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, December 20, 2016

Here Are Some Real Home Truths For ADHA Bureaucrats To Remember In 2017.

This appeared last week.

ONC's Washington has some health IT advice for Trump

Dec 14, 2016 4:23pm
ONC's B. Vindell Washington said government regulations around health IT is complex because the country is complex.
B. Vindell Washington has some advice for the incoming Trump administration when it comes to coordinating health information technology programs on a national level: It’s more complicated than it looks. 
“One reason that healthcare and government regulations are complex is because we have a complex country,” Washington, head of the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT, told Healthcare Dive.
“There are differences in the way that healthcare is delivered in Sioux falls or Tulsa or San Diego or where I live in Baton Rouge," he added.
Precision medicine, according to Washington, is the “next horizon” that the Trump administration should be looking toward as personalized care becomes increasingly important and more central to how healthcare is delivered in the country.     
In fact, precision medicine just got a big funding boost from the 21st Century Cures Act, which Barack Obama signed into law this week—although it’s unclear how the program and its $6.3 billion in funding, which is spread out over seven years, will fare under President-elect Donald Trump.
The law also aims to support that complex web of health information technology goals, including promoting electronic health record interoperability, discouraging information-blocking and protecting data privacy and security.
More here:
Despite the differences between OZ and the US there are some useful insights here:
First complexity is very real and if you don’t fully appreciate the fact you will trip over badly.
Second despite what you might think geography does matter. There are big differences in clinical practice between different States as well as between the cities and the country. This has real implications as to the type and set-up of the supporting technology.
Third we really do need to get clarity regarding the applicable and non-applicable Standards for digital health to say nothing of the need to sort out where the Government and the Private Sector fit and how they work with each other.
It would also be nice to believe ADHA and ONC are really sharing perspectives and experience.
David.

Monday, December 19, 2016

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 19th December, 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

A very quiet week, except for the release of the paper shown first below. I bet there are a lot of Canberra bureaucrats hoping this will be ignored. We must all consider what we think of the arguments raised and what needs to be done about it, if we agree the whole thing is as flawed as suggested.
The blog will be back in the new year – after a break over Christmas etc. Have a good one!
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'My [Electronic] Health Record' – Cui Bono (for Whose Benefit)?

Danuta Mendelson
Deakin University, Geelong, Australia - Deakin Law School
Gabrielle Wolf

Deakin University, Geelong, Australia - Deakin Law School

December 7, 2016

(2016) 24 Journal of Law and Medicine

Abstract:  

We examine the operation of Australia’s national electronic health records system, known as the “My Health Record system”. Pursuant to the My Health Records Act 2012 (Cth), every 38 seconds new information about Australians is uploaded onto the My Health Record system servers. This information includes diagnostic tests, general practitioners’ clinical notes, referrals to specialists and letters from specialists. Our examination demonstrates that the intentions of successive Australian Governments in enabling the collection of clinical data through the national electronic health records system, go well beyond statutorily articulated reasons (overcoming “the fragmentation of health information”; improving “the availability and quality of health information”; reducing “the occurrence of adverse medical events and the duplication of treatment”; and improving “the coordination and quality of healthcare provided to healthcare recipients by different healthcare providers”). Not only has the system failed to fulfil its statutory objectives, but it permits the wide dissemination of information that historically has been confined to the therapeutic relationship between patient and health practitioner. After considering several other purposes for which the system is apparently designed, and who stands to benefit from it, we conclude that the government risks losing the trust of Australians in its electronic health care policies unless it reveals all of its objectives and obtains patients’ consent to the use and disclosure of their information.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 14
Keywords: electronic health records system, privacy, Big Data, surveillance, control
JEL Classification: L18, K19, K39
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Ramsay Health app gives doctors more hours in a day

By Paris Cowan on Dec 14, 2016 6:42AM

Real-time data tames the chaos of a hospital.

In the world of healthcare, time is everything.
It's why CIO John Sutherland and his team at Ramsay Health are striving to give clinical staff the right tools to best manage their time in an unpredictable hospital environment.
Their new MyPatient+ smartphone app pushes all the information a doctor needs about their patients and their daily schedule to a hand-held device.
The time management solution has been designed in close collaboration with clinical staff to address some of the most acute pain points in hospital workflows.
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Is there a role for telehealth in palliative care?

Antony Scholefield | 15 December, 2016 |
Doctors who have used telehealth will have seen patients struggling with the technology. So, imagine what it’s like when the patient is at the point of needing palliative care.
It may seem an impossibility. However, SA researchers think they’ve proven that it’s feasible.
Their study, published in BMC Palliative Care, details the usability of a remote palliative care system established by the SA Palliative Care Service for 43 patients living at home.
The oldest patient was 91, the youngest 49. Most had carers, usually their spouses, and most had been diagnosed with cancer.
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Google just made GP-led telehealth a whole lot easier

Antony Scholefield | 25 October, 2016 | 
Some GPs wish there was a magic word that could dispel all the technical issues that are preventing telehealth from taking off. Could that magic word be “gRPC 1.0”?
GP and software developer Dr Joe Logan has helped develop a telehealth system called Air Health — a system that is sold as more secure than Skype.
He says a big positive during its development was when Google released open-source software called gRPC 1.0 so that anybody could work with it.
It’s now common for companies to release open-source software in this way. Google released gRPC, a building block for video call software, in August.
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#FHIR and Alt-health

