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."

Saturday, March 11, 2017

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links – 11th March, 2017.

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.
-----

How will artificial intelligence change radiology?

Artificial intelligence and cognitive computing is being heralded as the brave new frontier of clinical IT, Kim Thomas reports on how it is already beginning to reshape radiology imaging and diagnostics.

Jon Hoeksma

Editor, Digital Health 
IBM chose December’s annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America to showcase the ability of its Watson supercomputer to rapidly analyse medical images and suggest a diagnosis. Mark Griffiths, a clinical radiologist at University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust, who attended RSNA, says he saw some “stunning demonstrations” of the technology, including chest X-rays being “reported in milliseconds.”
Watson is an example of a technology that IBM refers to as “cognitive computing”. Using a form of artificial intelligence known as natural language processing, Watson, a cloud-based system, is able to analyse vast stores of scholarly articles, patient records and medical images. (When IBM acquired Merge Healthcare in 2015, it gained access to the company’s database of 30 billion images.) This ability to interpret written language is what marks Watson out as different from other computer-based tools used to aid diagnosis.
Not enough radiologists to meet demand
In England, the volume of radiology images taken has increased at the rate of 3.6% a year for 20 years, and there are not enough radiologists to meet demand. Could Watson ­– and other AI tools – provide a solution to the problem of overstretched radiology departments? And – as some fear – could it replace radiologists altogether?
-----

Healthcare organizations embrace the Internet of Things

by Matt Kuhrt 
Mar 3, 2017 9:24am
Almost 9 in 10 healthcare organizations surveyed by Aruba reported that they had already suffered an IoT-related security breach.
The healthcare sector sees the potential for big benefits in the Internet of Things (IoT), but security remains a major concern.
Objects that connect to the internet and share data have become widespread among organizations generally, according to a new study published by Aruba, part of Hewlett Packard Enterprise. Among sectors surveyed in the study, healthcare’s implementation of IoT lagged only the enterprise and industrial sectors, with 60% of healthcare organizations using the technology worldwide.
-----

How bioinformatics tools are bringing genetic analysis to the masses

Computational biologists are starting to develop user-friendly platforms for analysing and interpreting genetic-sequence data.
28 February 2017
For doctors trying to treat people who have symptoms that have no clear cause, gene-sequencing technologies might help in pointing them to a diagnosis. But the vast amount of data generated can make it hard to get to the answer quickly.
Until a couple of years ago, doctors at US Naval Medical Research Unit-6 (NAMRU-6) in Lima had to send their sequence data to the United States for analysis, a process that could take weeks — much too long to make pressing decisions about treatment. “If all you could do was get the data that you then have to ship to the US, it's almost useless,” says Mariana Leguia, who heads the centre's genomics and pathogen-discovery unit.
But Leguia no longer has to wait for the analyses; she can get results in days or even hours — and she can do them in her own lab. Her unit makes use of EDGE (Empowering the Development of Genomics Expertise), a bioinformatics tool that hides common microbial-genomics tasks, such as sequence assembly and species identification, behind a slick interface that allows users to generate polished analyses. “We can have actionable information on site that allows us to make decisions very quickly about how to go forward,” Leguia says.
-----

Why the urgency to share data will put new pressure on providers

Published March 03 2017, 3:30pm EST
Healthcare providers have a number of threats from which they must protect patient data and maintain HIPAA compliance. In this highly targeted industry, there’s no shortage of hackers constantly seeking out unsecured devices, paper and information to make a profit.
In fact, the price of stolen healthcare records is falling because of the abundance of such records on the black market. That means that the recent wave of data breaches within healthcare companies has saturated the stolen data market, and the drum beating for expanded data protection to defend against these breaches is only growing louder.
But it’s not just external attacks worrying healthcare organizations; internal leaks also have IT executives taking notice. With most patient data breaches triggered by employees of the organization, protecting information from within becomes just as important, if not more.
-----

10 next steps for the national health IT agenda

At a pivotal moment for healthcare, it's time to reform regulatory approaches, improve access to data for care coordination, establish a national patient ID and more.
March 01, 2017 11:53 AM
At HIMSS17, I listened carefully to payers, providers, patients, developers, and researchers. Below is a distillation of what I heard from thousands of stakeholders.
This list is not partisan, and does not criticize the work of any person in industry, government or academia. It reflects lessons learned from the past 20 years of healthcare IT implementation and policymaking. Knowing where we are now and where we want to be, here are 10 guiding principles.
1. Stop designing health IT by regulation. Through its certification program, ONC directs the specific features, functionality, and design of electronic health records. As a result, technology developers devote the majority of their development resources to fulfilling government requirements instead of innovating to meet market and clinician demands. The certification program has established a culture of compliance in an industry ready for data-driven innovations. ONC’s role in the health IT industry made sense eight years ago when IT adoption in healthcare lagged considerably behind all other sectors, but today the certification program impedes a functioning market and must be reformed.
-----

Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt grilled on missing confidential NHS data

Ben Heather

27 February 2017
Health secretary Jeremy Hunt was told more than 500,000 missing confidential NHS correspondence a year ago but kept the information secret on official advice.
Hunt faced urgent questions in the Commons after a report in The Guardian that  709,000 letters sent between GPs and hospitals in the five years to 2016 never arrived at their destination. About 500,000 contained confidential clinical data.
Instead, NHS Shared Businesses Services, the company charged with transporting the letters, stored the information in a warehouse, in some case for years.
-----

New Data Standards Can Help Extend Electronic Health Records

Ken Terry
February 28, 2017
ORLANDO, Florida ― A rapidly maturing HL7 standards framework promises to help physicians expand the capabilities of their electronic health records (EHRs) and will make it easier for them to comply with the requirement of the Merit-Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) that lets patients have easy electronic access to their health information. These budding standards are already starting to have an impact on the healthcare industry.
Showcased in a daylong series of presentations at the recent Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) 2017 Conference here in Orlando, the data standards, known collectively as Fast Health Interoperability Resources (FHIR), are already allowing physicians in about two dozen healthcare institutions to do things they could never do before with their EHRs. Among the outside applications that FHIR application programming interfaces (APIs) are letting these doctors use are programs for pediatric growth charts, the measurement of bilirubin levels, and the translation of medication instructions in more than 20 languages.
-----

