of pediatricians.
After years of federally funded studies of the problem, and few meaningful actions as part of meaningful use, it's time for a change.
One healthcare organization has identified pediatricians' biggest EHR pain points and is working to improve the situation.
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HIT Safety Concerns Mount Among Providers

HealthLeaders Media News, July 5, 2016

Healthcare providers are not well prepared for the "unintended consequences" of the shift to greater use of health information technology, researchers say.

Providers are not equipped to recognize, analyze, and learn from patient safety problems linked to the use of health information technology, according to speakers at a health services research conference in Boston last week.
Providers are familiar with patient safety issues from the Institute of Medicine's landmark 1999 report on medical error, said Hardeep Singh a professor Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. But health information technologies (HIT) are completely changing the way doctors practice, he said.
Providers were not prepared for the "unintended consequences" of the shift to greater use of HIT, he said.
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Enjoy!
David.