Posted on December 11, 2016 by Grahame Grieve
Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you’ve probably heard the terms ‘alt-right’ and ‘fake news’ by now. According to Wikipedia: “the alt-right (short for “alternative right”) is a loose group of people with far right ideologies who reject mainstream conservatism in the United States.” and “Fake news websites (also referred to online as hoax news) deliberately publish hoaxes, propaganda, and disinformation to drive web traffic inflamed by social media. Note: I’m well aware that Fake news websites aren’t confined to just the alt-right, but there’s a strong link between alt-right and fake news. It’s become clear, as time as progressed, that this is just another security risk in the eco-system that is the internet. Viruses, phishing, and now fake news. Something for Google and Facebook to work on – here’s some thoughts about that.
Waiting in the wings is something else I call ‘Alt-Health’ – the spread of bad healthcare advice running like wildfire through social media. One particular aspect of if – the anti-vaxxer campaign – that’s getting air time in the mainstream press, but it’s much broader problem than just that. Bad medical advice on the internet is nothing new – e.g. Google have a team devoted to working on the quality of web pages returned for medical related searches. But the spread of bad advice on social media is outside that. And it’s not always wrong advice, actually. Sometimes, it’s extremely good advice for one patient, but wrong for another patient. But it’s handed on as gospel – ‘this worked for me, so ignore your doctor and do what’s proven to work’… if only life were so simple. Looking forward, I expect that this is going to turn into an epidemic, as people turn away from complexity and cost, seeking simple solutions. What they’ll get is outright wrong or wrong in context, and it’s going to kill people. On the other hand, we know that while a lot of the advice is bad, it can also be very good as well. In some circumstances, better than the clinical advice a patient gets, particularly for rare diseases.
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A small change could bring efficiencies to pathology test requests

14 December 2016

THE ISSUE

THE RACGP Standards 4th edition requires that referrals, including requests for investigations, include sufficient information to facilitate optimal patient care, including details of the purpose of the referral.
Despite this, pathology practices report that most requests from GPs contain no clinical details. This hampers the provision of useful reports and increases the risk of adverse outcomes.
If the result is outside the reference range and the GP has not provided information that explains it, the pathologist feels obliged to advise repeat testing in case the results are artefactual. This causes waste and unnecessary patient worry.
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Medical pics on personal devices a “privacy time bomb”

Authored by  Sarah Colyer
HEALTH professionals’ increasing use of personal mobile phones to take and share clinical photos is creating a patient privacy time bomb that hospitals cannot afford to ignore, experts warn.
Writing in this week’s MJA, Dr Paul Eleftheriou, deputy chief medical officer at Austin Health, together with the hospital’s former chief medical officer, Dr John Ferguson, and graduating medical student Kieran Allen, warned that even when doctors think they have protected patients’ privacy, the images they take may be identifiable.
“The capture of potentially identifiable physical features and metadata, and the unknown factor of how software developments may enable the identification of image subjects, dictate that health care organisations treat every patient image as potentially identifiable,” they wrote.
In January 2017, Austin Health will launch its own medical photo app to reduce some of the risks inherent in health professionals using their personal phones to take clinical photos.
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Press release
13 December, 2016

Navy Design Gives Underfunded Health Projects Free Access to Design Expertise.

Specialist health design consultancy Navy Design has launched an initiative called Design Aid to give underfunded healthcare projects access to world class design, for free.
The initiative was launched this week for the first time, in what is set to become a bi-annual event for the Melbourne-based company, and hopes to contribute to improvements in the overall design of healthcare applications across the industry, making them more accessible for people who need it, as well as for health care professionals.
“We think great design can make a real difference to health outcomes. But some of the most promising digital health projects can’t afford to hire great designers, which is why we created Design Aid,” says Michael Trounce, General Manager of Navy Design.
Design Aid is a two week intensive design program where Navy will help one selected team take their product to the next level. It could include helping to visualise a new product or service, testing an emerging concept or improving an existing product. Navy is offering the successful company the same expertise they usually provide to their larger clients which range from software companies, to health insurers, and government health departments.
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Guild, Medical Software Industry Association sign MoU

Pharmacy Guild and Medical Software Industry Association sign a new agreement

A new agreement between the Pharmacy Guild of Australia and the Medical Software Industry Association creates a framework for both organisations to work together for the benefit of their respective members over the next five years, they say.
A Memorandum of Understanding between the two organisations was signed by Guild National President, George Tambassis, Executive Director, David Quilty and the MSIA President, Emma Hossack.
MSIA represents the interests of the Australian commercial software industry which develops, supplies and services information management products and services for healthcare practitioners, healthcare service providers and healthcare organisations.
The Guild and MSIA say they share a common objective to support community pharmacies in performing their role – delivering medicines and services to patients – through the provision of software specifically developed and tailored to meet the needs of the pharmacy industry.
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Three firms chosen to launch $500m Biomedical Translation Fund

The government has selected three funds to launch its $500m Biomedical Translation Fund.
  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM December 14, 2016