A digital revolution in health care is speeding up

Telemedicine, predictive diagnostics, wearable sensors and a host of new apps will transform how people manage their health

From the print edition | Business

Mar 2nd 2017
WHEN someone goes into cardiac arrest, survival depends on how quickly the heart can be restarted. Enter Amazon’s Echo, a voice-driven computer that answers to the name of Alexa, which can recite life-saving instructions about cardiopulmonary resuscitation, a skill taught to it by the American Heart Association. Alexa is accumulating other health-care skills, too, including acting as a companion for the elderly and answering questions about children’s illnesses. In the near future she will probably help doctors with grubby hands to take notes and to request scans, as well as remind patients to take their pills.
Alexa is one manifestation of a drive to disrupt an industry that has so far largely failed to deliver on the potential of digital information. Health care is over-regulated and expensive to innovate in, and has a history of failing to implement ambitious IT projects. But the momentum towards a digital future is gathering pace. Investment into digital health care has soared (see chart).
-----

Snooping patient transport staff cause Vanderbilt breach

Published February 28 2017, 4:20pm EST
In late December, executives at Vanderbilt University Medical Center learned that two employees in the patient transport department were inappropriately accessing patients’ electronic medical records, obtaining more information than they needed to do their jobs, according to the hospital.
An audit found that the activity had been going on for 20 months with 3,247 patients affected. For a smaller but undisclosed number of patients, their Social Security numbers were viewed.
-----

Blockchain's potential use cases for healthcare: hype or reality?

The technology's implications for interoperability, privacy, claims processing and more are intriguing. But many challenges must be addressed before wider applications become possible.
February 22, 2017 05:56 PM
ORLANDO – At HIMSS17 on Wednesday, IEEE Computer Society and the Personal Connected Health Alliance hosted a day-long event focused on the potentially transformative promise of an intriguing innovation: Blockchain.
Kicking off the symposium, "Blockchain in Healthcare: A Rock Stars of Technology Event," Tamara StClaire, previous chief innovation officer at Conduent Health (formerly known as Xerox Healthcare), made the case that the bitcoin-derived secure digital ledger technology could just maybe offer the answer to an array of vexing healthcare challenges – not least of which is interoperability.
"The current infrastructure is really inadequate to handle information exchange," she said. "Blockchain has the opportunity to impact those infrastructure challenges."
-----

Physician willingness to use wearables data in treatment grows

Published March 01 2017, 3:24pm EST
Patient-generated health data may be a matter for contention now, but a trade association for consumer wearable companies says its recent research suggests that acceptance of the data by physicians is nearing.
A report by the Consumer Technology Association (CTA) predicts that the U.S. could reach a “tipping point” of physicians using patient-generated data from devices such as wearables by 2020.
The group says the report’s findings were based on studying other industry research and on a series of interviews with “key U.S. healthcare industry stakeholders,” including physicians, insurance industry executives, clinical informaticists and experts in the field of digital health technology.
-----

Why healthcare must overcome 3 challenges to beef up security

Published March 01 2017, 3:26pm EST
Every day brings a new report of a security breach or other security based problem within healthcare. The unceasing cycle of issues gives rise to the question of what is healthcare doing about security and in particular cyber security, and what more can be done.
That is a question that is front and center for many individuals within the industry and examining the industry. It was also the focus of a recent discussion I had with Stephen Cobb, a security industry veteran currently running a research team at ESET.
Cobb focuses his research on emerging security threats. Given his prior experience in the privacy realm, he brings a somewhat different approach to security.
-----

Report: Cost discouraging long-term care providers from using EHRs

Post-acute care providers may think of electronic health records systems as too complicated and costly, according to a federal report published Monday.
Post-acute settings have limited use of EHRs, which spurred the Government Accountability Office to investigate why adoption is slow, according to the report.
Cost is the top factor inhibiting use, along with ability to exchange EHR information, the watchdog agency found. Facilities' financial resources are often limited to cover initial implementation costs of an EHR, let alone costs of exchanging information and maintenance, the report said.
Varying implementation standards, finding post-acute relevant health information among exchanged data, workflow disruptions and technological challenges also ranked as barriers to EHR use. Post-acute providers also told the GAO that a lack of staff expertise, coupled with high staff turnover, leads to a “constant need” to train staff on the technology.
-----

Survey: Patient engagement increasing thanks to digital tools, but reservations remain

February 28, 2017
By necessity, people who are living with a chronic condition are more familiar with the healthcare system than those who are not. As a natural extension of that relationship, these same people are also more in tune with the technology available to improve their engagement with their health, a new poll from health IT company CDW Healthcare shows.
Building on last year’s efforts to examine what’s driving, influencing and presenting barriers to the patient engagement space, CDW surveyed 200 patients and 200 providers (physicians and physician assistants) to assess the impact of digital tools and communication outreach efforts between the two.
All patients surveyed were chronic – defined as having been to the doctor six or more times in the past year. Of this group, 70 percent said they have become more engaged with their care in the past two years, representing a 13 percent increase from 2016. In the past year, 74 percent of patients joined a patient portal (a nearly 30 percent jump from 2016), which resulted in 69 percent speaking with their healthcare provider more often and 69 percent of respondents accessing their healthcare information online.
-----

Health Catalyst, Regenstrief partner to commercialize natural language processing technology

The companies said they intend to put the artificial intelligence-powered text analytics technology to work accelerating advances in patient care.
February 27, 2017 01:10 PM
Regenstrief Institute CEO Peter Embi, MD, said the deal will help patients benefit from unstructured data. 
Health Catalyst and the Regenstrief Institute are working together to commercialize nDepth, Regenstrief’s natural language processing technology.
nDepth is an acronym for NLP Data Extraction Providing Targeted Healthcare. Indianapolis-based Regenstrief developed the technology to harness unstructured data.
Salt-Lake City-based Health Catalyst, a data warehousing and analytics company, has been in the business of extracting data to boost care quality since it launched in 2008.
-----
Self-guided internet-based CBT significantly more effective for symptom severity, tx response
FRIDAY, Feb. 24, 2017 (HealthDay News) -- Self-guided internet-based cognitive behavioral therapy (iCBT) is effective for treating adults with depressive symptoms, according to a review published online Feb. 22 in JAMA Psychiatry.
Eirini Karyotaki, from the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, and colleagues conducted a systematic review to estimate the effect of self-guided iCBT in treating adults with depressive symptoms versus controls. Individual participant data were included for 3,876 participants from 13 of 16 eligible randomized clinical trials in which self-guided iCBT was compared with a control (usual care, waiting list, or attention control); multiple imputations were used to handle missing data.
-----

Survey Demonstrates Effectiveness of Secure Messaging in ED

Secure messaging is not prevalent among providers in emergency departments despite being regarded as one of the most effective forms of communication in coordinating care.

