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, April 22, 2017

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links – 22nd April, 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.
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Medical mistakes still kill 1,000 patients a day, Leapfrog says

Though new safety grades show problems persist, hundreds of hospitals are excelling at prevention based on the latest Hospital Safety Grade
April 12, 2017 02:21 PM
The Leapfrog Group on Wednesday released its Spring 2017 Hospital Safety Grade, highlighting hundreds of hospitals that are leading in preventing deadly medical errors at their facilities.
The Leapfrog Hospital Safety Grade, the first and only national healthcare rating focused on errors, accidents and infections, assigns A through F letter grades to general acute-care hospitals.
Leapfrog rated 2,639 hospitals, and 823 hospitals earned an A, 706 earned a B, 933 earned a C, and 167 earned a D.
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Apple has a secret team working on the holy grail for treating diabetes

  • Apple has a secret group of biomedical engineers developing sensors to monitor blood sugar levels, sources tell CNBC
  • The initiative was initially envisioned by Steve Jobs before his death
  • If successful, the advance could help millions of diabetes patients and turn devices like the Apple Watch into a must-have
Wednesday, 12 Apr 2017 | 7:10 PM ET
Apple has hired a small team of biomedical engineers to work at a nondescript office in Palo Alto, California, miles from corporate headquarters.

They are part of a super secret initiative, initially envisioned by the late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, to develop sensors that can noninvasively and continuously monitor blood sugar levels to better treat diabetes, according to three people familiar with the matter.
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HIMSS echoes calls for HHS to delay updated EHR certification requirements

Apr 14, 2017 12:47pm
HIMSS joined calls to delay the deadline for 2015 EHR certification standards.
HIMSS is the latest organization to call on the feds to delay updated EHR certification requirements, adding to a growing list of health IT associations and provider organizations that say vendors are not ready to meet the new certification standards.
In a letter to Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, HIMSS President and CEO Stephen Lieber and Chair of the HIMSS North America Board of Directors Michael H. Zaroukian, M.D., urged the agency to delay the 2015 Edition Health IT Certification Criteria six months to July 1, 2018.
“As of early April 2017, very few vendor products are certified to the revised 2015 Certification Criteria; this jeopardizes the requirement that health IT must be certified to the 2015 Edition for the Electronic Health Records (EHR) Incentive Programs and the Quality Payment Program (QPP),” the letter stated.
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What’s on your Facebook page? Study says many new doctors post unprofessional content

Apr 13, 2017 11:04am
What’s posted on your Facebook page? It might be time for some self-editing, as a new study found that many new doctors are posting unprofessional content on the social media site.
In fact, researchers found that 40% of 201 public profiles of young urologists had posts that they described as unprofessional or had potentially objectionable content, including 13% that reflected “explicitly unprofessional behavior.” In those cases, posts included depictions of intoxication, uncensored profanity, unlawful behavior and confidential patient information, according to the study published in BJU International. What’s more, the content was self-authored in 82% of those categories.
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Amazon Alexa Challenge Envisions an mHealth Care Management Tool

Amazon and Merck are challenging digital health innovators to design an mHealth care management platform that turns Amazon Alexa into a personal coach for those with type 2 diabetes.

Eric Wicklund

April 11, 2017 - Amazon and Merck are joining forces in a challenge designed to turn Alexa into an mHealth care management tool for people with type 2 diabetes.
The Alexa Diabetes Challenge offers a $125,000 prize to the mHealth innovator who can best develop a digital health platform integrated with Amazon’s digital assistant for people newly diagnosed with the chronic condition, which affects some 27.5 million people in the U.S. alone.
Digital assistants like Alexa, Google Home and Microsoft Cortana are slowly creeping up on the mHealth horizon, aided in part by a strong public relations campaign and a Tractica report that places one in more than 40 million homes by 2021. They’ve made splashy headlines this year at both the CES 2017 show in Las Vegas and the Health Information Management and Systems Society (HIMSS) conference and exhibition in Orlando.
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HL7 moves FHIR closer to interoperability for precision medicine

Health Level 7 genomics co-chair points to use cases in place today that other hospitals can adopt to advance precision medicine.
April 12, 2017 08:28 AM
Health Level 7 took another step forward with its FHIR specification this week by publishing the first HL7 Domain Analysis Model: Clinical Sequencing.
In addition to precision medicine, the developing FHIR specification is widely viewed as a boon to population health and data interoperability, albeit one that will have to live alongside other standards for some time.
The new Domain Analysis model, or DAM as HL7 abbreviates it, comes on the heels of Release 3 of FHIR, which included FHIR Genomics
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Trump effect on health IT? New vendors, EHR consolidation, big data explosion