Sarah-Jane Tasker

The Turnbull government has ­selected three funds to launch its $500 million Biomedical Translation Fund in what one manager describes as a “bold” move that will transform Australia’s biotech industry.
The three — Brandon Capital Partners, OneVentures Management and BioScience Managers — have all been tasked to select and finance Australian start-ups in health and medical research.
The BTF was first pitched as part of the government’s National Innovation and Science Agenda and sees the government provide $250m, which will be matched by the fund managers.
Each manager will now screen investment proposals to the BTF and develop a broad portfolio of investment in Australian science and research.
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Orion Health extends US deal with Keystone Health Information Exchange

New Zealand-based health technology company Orion Health has inked an expanded agreement with US company Keystone Health Information Exchange (KeyHIE), allowing continued use of its platform for information sharing between healthcare providers.
An existing client of Orion, KeyHIE is managed by Geisinger Health System and is one of the largest and most advanced health information exchanges in the US, supporting approximately five million patient records.
KeyHIE’s customer base includes 19 hospitals, over 250 physician practices and 95 long-term care facilities.
Orion says the new subscription based agreement builds on the prior arrangement and allows KeyHIE to continue using Orion Health’s Amadeus open technology platform.
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Australian Digital Health Agency (ADHA)

Best Case Scenario are proudly working with Australian Digital Health Agency (ADHA) on their engagement campaign.  Our role is to use our vast event planning experience and skill to put in place key processes and infrastructure to ensure the efficient roll out of events associated with this campaign.
The Australian Digital Health Agency was established in July 2016 by the Australian Government to help improve health outcomes for Australians through the delivery of digital health services and systems. The Agency is developing a National Digital Health Strategy, and embarking on a nationwide consultation to hear from a diverse cross-section of people, in order to ensure the strategy is shaped by the needs, wants and aspirations of the community.
Multiple events, multiple teams, multiple stakeholders all requiring regular updates, in real time. We developed a bespoke online planning interface for all teams to view the status of: delegate numbers, speaker pipeline & progress, theme and content development status, marketing drop schedule, upcoming deadlines and much more.
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  • Dec 12 2016 at 4:32 PM

German healthcare tech firm Lifespot Health to list on the ASX

German healthcare technology company Lifespot Health is preparing to list on the ASX later this month, hoping to capitalise on Australian investors' appetite for medical device and tech firms.
The company has a range of products that are centred on the mobile management of chronic diseases and assist with the measurement of vital functions and indicators of these diseases such as blood glucose, blood pressure and weight levels. It also has an app for the management and diagnosis of skin conditions.
Lifespot is raising up to $8 million at 20¢ a share, valuing the company at up to $14.9 million.
Chief executive Stefan Schraps told The Australian Financial Review the firm had opted to list on the ASX because local investors were willing to take on more risk than those in Europe.
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  • December 13 2016 - 9:08PM

Public servants sit idle as ATO's IT melts down

Noel Towell
Vast amounts of data stored by the Australian Taxation Office have been lost in the crash that brought down the agency's internal systems and customer service websites on Monday and Tuesday.
Large numbers of ATO officials were still sitting idle on Tuesday afternoon, unable to use their computers for a second day in the latest  public service tech meltdown.
Fairfax has been told that it may be Wednesday before the Tax Office's systems are fully restored and that the ATO is trying to recover a petabyte – a  million gigabytes – of data.
It is unclear what was recorded on the lost data but Tax Office management are adamant that no taxpayer information has been compromised. 
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ATO flags forensic review of IT debacle

  • The Australian
  • 3:39PM December 16, 2016

Supratim Adhikari

The Australian Taxation Office is set to undertake a forensic review of the IT failure that knocked its customer-facing sites and systems offline for two days.
While the outage has been pinned to a problem with Hewlett Packard Enterprise’s (HPE) storage hardware, the ATO will now engage an independent expert to undertake an end-to-end review, especially designed to ensure that there’s no repeat in the future.
The expert has been tasked to provide a definitive description of the failure and its root cause, the factors leading to and contributing to the scale of the outage, and the effectiveness of how the ATO’s technology partners responded to the problem.
“The review will also consider our immediate response to the failure, how we managed business resumption processes and the effectiveness of our communication with the community,” ATO commissioner Chris Jordan said.
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Medicare grandad claims victory as government buckles on logo threat

Heath Aston, political correspondent
Published: December 15, 2016 - 10:20AM
A retiree locked in a "Monty Pythonesque" legal stand-off with the Turnbull government over use of the Medicare logo has prevailed after the government apologised and abandoned its threats to sue him over copyright.
Mark Rogers, who created the little-visited "Save Medicare" website to campaign against health cuts, was notified in a letter from the Australian Government Solicitor that its demand to stop any use of the Medicare logo and cancel the site's domain name had been withdrawn.
Visitors to the Save Medicare site went from zero to 7000 in a day after Fairfax Media revealed the government's heavy-handed approach to the 66 year-old grandfather.
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Warning – the latest spam scam is 'unsubscribe'

  • 15 December 2016
  • Written by  Ray Shaw
The latest “seasonal” scam is to link a “payload” to unsubscribe buttons. It starts with a socially engineered phishing campaign sending out copious legitimate looking newsletters or e-zines, typically on topics relevant to your interests.
Faced with an ever-increasing, bulging, email inbox and a bit of spare time over the holidays you may do the right thing and try and clean up the inbox, junk, and clutter. But cybercriminals are way ahead of you. Please note that this advisory is most relevant to Windows and its built-in mail client or Outlook/Exchange.
The first scam comes when you select the unsubscribe button; Internet Explorer opens (not the later more secure Edge), and you are taken to a fake website that asks you to confirm your email address.
It is seemingly innocuous but it has also confirmed your email address is alive and captured leaked metadata from your browser like your IP address, location, operating system and more.
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Enjoy!
David.