February 27, 2017 - A recent report found despite secure messaging being cited as the second-most effective real-time communication in emergency departments (ED) behind face-to-face interactions, less than fifty percent of surveyed hospital ED staff report utilizing this form of communication.
Based on a poll of 158 ED staff members conducted by Everbridge, the report showed that while secure messaging (such as Direct messaging) is reportedly the most effective form of non-real time communication, it is still less prevalent in hospitals than communication via EHR technology, email, overhead systems, and fax machines.
Communication in emergency departments is inordinately complex and fast-paced. Errors in sharing information are extremely common, with more than half of surveyed ED staff members reporting over ten percent of handoffs in patient care contain communication errors, and 21 percent of respondents reporting communication errors in more than 1 in 5 handoffs.
-----

Cross-Functional Hospital Teams Key to EMR/EHR Success

Alexandra Wilson Pecci, February 28, 2017

Hospitals and health systems should assemble cross-functional teams of technology professionals, clinical, and business leaders to properly execute an EMR/EHR post-implementation strategy, advises KPMG.

Although the Office of the National Coordinator of Health IT puts electronic medical record system and electronic health record system implementation rates at more than 95% of hospitals, most EMR/EHR systems aren’t optimized for users, says a KPMG report.
Instead, the systems were “implemented as one-time, factory boilerplate-style system installations,” the report says.
The report advises hospitals to assemble cross-functional teams "that comprise technology professionals as well as clinical and business leaders to focus on executing an [EMR/EHR] post-implementation strategy."
-----

The Future Of Precision Medicine: Great Promise, Significant Challenges

February 28, 2017
Editor’s note: This post is part of a series stemming from the Fifth Annual Health Law Year in P/Review event held at Harvard Law School on Monday, January 23rd, 2017. The conference brought together leading experts to review major developments in health law over the previous year, and preview what is to come.
In his 2015 State of the Union address, President Obama launched the Precision Medicine Initiative (PMI), which is intended to help move medicine from the traditional “one-size-fits-all” approach where treatments are designed for the “average” patient, to one that “takes into account individual differences in people’s genes, environments, and lifestyles,” thereby personalizing treatment. According to the White House, a major goal is to “bring us closer to curing diseases like cancer and diabetes.” In December 2016, the 21st Century Cures Act was signed into law, authorizing up to $1.455 billion in funding for the initiative, spread over 10 years (although, importantly, the statute does not guarantee any of the funds, which will be subject to budget negotiations each year).
-----

Genomics promises a leap forward for rare disease diagnosis

by: Clive Cookson
February 28, 2017
Kate Palmer and Simon Wright were in despair. Their four-year-old daughter Jessica was suffering from epilepsy, poorly co-ordinated movement and slow mental development but doctors had been unable to pinpoint the rare disorder causing these problems. A series of tests including MRI scans, electroencephalography (EEG) recordings and lumber punctures had failed to provide diagnostic clues.
Then they enlisted Jessica in the UK government’s new 100,000 Genomes Project, through Great Ormond Street Hospital in London. By analysing Jessica’s genome — the 3bn biochemical letters of genetic code that control every cell in the body — and comparing it with her parents’ DNA, researchers identified the likely cause of her condition. A mutation in a gene called SLC2A1 was starving her brain of the sugar needed for efficient metabolism. Although the condition is extremely rare, affecting about 500 people worldwide, clinicians have developed a treatment in the form of a diet that enables the brain to maximise glucose production.
-----

EHRs could serve as more accurate tool to identify septic shock trends

Published February 27 2017, 5:00am EST
Despite the fact that sepsis is one of the most deadly and costly medical conditions for hospitals, doctors frequently fail to properly document this immune system response to infection that kills more than 250,000 Americans each year.
“At least 30 percent of the time, the physicians who are writing their notes do not use the words sepsis, severe sepsis or septic shock. And, so it doesn’t appear in the record,” says Steven Simpson, MD, professor of medicine and interim director of the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine at the University of Kansas.
Traditionally, tracking sepsis is done using diagnosis billing codes. The lack of documentation in the electronic health record (EHR) is why it is so difficult to get an accurate picture of septic shock trends, according to Simpson.
-----

Medicomp debuts latest point-of-care decision support tool at HIMSS17

The new system delivers optimized EHR data for physicians that is easy to digest and promotes new levels of clinical insights, the vendor says.
February 24, 2017 12:20 PM
Medicomp Systems, a patient data systems vendor, unveiled at HIMSS17 Quippe Clinical Lens, the company’s newest point-of-care decision support tool.
The new system delivers optimized EHR data for physicians that is easy to digest and promotes new levels of clinical insights, the vendor said. Meridian Medical Management has incorporated Quippe Clinical Lens into its EHR.
Quippe Clinical Lens is a web-based application that can be added to any EHR or health information exchange with the aim of making sense of data from multiple encounters across systems, Medicomp said. It’s the latest addition to the Quippe suite of systems, which is designed to deliver longitudinal patient information within a problem-oriented clinical view. It mirrors the way physicians think and work to drive optimal patient outcomes.
-----

ECRI's Partnership for Health IT Patient Safety issues safe practice recommendations for patient ID