Venrock 2017 Healthcare Prognosis finds industry is rankled by policy uncertainty, but that won’t stop companies from forming.
April 12, 2017 10:29 AM
President Donald Trump’s administration is causing a lot of angst over healthcare policy but healthcare technology isn’t exactly lying in wait. In fact, most healthcare pros expect the pace of new vendor creation to pick up over the next two years.
The 2017 Healthcare Prognosis survey by capital venture firm Venrock found 60 percent of respondents expect the rate that new companies emerge to increase despite 35 percent saying regulatory changes could present challenges to innovation.
When it comes to electronic health records companies, 78 percent of respondents expect merger and acquisition activity to pick up as well, especially as giants like Epic and Cerner look for new revenue streams.
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HHS data shows 1,800 large data breaches since 2009

Published April 11 2017, 7:23am EDT
Nearly 1,800 large data breaches involving patient information have occurred since 2009, according to an analysis of publicly available data from the Department of Health and Human Services.
Researchers examined HHS data for the period from Oct. 21, 2009, through Dec. 31, 2016. What they found is that providers reported more than 1,200 of the reported breaches, while business associates, health plans and healthcare clearinghouses reported the remaining breaches.
In addition, 257 breaches during that time period were reported by 216 hospitals, with 33 suffering more than one breach—many of which were large, major teaching hospitals.
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Half of hospitals to adopt artificial intelligence within 5 years

A new Healthcare IT News and HIMSS Analytics survey found population health and precision medicine among the initiatives where health IT professionals expect AI to have the greatest impact.
April 11, 2017 10:39 AM
About 35 percent of healthcare organizations plan to leverage artificial intelligence within two years — and more than half intend to do so within five.
That’s according to the Healthcare IT News and HIMSS Analytics HIT Market Indicator: Artificial Intelligence.
 “If you look at those with plans to leverage AI in some way, shape or form, we’re going to see significant growth,” said Brendan FitzGerald, director of research at HIMSS Analytics.
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See the technology that is making care transitions better

Several technology vendors tout solutions that better link provider and patient while lowering dreaded readmissions.
April 10, 2017 10:37 AM
Technology has created a new era of care transition that is empowering the post-acute sector while creating a shared sense of responsibility when it comes to the ultimate care of the patient.
But although care transition has been a focus for years, it has gained greater prominence due to recent pressures of readmission penalties and prospective payment models that require providers to assume more risk, said Tom Sullivan, MD, chief strategic officer for Rockville, Maryland-based DrFirst.
"The big risk for errors is from acute care to where the patient goes next – rehab, home or nursing home," Sullivan said. "Discharge plans are so complex now, but if they aren't followed closely, the patient will get readmitted, and now there are penalties. If you don't get the transition right and the readmission could have been avoided, it will cost the system more money."
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Medical devices are the next big target for hackers

Apr 12, 2017 9:53am
As more medical devices are wireless, manufacturers can expect more cyberattacks.
Just as the transition from paper to electronic health records left hospitals vulnerable to cyberattacks, medical devices with wireless capabilities are expected to become a prime target for hackers.
Hospitals are coming off a record-setting year of EHR breaches and continue to face an ongoing barrage of threats. Although hackers have not launched a successful attack on healthcare devices yet, the patient safety implications of an attack have made cybersecurity a priority among device manufacturers, hospital CISOs and the FDA.
 “The medical device industry, I would say in the last two-and-a-half years or so, has gone from general understanding of the issue, general participation to extreme awareness and participation in cybersecurity efforts," Zach Rothstein, associate vice president at the Advanced Medical Technology Association, told The Hill.
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Buffalo hospital returns to pen and paper after a virus shuts down IT systems

Apr 12, 2017 12:04pm
Erie County Medical Center is back to using paper records following a virus that shut down its IT systems.
Physicians are quick to lament the time-suck of EHRs, but most also acknowledge that they wouldn’t go back to paper records. This week, a Buffalo hospital was forced to put that theory to the test.
Erie County Medical Center in New York has been using paper records this week after a virus shut down IT systems early Sunday morning, according to The Buffalo News. Officials say the hospital is following its power outage emergency preparedness plans and the disruption has not impacted care delivery, with staff continuing to admit patients, fill prescriptions and perform scheduled surgeries.
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ONC Reiterates Healthcare Data Privacy, Security Need in PMI

ONC is collaborating with the National Institutes of Health to fuel the Precision Medicine Initiative, which has a key focus in healthcare data privacy.