Here Is The Only Digital Health Initiative I Could Spot In The MYEFO. Consultants Relieved!

Looks like a little more for the consultants.

From the MYEFO Papers - Health Section p165:

These are found here:
http://www.budget.gov.au/2016-17/content/myefo/download/2016-17-MYEFO-combined.pdf

Digital Mental Health Gateway — development of a second pass business case

Expense ($m) 2016-17 Department of Health  $2.5m
The Government will provide $2.5 million in 2016-17 for a second pass business case to continue the development of a Digital Mental Health Gateway to improve community access to mental health services. The Gateway will enable users to access evidence-based information and advice and mental health treatment options.
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I wonder why it is the public keeps paying for these documents but never has a chance to review them and test out their credibility.
Pity about that.
On a broader level there appears to be close to $50M over four years to help seniors develop and use digital technology. Enough - who knows?
David.

Sunday, December 18, 2016

Well This Is Getting Pretty Close To A Wrap For 2016. So Where Are We?

If I had to summarise I would suggest that there no real message or outcome for the year.

At a national level we have seen the demise of NEHTA and the foundation of the ADHA with a new CEO and Executive July 1, 2016. Since then I reckon it is fair to say we have been in pause mode as the ADHA consults on its strategy, tries to figure out just what is the best thing to do with the myHR and gets its staff etc. into place.


By mid-year 2017 clarity, strategy and transparency will need to emerge or there is going to be considerable disappointment and frustration. The May 2017 Budget may turn out to be pivotal.

I wonder are we going to see some proper evidence to justify what happens next?

As a working list of the issues that need to be addressed the following might be useful.

Current Issues With Previous NEHTA Approach ADHA Needs To Remedy.

a. Destroyed trust in government and the DoH (repeated consultations just ignored).

b. Unclear as To motivation and rationale for existence  (What is the evidence for what has been done so far?)

c. Unclear role of ADHA vis a vis the Private Sector.

d. Lack of Transparency – Need to publish board minutes etc.

e. A need to establish intellectual technical leadership (evidence, understanding)

f. A need to actually address issues like workflow, time spent, useability and real safety issues.

g. Failure in the past to develop quality and sustainable modus operandi with the private sector

h. Failure to address the mess with current Standards Australia environment.

i. A failure to grasp the complexity and a lack of a really realistic approach.

j. The ongoing fostering of absurd political expectations that are not hosed down as they should be.

At the State level we have a wide divergence with the less successful States seemingly unable to use the skills and capacities available in those getting on with it with some success.

As noted in the weekly news there is a lot of really interesting stuff happening in the private sector that is often rather under the radar. There needs to be active fostering of this activity in my view.

Early next year is going to be a seminal for the future, so I suggest you have a great Holiday season and then strap in for a very interesting 2017.

David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 349 – Results – 18th December, 2016.

Here are the results of the poll.

Which Organisation Best Represents The Professional Aspirations, Capabilities, Concerns and Objectives Of Australian Health Informatics Professionals?

The Australasian College Of Health Informatics (ACHI) 23% (28)

The Health Informatics Society Of Australia (HISA) 11% (13)

The Health Information Management Association Of Australia (HIMAA) 30% (36)

None Of The Above 24% (29)

I Have No Idea 12% (15)

Total votes: 121

What a fascinating outcome! What seems to be reflected here is a very fractured profession with apparently no clear voice. This has to be a problem.

I am very interested in any comments people have on the results. I wonder do the votes reflect the readership mix of the blog? It is interesting how poorly HISA scored, and how almost a quarter were off somewhere else.

A very large turnout of votes.

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

David.

Saturday, December 17, 2016

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links – 17th December, 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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Commonwealth Fund, others offer 'playbook' for treating patients with complex needs

Five foundations assess scope of difficulties and offer new approaches to address hurdles patients encounter on the way to recovery.
December 09, 2016 02:14 PM
"Our research shows that when people with complex needs require medical help, they encounter a health care system that's expensive, inefficient and poorly coordinated," said David Blumenthal, MD, president of The Commonwealth Fund.
The results of a nationwide survey of patients with complex medical needs released December 9 by The Commonwealth Fund, shows that the healthcare system is failing them.
The results of the survey are bleak. It reveals that of those patients with a complex medical history:
  • Nearly half (47 percent) visited the emergency department multiple times in the past two years.
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CMS to test two models to boost patient engagement