The new system delivers optimized EHR data for physicians that is easy to digest and promotes new levels of clinical insights, the vendor says.
February 24, 2017 12:53 PM
The Partnership for Health IT Patient Safety, an ECRI Institute collaborative, announced at HIMSS17 its second set of Safe Practice Recommendations aimed at reducing patient misidentification.
The evidence-based recommendations for the use of health IT in patient identification are designed to improve health IT safety and build upon other work in patient identification, the collaborative said.
In the publicly available toolkit, “Health IT Safe Practices: Toolkit for the Safe Use of Health IT for Patient Identification,” the Partnership presents eight safe practice recommendations, along with actionable resources to facilitate the implementation of these recommended safe practices.
-----

Functional design, usability inhibits open-source EHRs

Feb 27, 2017 10:58am
Despite the low price point, open-source EHRs struggle with functionality and require additional IT resources.
Given the high costs associated with commercial EHR implementation, open-source software has become a financially alluring option for hospitals and physicians. But usability continues to plague the free software that is currently available.
Just four of the 54 available open-source EHR projects have been certified by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT, according to a study published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research Medical Informatics.
-----

The 8 most common healthcare apps clinicians want to create

Written by Jessica Kim Cohen | February 23, 2017 
Fifty-one percent of clinical leaders report they use mobile or desktop applications at the point-of-care, according to a KLAS report.
For the report, titled Connected Apps in Healthcare 2017, researchers interviewed 47 members of clinical leadership at large healthcare organizations. The goal of the report was to determine how clinicians use software today and what they would like to see in the future.
Here are the eight suggestions respondents shared when asked what applications they would want to create or purchase, ranked by popularity.
-----

Why big data must be better utilized to fight cancer

Published February 27 2017, 3:20pm EST
Cancer is one of the leading causes of death, with some 1.7 million Americans expected to be diagnosed with some form of the disease this year alone. Yet in the vast majority of cases, the details of their disease and treatment—from the tumor’s composition to which drugs were tried and what the results of those treatments were—remain stuck in medical records that offer no help to others facing similar circumstances.
Instead, most of what’s known comes from the 3 percent of patients who’ve taken part in clinical trials, leaving enormous gaps in our understanding of the multiplicity of diseases that are grouped together as cancer and why certain patients respond or don’t to various treatment regimens.
In many ways, it’s puzzling that the power of big data is not being unleashed to the extent it might to help cure cancer. Therefore, there’s a real opportunity for big data providers, the healthcare industry, health policy makers and the new administration in Washington to step up.
-----

The Fourth Industrial Revolution: Risks and Benefits

By Irving Wladawsky-Berger
Feb 24, 2017 12:25 pm ET
Concern over dwindling bee populations has inspired a tiny drone for pollinating plants. Chemists from Japan's National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology designed the little drones. They plan to add GPS, artificial intelligence and high resolution cameras to the small machines, which also need to crawl inside certain plants, as bees do.
A Fourth Industrial Revolution linking physical, digital, and biological worlds was the central theme of the 2016 World Economic Forum that took place a year ago in Davos, Switzerland. It continued to play a prominent role in the recently concluded 2017 annual meeting. Coming to grips with the impact of the Fourth Industrial Revolution was among the top leadership priorities discussed at this year’s meeting.
Over the past year, Klaus Schwab, WEF founder and executive chairman, has described his vision for the fourth industrial revolution in a number of articles as well as a book on the subject. Dr. Schwab positions the 4IR within the historical context of three previous industrial revolutions. The First, starting in the last third of the 18th century, introduced new tools and manufacturing processes based on steam and water power. The Second, a century later, saw the advent of steel, oil, electricity, mass production and associated inventions including the telephone, light bulbs phonographs and cars. The Third, starting in the middle of the last century, has brought us digital technologies, computers, the IT industry, and the automation of processes in just about all industries.
-----

How to Get Patients to Take More Control of Their Medical Decisions

For years, people have been urged be more active in their own care. Now providers are giving them better tools to make that happen.

Studies show that shared doctor-patient decision making leads to better health-care outcomes, fewer invasive procedures and lower costs.
By Laura Landro
Updated Feb. 26, 2017 11:08 p.m. ET
For years, patients have been hearing the same message from the health-care industry: Get involved.
They’re told they need to do more to monitor their chronic conditions. They are directed to be more active in deciding what treatments to have, or whether to treat a condition at all.
That has proved easier said than done. For some people, it’s a matter of feeling intimidated: Better to let the doctors decide. Some are overwhelmed by the choices they have to make about their care, which seem to get more complex every year. At the same time, many doctors are reluctant to change old ways of working.
-----

Artificial intelligence can help doctors

February 27, 2017
The computer gathers relevant disease information from 200 documents in just a few seconds. Doctors have no chance at matching its tempo.
"This technology contributes to more accurate and updated information about pain and risk, and makes this information available to doctors involved in patient care. The research results show, at this stage, that the system's precision is not far off the level of experienced clinicians, and the computer is in addition much quicker than the doctors," says Geir Thore Berge.
He is a qualified nurse, and works with IT and information systems at the Department of Technology and e-Health at Sørlandet Hospital HF. As a PhD research fellow, he is associated with the Centre for e-Health and Care Technology and the Department of Information Systems at the University of Agder (UiA).
-----

Enjoy!
David.

Friday, March 10, 2017

Well This Is An Unexpected IT Failure Causing Significant Health Concerns.

This appeared last week:

Surgeries in doubt due to computer bungle

GRANT McARTHUR, HEALTH EDITOR, Herald Sun
February 28, 2017 8:00pm
HUNDREDS of operations across Victoria are at risk of cancellation or complication because hospitals have been left without the vital supplies needed for surgery.
Victoria’s Health Department is fighting to avert chaos, after a bungled computer ­ordering program at one of the largest medical suppliers left hospitals unable to order surgical instruments and other items for more than six weeks.
The situation has become so critical that several patients suffered “adverse outcomes” — including extended recovery times in hospital and needing additional pain medication — after surgeons used alternative products.
At least one op was recently cancelled because surgeons were left without the necessary supplies. The impact could become much wider if Sydney-based supplier Medtronics is not able to replenish the state’s surgical stocks.
With other states also struggling, Victorian Health Minister Jill Hennessy last week wrote to federal counterpart Greg Hunt warning of “major medical supply shortages”, saying the impact on patients was “increasingly concerning” and needed national assistance to be resolved.
Ms Hennessy told the ­Herald Sun she was hopeful ­ordering would return to normal in three weeks.
“I’ve made it clear to Medtronics that this is not acceptable, and have requested the federal Health Minister urgently intervene to ensure there is a co-ordinated response to this national shortage,” Ms Hennessy said.
Lots more here:
There was also coverage here:

IT glitch leaves hospitals without surgical supplies, patients at risk

Chloe Booker
Published: March 1, 2017 - 11:52AM
Hundreds of patients have been put at risk after Victorian hospitals were left without vital surgical supplies due to an IT glitch.
The hospitals were unable to order surgical instruments when the computer ordering program of one of Australia's largest medical suppliers, Medtronics, went down.
There were 7290 outstanding orders a fortnight ago, leading to shortfalls in surgical and laparoscopic instruments, respiratory products and sutures, skin staples and tissue adhesives.
At least one surgery was cancelled, while others patients were forced to have extended stays or take additional pain medication after alternative products were used.
The problem at the Sydney-based medical supplier has also left health services in other states with shortfalls.
Victorian Health Minister Jill Hennessy wrote to her federal counterpart Greg Hunt calling for a national approach to fix the situation.
More here:
The simple lesson in all this is that supply chains really matter – what does not seem to be mentioned is the cost in lost sales that this failure might have caused.
With Mr Trump apparently planning to up-end supply chains all over the world this incident may just be a harbinger of things to come!
David.

Thursday, March 09, 2017

The Macro View – Health, Financial And Political News Relevant To E-Health And The Health Sector In General.

March 9, 2017  Edition.
The big economic news of the week has been yet another alarm about the level of debt and price of houses in Australia. We seem to have had many of these scares and so far all has been well. We can only hope our luck continues – but each time it happens it might just play out badly – so do stay alert but not alarmed.
On the Trump front things are seemingly pretty rocky on the weekend with claims on Twitter regarding electronic spying by the previous President. I become increasingly worried that the man is unhinged – time will tell I guess.
Here is the Australian bad news:
  • Updated Mar 3 2017 at 12:01 AM

OECD rings alarm on housing 'rout'

Australia's vulnerability to a house price collapse morphing into a recession has sharpened because of ballooning household debt and the dominance of big banks, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development's latest report on the economy.
Putting the risk of a recession at around one in five, the Paris-based OECD says alongside a shakeout in China and ongoing weakness in business investment, the single biggest threat to the nation is from a potential hard landing in the property market after years of double-digit price gains.
OECD officials – writing in what is their first major review of Australia's economy since 2014 – said the housing market may not "ease gently" and could develop into a "rout on prices and demand with significant macroeconoimc implications".
-----
Here are a few other things I have noticed.
-----

Trump Issues.

With Donald Trump scaring allies, Australia has never been so popular

Peter Hartcher
Published: February 28, 2017 - 12:00AM
The leader of the Jewish state was in Australia  last week, the first time in the country's 69 years that any serving Israeli prime minister has set foot here.
Overlapping his time in Sydney was a visit by the leader of the world's biggest Muslim-majority state. Even though the distance from Indonesia to Australia at its closest is only a quarter the distance from Sydney to Melbourne, Joko Widodo is just the fourth serving Indonesian leader to visit in the 72-year history of his country.
Jerusalem and Jakarta do not recognise each other diplomatically. The two leaders were in Sydney on the weekend and studiously ignored each other.
-----

George W. Bush takes on Donald Trump on Russia, immigration and media

Jennifer Epstein
Published: February 28, 2017 - 3:17AM
Former United States President George W. Bush, in his first interview since the start of Donald Trump's administration, said he sees a need for an investigation into the Trump team's ties to Russia and voiced scepticism about his successor's approach to immigration and the media.
"We all need answers," Mr Bush said during an interview with NBC's Today program on Monday regarding the Trump campaign's involvement with Russia prior to the November election. He declined to say whether he thinks a special prosecutor should be named and said he trusted congressional committees to make that call. "You're talking to the wrong guy," he said, quipping that he's "never been a lawyer."
-----
  • February 28 2017 - 12:29PM

Seeking to destroy Obamacare, Donald Trump admits healthcare is 'so complicated'

New York: US President Donald Trump is on a mission to replace his predecessor's signature healthcare policy, but he is finding being in government not as easy as making grand promises on the campaign trail.
"Nobody knew that healthcare could be so complicated," he reportedly told a meeting of the National Governors Association on Monday.

Trump's budget focuses on defence, public safety

At a meeting with governors, President Donald Trump said his first budget will focus on "public safety" and "national security."
-----

A Yale history professor’s powerful, 20-point guide to defending democracy under a Trump presidency

Written by
Timothy Snyder Housum Professor of History at Yale University, author of Black Earth: The Holocaust as History and Warning
Americans are no wiser than the Europeans who saw democracy yield to fascism, Nazism, or communism. Our one advantage is that we might learn from their experience. Now is a good time to do so. Here are twenty lessons from the twentieth century, adapted to the circumstances of today:

1. Do not obey in advance.

Much of the power of authoritarianism is freely given. In times like these, individuals think ahead about what a more repressive government will want, and then start to do it without being asked. You’ve already done this, haven’t you? Stop. Anticipatory obedience teaches authorities what is possible and accelerates unfreedom.
-----

National Budget Issues.