Elizabeth Snell

April 11, 2017 - The Precision Medicine Initiative (PMI) is a federal research program that hopes to improve how disease is treated, but there are still healthcare data privacy and security concerns. However, ONC explained in a recent blog post that keeping data secure through PMI remains a top priority.
ONC partnered with the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to launch three separate but related activities to advance PMI. One of those activities is Sync for Science (S4S) API Privacy and Security, which assesses whether S4S API pilots implement appropriate privacy and security principles.
“In this new era, securing the electronic platforms that support sharing data with PMI is paramount,” Chief Scientist Teresa Zayas Caban and ONC Health Scientist Administrator Kevin Chaney wrote. “Data is a foundational underpinning of PMI, and participants should have confidence that data about them are securely shared according to their preferences.”
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How patient-centered medical homes can help trim hospitals' ER costs

Published April 10 2017, 4:40pm EDT
The challenge of emergency care in America is this—it’s the most expensive care money can buy—and it’s a primary reason for Patient Centered Medical Homes (PCMH).
The PCMH concept was established as a care delivery model in which the primary care physician acts as the central coordinator for all aspects of a patient’s care. With the help of a PCMH, patients learn to contact the doctor first for care unless there is an obvious medical emergency. After initial contact, the doctor evaluates and recommends the optimal approach with an eye toward both efficacy and resource use.
From the primary care doctor, patients branch out to see specialists and mental health professionals, go to the hospital for more involved health requirements, visit satellite clinics for lab tests and other procedures. All this potential movement and coordination is made possible by very modern tools like health registries, health information exchanges and electronic health records (EHRs).
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Digital health companies are targeting obesity and diabetes, but will it work?

Apr 11, 2017 11:24am
Digital health companies are finding success with tech-based interventions for obesity and diabetes, but many mHealth solutions lack clinical evidence.
Digital health startups that target chronic conditions like obesity and diabetes have been bolstered by new evidence that suggests those tech-driven interventions can have a substantial impact. But questions still surround an industry that is rife with apps that aren’t clinically effective.
According to a literature review in Perspectives in Health Information Management, a journal published by the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA), mHealth interventions were generally more effective than conventional approaches to helping users lose weight, increase physical activity and make dietary changes. Researchers noted that those interventions have the potential to reduce the high healthcare costs associated with obesity.
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Industry groups press Congress to back private-sector patient matching solutions

HIMSS and 24 other organizations want the feds to support creating unique patient identifiers to improve care delivery.
April 10, 2017 01:14 PM
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services should provide technical assistance to private-sector led initiatives that promote patient safety by accurately identifying patients and matching them to their health information, 25 industry groups have informed members of Congress.
Allowing the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to offer this type of technical assistance will help scale safe and effective patient matching solutions, the industry groups, including HIMSS, said in their April 5 letter to the chairmen and ranking members of several House and Senate committees.
“For nearly two decades, innovation and industry progress has been stifled due to a narrow interpretation of the language included in Labor-H bills since FY1999, prohibiting the Department of Health and Human Services from adopting or implementing a unique patient identifier,” the organizations wrote in the letter.
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Project collects data to save babies' lives

By Jill Daly / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
A new collaboration of healthcare providers, researchers, public agencies and nonprofit foundations is aimed at preventing infant deaths and promoting good health among Allegheny County residents.
The Richard King Mellon Foundation made several grants in June to the Magee-Womens Research Institute, the University of Pittsburgh and Rand Corporation to collaborate with experts and the community to propose solutions using data and models to uncover factors that might predict the risk of a baby dying before its first birthday.
“If we’re successful in this, we could not only predict and take precautions,” said institute director Yoel Sadovsky, who is lead investigator on the project. “In addition, we want to have a partnership with communities, share with people a program in the community. If this works, we could reach out with education and learn from them and have a partnership in health and wellness.”
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Doctors demand extreme EHR makeover ... right now