Dec 9, 2016 11:30am
The government agency will test new models for patient engagement.
What’s the best way to get patients involved in their own healthcare? CMS is launching two new models to help determine what works best when it comes to encouraging shared decision-making between doctors and patients.
The two models from the CMS Innovation Center, which will test patient engagement both inside and outside the doctor’s office, will soon be tested by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, according to a blog post by Patrick Conway, MD, CMS’ principal deputy administrator and chief medical officer, and Andy B. Bindman, MD, director of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ).
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UC San Diego Health Offering EHR, iPad Access to Patients

December 8, 2016
by Rajiv Leventhal
Patients at the recently-opened Jacobs Medical Center at UC San Diego Health can be in more command with their own experience by assessing their own medical information, controlling room features and more.
Officials of UC San Diego Health noted in an announcement that with a swipe and tap of an iPad, patients at Jacobs Medical Center can be in command of their own experience by controlling room temperature, lighting, accessing their personal medical information, details on their patient care team and entertainment options all from their beds.
“By adding connectivity in every patient room, each person can take control of their hospital experience from regulation of their environment to connecting online with friends and family for support,” Thomas J. Savides, M.D., chief experience officer at UC San Diego Health, said in a statement. “Patients also see portions of their electronic medical record to help them understand their progress and anticipate daily events. We hope that feeling in control will aid in the healing process.”
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Could a Computer Someday Guide Breast Cancer Care?

'Watson Oncology' agreed with doctors 90 percent of the time in many cases, study finds
By Dennis Thompson
HealthDay Reporter
FRIDAY, Dec. 9, 2016 (HealthDay News) -- An artificially intelligent computer system is making breast cancer treatment recommendations on a par with those of cancer doctors, a new study reports.
The IBM computer system -- called Watson Oncology -- made treatment recommendations that jibed nine out of 10 times with those of a multidisciplinary board of doctors at a top cancer hospital in India, researchers say.
In cases involving more complex cancers, however, the computer did not hit that 90 percent mark.
Another version of Watson famously defeated two former winners on the game show "Jeopardy!" in 2011, winning a first-place prize of $1 million.
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NHS Digital sees off patient privacy challenge

Ben Heather
6 December 2016
NHS Digital has seen off a challenge to the way its anonymises millions of patients’ data, with a verdict finding the practice is in keeping with national guidelines
The Information Commissioner’s Office has not upheld a complaint from privacy group MedConfidental, which challenged the way NHS Digital anonymised Hospital Episodic Statistics.
The group complained this data, which is provided to dozens of companies and non-NHS organisations, was only pseudonymised, and the identity of patients could be uncovered and their privacy breached.
This meant NHS Digital’s pseudonymising practices did not meet the ICO’s Anonymisation Code of Practice, MedConfidential argued.
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Center for Internet Security expert offers a simple equation to manage cyber risk

'No matter what, you cannot take your vulnerability to zero,' says former NSA agent Tony Sager.
December 06, 2016 11:50 AM 
BOSTON – Tony Sager, senior vice president at the Center for Internet Security, promised to help simplify security – if not necessarily make it easy – at the HIMSS Health Privacy Forum on Tuesday.
Sager, who spent nearly four decades at the National Security Agency before he joined CIS, offered an equation to help put the situation in perspective: Risk = vulnerability, threat, consequence / controls.
In other words, an organization's cyber risk is a function of the vulnerability of their systems, the volume and variety of security threats and the consequence of an attack or breach – weighed against the strength of the organization's controls, what it can do about it.
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10 outdated security tools that need to be replaced

Among the items in the ‘security graveyard,’ Intermountain CISO Karl West included flat networks, SOC-less security and compliance-only security.
December 06, 2016 02:51 PM
Healthcare security is in constant flux. While most organizations recognize the need to involve multiple departments in the security discussion, security work was frequently designated to just one or two people in the past.
On Tuesday, Karl West, Salt Lake City-Intermountain Healthcare CISO broke down the 10 outdated security tools (and viewpoints) used in healthcare and how organizations can replace them.
1. Simple Passwords: Passwords like ‘MD’ or ‘1234’ have gone by the wayside. Passwords (hopefully) have increased in complexity, like 8 to 12 characters and special symbols.
2. Password only: Organizations need to move the single password mentality. West recommended multi-factor authentication, as passwords and PINs are no longer secure.
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APIs can unlock health information for patients

Dec 8, 2016 12:02pm
Already widely used in the banking and credit card industries, APIs could allow patients to easily access digital medical records.
Technology that allows consumers to withdraw money from any ATM in the world could also be the key to giving patients better access to their health data.
Application program interfaces (API), which facilitate secure information transfers between computer programs, are poised to take on a greater role in healthcare, according to researchers at The Commonwealth Fund. Already widely used within the banking and credit card industries, API technology would allow patients to easily access digital medical records and improve interoperability between different healthcare providers.
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Research of mHealth Apps Reveals Significant Gaps in Quality