  • Opinion
  • Updated Feb 26 2017 at 11:45 PM

The growth deficits threatening prosperity

by The Australian Financial Review
NAB chairman and former federal Treasury secretary Ken Henry says politics is such a shambles that business must take the lead to drive economic growth, jobs and the foundations of a good society.
After a quarter of a century of unbroken economic growth, Australia remains an envied and prosperous nation. Yet we have emerged from our biggest ever resources development boom with at least four deficits that threaten this prosperity.
First, the biggest national income boom since the 1850s gold rushes has given way to entrenched government budget deficits that could strip Australia of our AAA sovereign credit rating within months.
-----

Cut company tax and you cut national income, says Grattan Institute

Peter Martin
Published: February 26, 2017 - 9:00PM
The Turnbull government's proposed company tax cut would drop national income for years before it boosted it and would never be self-funding, a new analysis from the Grattan Institute has found.
One of the key justifications for the proposed phase down in the company tax rate from from 30 per cent to 25 per cent over 10 years has been that it would boost national income and wages.
"Even assuming you get those things in the long run, there will be a period of time in which national income falls," said the director of the Grattan Institute's productivity growth program Jim Minifie.
-----
  • Updated Feb 26 2017 at 9:00 PM

Scott Morrison says workers win 50pc of company tax cut benefits:

Treasurer Scott Morrison will argue this week that half the benefits from the Turnbull government's 10-year tax cut plan will flow through to workers through higher wages, as Labor prepares a "work choices" style against last week's penalty rate cuts to low-income workers.
Federal parliament will begin debating on Tuesday afternoon the $50 billion tax cut plan as the first step of passing it through the House of Representatives before it will hit major blockades in the Senate.
"Modelling has shown that half of the benefits of the tax cuts would flow through to workers through higher real wages, a necessary boost to workers given subdued wages outcomes," Mr Morrison said.
-----

Missing: Political courage. If found, please return to Canberra

Shane Wright
Monday, February 27, 2017 11:42AM
This is the tale of three speeches.
Sadly, unlike usual tales there is unlikely to be a happy ending. For readers and for voters.
These three speeches were delivered here in Australia in the past week. One by a former American congressman, one by a former public servant and one by the current Reserve Bank governor.
And each of them goes to the heart of some of the biggest economic issues facing the country.
-----

Welfare crackdowns a $270 million flop: audit

Noel Towell
Published: February 28, 2017 - 6:12PM
Government efforts to crack down on welfare have fallen hundreds of millions of dollars short of their targets, the National Audit Office has found.
The new report shows a shortfall of  $270 million on a target of $790 million from headline "compliance" efforts, announced by both Labor and Coalition governments since the 2012.
The audit, published on Tuesday found senior bureaucrats at the departments of Human Services and social services failed to honour commitments to keep their political bosses and other departments in the picture about how the compliance projects were tracking.
-----

Investors driving a red-hot market

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM March 1, 2017

Michael Roddan

Investor lending in the property market is running hot and analysts say the frenzy is likely to continue unless there is a “dramatic” tightening of lending standards.
Data from the banking regulator shows Commonwealth Bank grew its investor loan book at twice the rate of the entire banking system during the seasonally slower month of January.
Meanwhile, a report released by ratings agency Standard & Poor’s yesterday said “a continued build-up of economic imbalances” was heightening the risk of a “low probability scenario of a sharp correction in property prices”. “There is a significant risk of continued build-up of private sector debt and house price growth” due to low interest rates and the lack of housing supply, S&P credit analyst Sharad Jain said.
-----

Battle over budget as Treasurer Scott Morrison won't commit to saving mining windfall

Peter Martin
Published: March 2, 2017 - 12:45AM
Australia's top economic bureaucrat has begged the government not to spend the coming windfall from soaring coal and iron ore prices, saying if it did it would repeat the mistakes of prime minister John Howard and treasurer Peter Costello in the early 2000s.
Treasury secretary John Fraser was appearing before the Senate economics committee 10 weeks before the May budget and just ahead of economic growth figures showing the strongest rebound in national income in half a decade.
Australia's real gross domestic product soared 1.1 per cent in the December quarter after slipping 0.5 per cent in the September quarter. Over the year to December, it grew 2.4 per cent, up from 1.8 per cent, and close to the Treasury forecast.
-----

Don't waste commodity windfall: Treasury

- on March 1, 2017, 1:57 pm
If Scott Morrison heeds the advice of his departmental chief, the treasurer won't be squandering any revenue windfall the federal budget might receive from a surge in commodity prices.
Treasury secretary John Fraser on Wednesday told a Senate committee it was unclear how much of the recent surge in coal and iron ore prices were driven by temporary or more persistent factors, presenting difficulties in preparing the budget.
"If these elevated prices continue, we should prioritise budget repair and ensure any additional revenue is banked as an improvement to the budget bottom line," he said.
-----

OECD warns of 'rout' in house prices if investors head for the doors

Peter Martin
Published: March 3, 2017 - 6:25AM
The OECD has warned of a "rout" in Australian house prices, leading to a new economic downturn, saying both prices and household debt have reached "unprecedented highs".
The warning is in an otherwise positive biennial assessment released overnight that broadly mirrors the Australian Treasury's.
The survey says in real terms house prices have climbed to 250 per cent their level in the 1990s, with much of the increase taking place in the past few years, "straining affordability, especially for first-time buyers in Sydney".
-----

Economy roars to life, warding off recession

The economy recorded strong 1.1 per cent growth in the final three months of the year.
  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM March 2, 2017

David Uren

The economy has roared back to life, buoyed by booming commodity prices and rising con­fidence among businesses and consumers, with Treasury increasingly confident Australia will retain its AAA credit rating.
After the shock 0.5 per cent fall in GDP in the September quarter, which raised fears of a recession, the economy recorded strong 1.1 per cent growth in the final three months of the year. The turnaround was sufficient to pull the 12-month growth rate up from 1.9 per cent to 2.4 per cent, which Scott Morrison said was faster than achieved by any of the world’s biggest seven advanced nations.
“These growth figures say we are at the top of the pack, and while last September quarter’s figures were surprising and dis­appointing, what we’ve seen in the December quarter is a return to the strong momentum that we’re seeing in our economy,” the Treasurer said.
-----

The recession that never was, didn't happen... Phew

Ross Gittins
Published: March 4, 2017 - 12:00AM
Fabulous news on the economy this week. The recession that never was, didn't happen. Phew. That's a relief.
After going backwards by 0.5 per cent in the September quarter of last year, we learnt from the Bureau of Statistics' national accounts that the economy rebounded by 1.1 per cent in the December quarter - meaning, according to the overexcited children of economic reporting, that we've escaped "technical" recession.
Actually, anyone with sense knew three months ago we would. The detail of the national accounts showed the contraction was no more than a pothole on the economic road, the product of an unusual accumulation of negative one-offs.
-----

Wellbeing Index reveals life got better for Australians in 2016

Matt Wade
Published: March 3, 2017 - 5:00PM
Australia's collective wellbeing grew at more than twice the rate of the economy last year.
The Fairfax-Lateral Economics wellbeing index - which provides a broader measure of national welfare than traditional economic figures - rose 5.8 per cent in 2016. That compares with annual gross domestic product growth of 2.4 per cent revealed by official figures on Wednesday.
The wellbeing index adjusts GDP to take into account changes in knowhow, health, work life, social inequality and environmental degradation to put a dollar figure on Australia's collective wellbeing.
-----

Health Budget Issues.