Electronic health record vendors are making the software more user-friendly, but not nearly fast enough.
April 10, 2017 01:45 PM
Just about every week or so there’s a new report chronicling doctors’ frustrations with electronic health records. Drill down a bit and the source of discontent becomes clear: poor usability, clunky interfaces, ineffective search and too many clicks. 
So what would actually make doctors like their EHR?
“They need a tremendous makeover with lots of clinical input to make it easy to do not only the right thing, but the things you do all the time,” said Robert Wachter, MD, a professor of medicine at the University of California, San Francisco. 
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Hackers will target hospitals like never before in 2017

With Bitcoin allowing attackers to stay anonymous, and a bulls-eye painted over the industry, time to get prepared is running out, group says.
April 06, 2017 03:16 PM
Global spending on cybersecurity in healthcare is set to surpass $65 billion by 2021 but the real problem isn’t how much healthcare organizations spend — it’s how much they don’t, according to new research from Cybersecurity Ventures published Thursday.
That’s because ransomware and other cybercriminal attacks are going to get a lot worse before they get any better, said Matt Anthony, vice president of incident response at the Herjavec Group, which sponsored the report. 
“In 2017 healthcare providers are the bull’s-eye for hackers,” the report noted.
Bitcoin, in fact, has enabled and encouraged criminals to pursue ransomware attacks, Anthony said. 
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AI, machine learning will shatter Moore's Law in rapid-fire pace of innovation

The technologies are enabling early-adopter hospitals to transition from the art of medicine to the science of medicine.
April 07, 201706:42 AM
Health Catalyst EVP Dale Sanders said the rate of machine learning advancement is faster than anything he's ever seen. 
Artificial intelligence: Savvy hospitals are deploying AI and its technological brethren cognitive computing and machine learning in specific use cases at this point – while industry luminaries are predicting that their advancement will soon start happening more quickly than previously anticipated.
"I've never in my career seen the acceleration of technology as fast as what we've witnessed in machine learning during the last two years," said Dale Sanders, executive vice president at Health Catalyst.
Sanders, it's worth noting, has a U.S. Air Force background working on stacked neural networks and fuzzy logic, which used to be called deep learning, as well as serving as the CIO of both Northwestern University and national health system of the Cayman Islands.
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AI on the go: WellCare builds artificial intelligence into its mobile app

Apr 10, 2017 12:17pm
WellCare is developing two artificial intelligence-powered systems that patients and caregivers can access through a mobile app.
To improve patient care out in the field, WellCare is turning to a combination of artificial intelligence and mobile technology.
The insurer, which serves Medicare and Medicaid patients, is creating one version of a new AI-powered system for patients and another for caregivers, Chief Information Officer Darren Ghanayem told The Wall Street Journal’s CIO Journal.
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Shadow IT systems leave healthcare vulnerable to attacks

Apr 10, 2017 11:48am
Unsecured shadow systems, like email and texting, have generated additional risks for healthcare providers.
Born out of provider frustration with existing health IT tools, “shadow” systems are creating additional cybersecurity risks for providers.
In an effort to work around inefficient systems, clinicians occasionally resort to unsecured communication tools like personally email or texting, Mick Coady, a partner at PwC’s Health Information Privacy and Security practice, told Crain’s Chicago Business. Those workarounds create additional vulnerabilities within the system that might not be easily identified by security professionals.
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ECRI Introduces HIT-based Patient Identification Tools

Alexandra Wilson Pecci, April 10, 2017

The toolkit aims to prevent patient misidentification through the use of health information technology.

Patient misidentification is a big and likely underreported problem for hospitals and health systems, as well as for patients.
The consequences can be significant. ECRI Institute research shows that 9% of patient misidentification events lead to temporary or permanent harm or death.
That's why the ECRI Institute and a stakeholder collaborative it convened, the Partnership for Health IT Patient Safety, has launched a new patient identification resource to help prevent patient misidentification through the use of health information technology.
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Enjoy!
David.

Friday, April 21, 2017

Now This Is A Really Sobering Statistic. - I Hope We Are A Bit Better!