December 7, 2016
by Rajiv Leventhal
An evaluation of 137 patient-facing mobile health (mHealth) apps revealed subpar findings, including that few apps address the needs of the patients who could benefit the most, according to research in December’s issue of Health Affairs.
Researchers from University of Michigan Medical School, the Department of Medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and elsewhere noted that key stakeholders, including medical professional societies, insurers, and policy makers, have largely avoided formally recommending apps, which forces patients to obtain recommendations from other sources. As such, the researchers evaluated apps that were intended for use by patients to manage their health, that were highly rated by consumers and recommended by experts, and that targeted high-need, high-cost populations.
They found that there is a wide variety of apps in the marketplace but that “few apps address the needs of the patients who could benefit the most. “We also found that consumers’ ratings were poor indications of apps’ clinical utility or usability and that most apps did not respond appropriately when a user entered potentially dangerous health information. Going forward, data privacy and security will continue to be major concerns in the dissemination of mHealth apps,” the researchers stated.
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Unisys launches new technology to stop cybercrime in its tracks

Built-in analytics, visualization and micro segmentation are key
December 06, 2016 10:24 AM
Unisys President and CEO Peter Altabef says his company is committed to tightening digital security.
Unisys Corporation today launched Unisys Stealth, a software application aimed at helping organizations ward off cybercrime.
The application makes it easier for organizations to deploy enterprise-wide, micro-segmentation security across extended networks. Unisys executives say it can be done with “the touch of a button.”
Built-in analytics and visualization provide immediate insight into security risk for automatic configuration and deployment of the technology, they add.
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ONC expects mission will continue during Trump presidency

Published December 07 2016, 7:03am EST
The Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT expects to weather the political changes resulting from a new Trump administration and the 21st Century Cures bill, expected to be signed into law soon.
The ONC is currently led by National Coordinator Vindell Washington, MD, ascending to the position in August—his position is appointed and could change under the new administration.
Speaking at Tuesday’s joint meeting of the Health IT Policy and Standards Committees, ONC’s Deputy National Coordinator Jon White, MD, reassured its members that while “there is an upcoming change in administration,” the statutory mission of ONC is firmly entrenched.
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21st Century Cures Act passes Senate; Barack Obama expected to sign wide-ranging healthcare bill into law

Dec 7, 2016 2:10pm
The Senate approved the 21st Century Cures Act Wednesday afternoon in a majority vote. President Barack Obama could sign it into law as early as tomorrow.
The final vote was 94 to 5. 
The act covers a broad range of medical reforms and innovations, including fixes to the Food and Drug Administration’s process for approving drugs, funding for the “Cancer Moonshot” and precision medicine initiatives, and expanded access to mental health services.
It also aims to support health information technology goals, including electronic health record interoperability and data privacy and security.
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IHI 2016: EMRs 'a 4,000-click-a-day problem,' says Verghese

Dec 7, 2016 12:13am
ORLANDO, Fla.–Technology has advanced medicine in many ways, but it has also led physicians to focus more on data than patients, said best-selling author Abraham Verghese, M.D.
Verghese, the keynote speaker Tuesday at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement’s 28th annual National Forum on Quality Improvement in Healthcare in Orlando, Florida, said physicians’ attention has been diverted and patients suffer as a result.
Patients don’t like it when doctors break eye contact with them, said Verghese, senior associate chair, Stanford University School of Medicine. They want to feel like their doctors are paying attention to them.
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Why implementing EHR systems still is fraught with risk

Published December 07 2016, 3:15pm EST
The often-cited challenges to the implementation of electronic health record systems are not what healthcare providers say they are.
That’s the finding of researchers from Johns Hopkins University’s Bloomberg School of Public Health who analyzed data from the American Hospital Association (AHA) Annual Survey Information Technology Supplement.
“Many people were saying that the biggest challenges to EHR adoption were the purchase price and meeting the Meaningful Use requirements,” says Eric Ford, professor and associate department chair at the Bloomberg School of Public Health. “While those are the most common concerns, that doesn’t necessarily mean they’re the greatest concerns in terms of being actual challenges.”
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Strong Cybersecurity Measures Need Security in IoT Devices

By Elizabeth Snell on December 05, 2016

NIST released guidelines on cybersecurity measures for IoT and why an engineering-based approach building security systems directly into IoT technology is needed.

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) recently published guidelines on how organizations can utilize cybersecurity measures for IoT devices, and underlined the importance of ensuring that security systems are built directly into IoT technology.
Systems Security Engineering: Considerations for a Multidisciplinary Approach in the Engineering of Trustworthy Secure Systems explains that the need for trustworthy and secure systems has become stronger as the cybersecurity threats continue to evolve.
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Healthcare Cloud Becoming Critical IT Infrastructure Tool

By Elizabeth O'Dowd on December 05, 2016

Healthcare organizations are embracing the cloud and no longer hesitant to trust cloud security as a recent HIMSS study points to future healthcare cloud dependence.