All high earners to pay Medicare levy surcharge under budget proposal

Peter Martin
Published: February 27, 2017 - 12:15AM
All high-income Australians would pay the 1 to 1.5 per cent Medicare levy surcharge under a budget proposal that would raise a breathtaking $4 billion per year, more than six times the net amount saved in the first Turnbull budget.
At present only high-income Australians without private health insurance are made to pay the extra levy.
Extending it to all families earning more than $180,000 per year and all individuals without children earning more than $90,000 per year would raise at least $900 per year more from each high-income Australian with private health insurance, and would offset the removal of the high-income temporary budget deficit repair levy, which expires in the middle of this year.
-----

What we know and don't know about the PIP overhaul

Antony Scholefield | 2 March, 2017
GP groups are currently wrestling with the coming shake-up of the Practice Incentives Program. Australian Doctor reports.
Whenever the Federal Government talks health reform, there must be a Pavlovian shiver running down the spine of general practice.
Conditioned to expect the worst, GP groups are currently wrestling with the coming shake-up of the Practice Incentives Program (PIP).
The pretext is that the scheme that has been running since the late 1990s is widely seen as another heavy bureaucratic impost on practices — tolerated for the money it generates rather than the support it provides to good care.
-----

How much Australians spend on health

Georgina Dent
Published: February 26, 2017 - 12:15AM
Personal spending on health is about $28.6 billion a year in Australia. This includes $3 billion on hospitals, $5.5 billion on dental care and almost $11 billion on medication.  We shell out a further $21 billion each year on health insurance premiums.
As private consumers, we contribute almost one in every five dollars spent on health care. Among wealthy countries, we have the third-highest reliance on out-of-pocket payments and it's growing.
Data from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare shows funding from non-government sources – mostly out-of-pocket costs – increased four-and-a-half times faster than government funding in 2014-15.
-----

What does the health sector want from the Federal Budget?

Editor: Jennifer Doggett Author: Jennifer Doggett on: March 02, 2017
Health reform is on the agenda in Canberra with the Federal Government in the process of developing the 2017/18 Federal Budget and Labor signalling a major review of its policies via its Health Policy Summit, to be held tomorrow.
Luckily for all sides of politics there is no shortage of expertise and willingness within the health sector to provide advice on potential reform options.
Most major health organisations have provided details Budget Submissions identifying the funding and policy changes they believe are required to improve the functioning of our health system.  A complete list of Budget Submissions can be found on the Treasury website.
-----

Health Insurance Issues.

Forget the banks – health insurance makes them look like amateurs

Michael Pascoe
Published: February 27, 2017 - 2:32PM
More Australian than hot summers and bagging cricket selectors is the habit of criticising the Big Four banks' "outrageous" profits.
Forget the banks, they're relative amateurs. If you want outrage, check out the private health insurance rip-off as demonstrated by NIB and Medibank.
Little NIB was one of this reporting season's star turns, the market applauding the 65 per cent surge in its first-half net profit to $71 million, and its chief executive afforded a lap of honour in the AFR, where he called for his industry to return to the good old days before Whitlam introduced Medicare, when 70 per cent of the population bought health insurance instead of the present 46-point-something per cent.
-----

States urge hospitals to bill insurers

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM March 4, 2017

Sean Parnell

Sarah-Jane Tasker

State governments are actively encouraging public hospitals to bill health insurers for their ­members’ treatment, driving up premiums and threatening the stability of Australia’s two-tier health system.
The states have become so ­dependent on revenue from ­insurance payments there are concerns that public hospitals will prioritise insured patients, blowing out waiting lists.
Reports have emerged of members being offered free meals and parking for their family members if they bill their insurer, or being told they will be helping hospitals to buy new equipment or fund medical research.
-----

Pharmacy Issues.

Guild raises the ante on risk share and other 6CPA issues

28 February, 2017 Heather Saxena 
The Pharmacy Guild has subtly upped the pressure on the federal government to honor the 6CPA.
In a full page advert in Tuesday’s Australian, the Guild congratulates Federal Health Minister Greg Hunt (pictured) on his new position. But the text also encourages the government to honour the 6CPA.
The advert says: “We appreciate the Coalition’s strong commitment to the community pharmacy model and look forward to working with you to deliver the Sixth Community Pharmacy Agreement in full.
-----

Superannuation Issues.

There’s a superannuation tsunami heading our way

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM March 2, 2017

James Kirby

With just four months to go before a sweeping set of changes is unleashed in the superannuation system on July 1, the lack of understanding on the issue is alarming: the government must act immediately to inform the broader public what is going to happen and who will be affected by the changes.
Though there is effectively only weeks to go before people could possibly organise significant changes to their arrangements in relation to super, a public education program from the government is nowhere to be seen.
Even financial advisers are struggling to grapple with the finer points linked with the changes which are set to change both investing patterns across Australia.
-----
I look forward to comments on all this!
-----
David.

There Has Been Some Work To Try And Improve Electronic Discharge Summaries. A Good Thing I Believe.

I noticed this last week:

New guidelines simplify discharge summaries

28 February, 2017
The Australian Commission for Safety and Quality in Health Care has released guidelines showing hospitals what to include on an electronic discharge summary, and how to present it in a clear and succinct format.
The guidelines come in the form of style sheets designed to be incorporated into hospital software.
The templates include the essential components of a discharge summary, such as diagnosis, procedures and medication lists.
More here:
Following up I found this:

National guidelines for on-screen presentation of discharge summaries


February 13, 2017
The National guidelines for on-screen presentation of discharge summaries specify the sequence, layout and format of the core elements of hospital discharge summaries, as displayed in clinical information systems.
The guidelines were developed through extensive research, consultation and iterative testing with more than 70 clinicians.
The guidelines are intended to be adopted by vendors of medical software, and health services which procure and implement systems which generate and present discharge summaries.
Here is the link:
What does seem to be a bit odd is that the document is dated August 2016 – so it seems no one was in a real hurry to get change started.
That said I hope all the work leads to some improvement over time! The formats seemed pretty good to this elderly clinicians eye!
David.

Wednesday, March 08, 2017

The Economist Weighs In On Digital Health - A Good Perspective I Believe.

This appeared last week.

A digital revolution in health care is speeding up

Telemedicine, predictive diagnostics, wearable sensors and a host of new apps will transform how people manage their health

From the print edition | Business

Mar 2nd 2017
WHEN someone goes into cardiac arrest, survival depends on how quickly the heart can be restarted. Enter Amazon’s Echo, a voice-driven computer that answers to the name of Alexa, which can recite life-saving instructions about cardiopulmonary resuscitation, a skill taught to it by the American Heart Association. Alexa is accumulating other health-care skills, too, including acting as a companion for the elderly and answering questions about children’s illnesses. In the near future she will probably help doctors with grubby hands to take notes and to request scans, as well as remind patients to take their pills.
Alexa is one manifestation of a drive to disrupt an industry that has so far largely failed to deliver on the potential of digital information. Health care is over-regulated and expensive to innovate in, and has a history of failing to implement ambitious IT projects. But the momentum towards a digital future is gathering pace. Investment into digital health care has soared (see chart).
One reason for that is the scale of potential cost-savings. Last year Americans spent an amount equivalent to about 18% of GDP on health care. That is an extreme, but other countries face rising cost pressures from health spending as populations age. Much of this expenditure is inefficient. Spending on administration varies sevenfold between rich countries. There are huge differences in the cost of medical procedures. In rich countries about one-fifth of spending on health care goes to waste, for example on wrong or unnecessary treatments. Eliminating a fraction of this sum is a huge opportunity.
Consumers seem readier to accept digital products than just a few years ago. The field includes mobile apps, telemedicine—health care provided using electronic communications—and predictive analytics (using statistical methods to sift data on outcomes for patients). Other areas are automated diagnoses and wearable sensors to measure things like blood pressure.
If there is to be a health-care revolution, it will create winners and losers. Andy Richards, an investor in digital health, argues that three groups are fighting a war for control of the “health-care value chain”.
One group comprises “traditional innovators”—pharmaceutical firms, hospitals and medical-technology companies such as GE Healthcare, Siemens, Medtronic and Philips. A second category is made up of “incumbent players”, which include health insurers, pharmacy-benefit managers (which buy drugs in bulk), and as single-payer health-care systems such as Britain’s NHS. The third group are the technology “insurgents”, including Google, Apple, Amazon and a host of hungry entrepreneurs that are creating apps, predictive-diagnostics systems and new devices. These firms may well profit most handsomely from the shift to digital.
The threat to the traditional innovators is that as medical records are digitised and new kinds of patient data arrive from genomic sequencing, sensors and even from social media, insurers and governments can get much better insight into which treatments work. These buyers are increasingly demanding “value-based” reimbursement—meaning that if a drug or device doesn’t function well, it will not be bought.
The big question is whether drug companies will be big losers, says Marc Sluijs, an adviser on investment in digital health. More data will not only identify those drugs that do not work. Digital health care will also give rise to new services that might involve taking no drugs at all.
Vastly more here:
I found it very interesting to read about digital health from an economic / commercial perspective and was also pleased to see there was a healthy level of scepticism as to how large the impact would be and how long it would take.
Not all ra ra but also clear that there is a real opportunity to make a difference – and probably much of that difference is still being developed and shaped rather than being settled!
Well worth a browse when you have a moment.
David.

Fascinating – The Steps And Timetable For The New Digital Health Strategy. Has A Gap Or Two!

This appeared a little while ago – and was part of the December ADHA Board Papers :
The formatting is not wonderful ( sorry about that, the best I could do) but this outline has a lot of information on the Strategy Plans I have not seen before, other than the consultation we have all heard about. Here is some information on the other 2 sections.

3. Expanding the evidence base

The findings from national engagement and consultation (quantitative and qualitative) are one of the four main inputs to the evidence base substantiating the National Digital Health Strategy. The other three are: leading research on digital innovation in health and care (global and local); expert knowledge and perspectives of individuals from private sector, academia and research institutions; and alignment to jurisdictional and Australian Government priorities and initiatives.
Therefore, starting in December, the Strategy team will prioritise expanding the evidence base through gathering and synthesising the evidence from the other three main inputs – all building on what we have learned through national engagement and consultation.

4. Strategy development

As reflected in the project team’s draft Strategy Development Plan, which is currently being finalised, the table below summarises the key strategy deliverables, which the team intend to develop iteratively through internal and external collaboration.

There are three key deliverables which are intended to make up the National Digital Health Strategy to be submitted to the COAG Health Council (CHC) in June 2017:
1       The National Digital Health Strategy core document;
2       Framework for Action (detailing the strategic initiatives aligned to the strategic priorities); and
3       Cost Benefit Analysis (for the strategic initiatives co-designed with the stakeholders).



Here is the basic timetable outlined in December, 2016.

First draft:

National Digital Health Strategy core document

 + Framework for Action - No CBA - End March 2017

AHMAC draft:

National Digital Health Strategy core document
+
Final draft of Framework for Action
+
Cost Benefit Analysis - Mid May 2017

Final CHC draft:

National Digital Health Strategy core document
+
Final draft of Framework for Action
+
Final Cost Benefit Analysis - End June 2017

Public Release:

National Digital Health Strategy core document
+
Framework for Action
+
Interactive web experience - July 2017
Technology Roadmap:

(post Strategy release) - End 2017

 Here is the link for the .pdf of the full document which has more details:

Enjoy the browse!

Note: There does not seem to be a public plan to release the Cost Benefit Analysis or if it is to come out it won't address the myHR!

Note also that finality seems to be after the May 2017 Budget. I wonder what that means?

David.