Healthcare organizations are increasing their dependence on cloud technology as It decision-makers are putting more trust in the cloud.
The HIMSS Analytics 2016 Cloud Survey cites the strategic benefits of the cloud eclipse the previous security reservations. Healthcare organizations are generally rolling out cloud deployments first on back office applications, with plans to expand to analytics and patient facing apps. HIMSS analysts predict that cloud will become a mission-critical tool for all healthcare IT infrastructure incentives.
According to the survey, the use of cloud computing in the healthcare setting has tripled since 2014 due to the different ways organizations are leveraging the technology. In 2014, cloud was seen primarily as a way to support health information exchange (HIE) and store data, but in 2016, organizations are implementing the cloud for application development, patient engagement, and more.
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IoT threatens patient safety, but regs could stifle innovation

Dec 6, 2016 9:15am
Connected devices powered by the Internet of Things is vulnerable to hackers, malware and other privacy and security threats.
The rise of connected devices in healthcare and the Internet of Things (IoT) might help improve patient care by making data-sharing easier, but it could also put patients in danger.
While many are calling for more government oversight and regulation in the area, others warn that could stifle innovation, according to an MIT Technology Review article.
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Futuristic tech could extend lifespans, improve care quality

Dec 6, 2016 11:34am
Technology—from nanotech to DNA-fueled precision medicine to the much-hyped Google Glass—could extend human life expectancy into the triple digits, says Nicole Sirotin, chief of the internal medicine department and director of the executive health program at Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi.
Patients could soon be issued "insideables," chips planted just under the skin, and "ingestibles,” tiny sensor pills. A "health check chair" could bolster efficiency by automatically and simultaneously checking patients’ vital signs while they sit, Sirotin writes in an opinion piece in The National.
“Medical staff, especially trauma specialists, can use head-mounted Google Glass technology to have hands-free access to the internet and instantaneous access to patients’ medical history, medical checklists and the availability of hospital resources,” she adds.
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Most mHealth apps aren't effective for chronic conditions

Dec 6, 2016 7:30am
An explosion of new mobile health apps offers consumers an unprecedented level of choice, but clinical utility is still lacking for those with chronic conditions.
Although there is a rapidly growing market of mHealth apps targeting high-cost, high-need health conditions, the majority of those apps are unable to go beyond a basic level of patient engagement that would be clinically effective in helping consumers manage specific chronic illnesses, according to a study published in the December issue of JAMA.
Of the 137 mobile health apps evaluated by researchers targeting illnesses such as diabetes, hypertension, obesity, arthritis, and depression and bipolar disorder, very few offered functionalities like providing guidance based on user-entered information or rewarding behavior changes. Researchers also discovered that user ratings offer a poor indication of the apps clinical impact, an indication that patients and clinicians value certain functionalities differently, and echoing previous findings that app reviews aren’t trustworthy.
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How data warehouses can speed identification of rare diseases

Published December 06 2016, 3:02pm EST
There are more than 7,000 rare diseases for physicians to consider when diagnosing a patient. For even the most experienced physician, this is a daunting task. This is further compounded by the fact that one in ten people have one of these diseases.
Recognizing and sifting through a plethora of signs and symptoms takes an average of seven years and seven doctors, leaving patients suffering for years from rare diseases and a lack of answers. It takes an emotional and financial toll on patients and their families as they wait, hoping for a positive health outcome.
The future demands a new approach, where phenotypic and genomic data are captured and stored in a way that is easily understood and used to make more informed decisions during patient evaluations, improving the diagnostic process of rare genetic disorders.
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27 hot health techs to watch in 2017

A look at the leading health information technologies hospitals told HIMSS Analytics they plan to buy in the next 12 months. 
December 02, 2016 02:14 PM
Laboratory-focused technologies, such as transfusion and specimen collection management systems, lab outreach services and molecular diagnostics, are seeing big upticks in purchasing plans, according to HIMSS Analytics.
Seven years since the HITECH Act's meaningful use incentives turbocharged hospitals' information technology purchasing plans, providers are still investing big money in their IT infrastructure. Having moved well beyond basic electronic health record systems, they're now looking for efficiencies in communication, data storage and security, analytics, asset tracking, bed management and more.
We consulted with HIMSS Analytics to spotlight technologies that have the greatest predicted buying activity for U.S. hospitals in the coming year.
"These are the technologies that are showing the most potential for growth for 2017," said Matt Schuchardt, director of market intelligence solutions sales at HIMSS Analytics.
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Healthcare gets a 'D' on cybersecurity report card

Dec 5, 2016 10:25am
A new report gives healthcare a "D" grade in network security.
Healthcare security professionals are less confident in their ability to assess security risk than in the past.
That’s part of the reason network security firm Tenable gave the industry an overall “D” grade on its global cybersecurity report card.
In another recent survey of healthcare public relations pros, payer and provider executives said technology catastrophes were their top concern. That's a shift from previous years, when workforce issues, physician satisfaction and medical-legal problems were top of mind.
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Nurse fired after 528 patients' records breached at Glendale Adventist Medical Center

A health-care professional at Glendale Adventist Medical Center was fired Wednesday over a privacy breach involving hundreds of patient medical records.
Glendale Adventist officials said in a statement on Friday that the protected health information of 528 patients was accessed without authorization by a hospital employee. The unauthorized access included 88 patient records from Glendale Adventist’s sister hospital, White Memorial Medical Center in Boyle Heights.
The breach was discovered during a routine security review in June and, after an investigation, the source was confirmed as an employee and not an external hack. The employee, who was terminated, was working as a per-diem nurse.
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The Situation Report: Cerner Positions Itself For EHR Deal With Veterans Affairs

Dec 1, 2016 | 12:03 pm
The technological stars may be aligning for health IT giant Cerner. And that could mean another multibillion-dollar government contract–this time with the Department of Veterans Affairs.
Kansas City-based Cerner announced this month an agreement with American Well, a telehealth technology company, to deliver a virtual health care experience within Cerner’s electronic health record (EHR) system–an industry first.
Integrating telehealth capabilities into the EHR experience puts Cerner in a highly competitive position as the VA continues to deliberate the fate of its aging VistA EHR platform. Telehealth has been a major component of VA’s efforts to improve access to care for veterans, especially for those veterans who do not live close to a VA hospital or clinic. Making the Cerner EHR even more attractive to VA is the company’s recent win of the Defense Department’s $4.6 billion EHR contract.
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Irish e-health projects target heart disease, prescriptions

GPs may soon see back of dot matrix printers
5 December 2016 | 0
An Irish-led team of researchers is working on ways of using technology to improve these numbers. The group is led by Dr Kieran Moran of Ireland’s Insight Centre for Data Analytics at DCU.
Exercise reduces the likelihood of patients dying prematurely from a cardiac event by 25%. However research has found that despite suffering a cardian event, only 10% of patients participate in a cardiac rehabilitation programme after leaving hospital.
“While patients tend to be aware of the benefits of exercise there are a number of barriers for people who want to exercise after a cardiac event,” said Dr Moran. “They not only have the usual barriers such as time constraints and ‘exercising takes effort’, that we all have, they also cannot find classes relevant to them. They want to exercise with others recovering from the same condition and often feel that they won’t be able to do the exercises. The use e-health and other technological solutions may offer an alternative.”
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Grab Bag Of Goodies In 21st Century Cures Act

By Sydney Lupkin and Steven Findlay December 2, 2016
A sprawling health bill expected to pass the Senate and become law before the end of the year is a grab bag for industries that spent plenty of money lobbying to make sure it happened that way.
Here are some of the winners and losers in the 21st Century Cures Act:
Winners
Pharmaceutical and Medical Device Companies. The bill will likely save drug and device companies billions of dollars bringing products to market by giving the Food and Drug Administration new authority and tools to demand fewer studies from those companies and speed up approvals.
The changes represent a massive lobbying effort by 58 pharmaceutical companies, 24 device companies and 26 “biotech products and research” companies, according to a Kaiser Health News analysis of lobbying data compiled by the Center for Responsive Politics. The groups reported more than $192 million in lobbying expenses on the Cures Act and other legislative priorities, the analysis shows.
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21st Century Cures Act May Reduce HIT Regulatory Burden

Scott Mace, December 6, 2016

Legislation on its way to the U.S. Senate offers a possible path toward solving the patient ID problem.

Last week's passage of the 21st Century Cures Act in the U.S. House of Representatives may result in reduced regulatory burdens for providers struggling to comply with meaningful use and other health IT-related requirements.
The bipartisan legislation is expected to pass the Senate this week and head to President Obama's desk for a promised approval.
It directs the Department of Health and Human Services to create a report outlining how the department could reduce regulatory and administrative burdens, says Leslie Krigstein, vice president of congressional affairs at College of Healthcare Information Management Executives (CHIME).
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21st Century Cures Act Could Have Big Tech Impact

Ken Terry
December 05, 2016
The 21st Century Cures Act, which the US House of Representatives adopted by an overwhelming vote last week and which is expected to pass the Senate and be signed by President Obama, has major implications for the future of health information technology. Not only does the legislation take a strong stand against "information blocking" by electronic health record (EHR) vendors and healthcare providers, but it also mandates the use of new methods of exchanging data between disparate EHRs.
Within 1 year after the bill's passage, the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) will have to require EHR developers to attest, as a condition of product certification, that they have not and will not engage in information blocking. The measure defines information blocking as practices that restrict authorized access, exchange, or use of information for treatment and other permitted purposes.
The HHS Office of Inspector General will be responsible for enforcing the prohibition against information blocking. Beyond the threat of decertification, "developers, networks and exchanges" found guilty of these practices will be fined up to $1 million per violation.
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U.S. healthcare spending skyrockets to $10K per person

Dec 5, 2016 10:38am
A new analysis from the Office of the Actuary at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and published by Health Affairs indicates that healthcare spending has exploded, reaching $3.2 trillion in 2015. Photo credit: Getty/MrLonelyWalker
The rising cost of private health insurance, hospital care, physician and clinical services, and prescription drugs are a few reasons that in 2015 healthcare spending in the United States grew at a rate of 5.8% and reached $3.2 trillion.
Those figures equate to $9,990 per person, according to a new report from the Office of the Actuary at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and published by Health Affairs.
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Going digital: Rollout begins for e-health records from babies' birth

The new system is the first national electronic patient chart for maternity anywhere in the world.

December 5, 2016
OVER THE WEEKEND, Emily was born – one of Ireland’s first newborns to have their own electronic health record from birth.
Weighing 7lb 5oz, Emily was born to Ellen and Aidan in Cork University Maternity Hospital last Saturday 3 December.
Her birth heralds the introduction of an electronic health record for all women and babies in maternity services in Ireland – the nationwide system being a world first.
Ireland’s Maternal & Newborn Clinical Management System (MN-CMS) will allow clinical record information to be shared with relevant providers of care when needed.
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Enjoy!
David.