This appeared last week:

Medical mistakes still kill 1,000 patients a day, Leapfrog says

Though new safety grades show problems persist, hundreds of hospitals are excelling at prevention based on the latest Hospital Safety Grade
April 12, 2017 02:21 PM
The Leapfrog Group on Wednesday released its Spring 2017 Hospital Safety Grade, highlighting hundreds of hospitals that are leading in preventing deadly medical errors at their facilities.
The Leapfrog Hospital Safety Grade, the first and only national healthcare rating focused on errors, accidents and infections, assigns A through F letter grades to general acute-care hospitals.
Leapfrog rated 2,639 hospitals, and 823 hospitals earned an A, 706 earned a B, 933 earned a C, and 167 earned a D.
Unfortunately, 10 hospitals received an F grade.
The five states with the highest percentage of A hospitals in this rating are Maine, Hawaii, Oregon, Wisconsin and Idaho.
Maine is the only state to sustain its ranking as one of the top five states in percentage of A-graded hospitals since the Safety Grade began in 2012.
Over time there have been significant strides in improving patient safety, said Leapfrog CEO Leah Binder, pointing to a 21 percent decline in hospital-acquired conditions, increased adoption and improved functionality of computerized physician order entry systems, and millions of averted patient harms.
Still, 1,000 people a day are estimated to die from medical errors.
More depressing details here:
On a population basis that is about 80 per day or close to 30,000 per annum.
I think we need to keep this figure in focus as we work out what e-health might be able to do!
David.

Thursday, April 20, 2017

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

April 20, 2017 Edition.
It the last week President Trump seems to have gone all military on us with cruise missiles, huge bombs and a stand-off with North Korea which seems to be loving all the attention!
Markets all over have got nervous. Additionally confidence of Pres. Trump delivering major legislation any-time soon is certainly fading.
In OZ we have had the usual Budget run-up and a huge number of kites have been flown! Most will never see the light of day! Political agreement as to both the problems and even more so what to do with them seems rare indeed. We will all have to  just wait and see!
May 9, 2017 is Budget Day if you are wondering.
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Here are a few other things I have noticed.
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National Budget Issues.

Too many stuff-ups about to put economic reform into reverse

Ross Gittins
Published: April 10, 2017 - 5:57AM
I have bad news and worse for advocates of micro-economic reform. First, the jig is up. There'll be few if any further major reforms. Second, the backlash against mounting wreckage from failed reforms is about to begin.
Since the reform push has degenerated into little more than business rent-seeking – let's cut tax on business and increase it on consumers; let's push the legislated balance of power in industrial relations further in favour of employers – it's neither surprising nor regrettable that voters have called a halt.
Micro reform has lost all credibility with voters. Most oppose company tax cuts for big business, cuts in penalty rates and a freeze on the minimum wage. Neither side of politics will pursue these "reforms" with any enthusiasm.
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Scott Morrison's housing fix: no change to negative gearing, affordable rentals

James Massola, chief political correspondent
Published: April 10, 2017 - 12:00AM
The federal government is spending $6.8 billion each year to fix housing affordability for renters but the problem is getting worse, not better, according to Treasurer Scott Morrison.
And while the overall rate of home ownership in Australia fell from 71 per cent to 67 per cent between 2002 and 2014, young people are being hit hardest by soaring house prices in Sydney and Melbourne, in particular, and are being forced out of the housing market.
For 25 to 34 -year-olds in this period, home ownership rates fell by nearly 10 percentage points to less than 30 per cent and for 35 to 44-year-olds, it fell by more than 10 points to 52.4 per cent.
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Cuts to the $22 billion NDIS behemoth would cost more in the long run

Jessica Irvine
Published: April 10, 2017 - 12:00AM
Everyone knows the National Disability Insurance Scheme is a great idea, but hopelessly over budget – an expensive Labor extravagance – right?
Don't buy the lie.
The $22 billion behemoth is certainly vulnerable to cost-over runs (which I'll get to).
But the most remarkable thing about this important scheme is the extent to which it has, since its conception in 2011, remained on-budget and on-time.
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Cradle-to-grave housing plan

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM April 10, 2017

Simon Benson

The Turnbull government will pursue a “cradle-to-grave” housing affordability package in the budget likely to include a mutual-obligation superannuation plan for first-home buyers, tax breaks for downsizing the family home in retirement and a social housing plan to alleviate rental stress.
The government is also considering a plan to unlock and better use federal government land for housing, to address big housing supply issues facing the states.
In a speech to be delivered today, Scott Morrison will also place the rental crisis at the heart of the housing package, with incentives planned for institutional investment in social and affordable housing.
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Budget measures to encourage migrants out of capital cities

Adam Gartrell, Political Correspondent
Published: April 9, 2017 - 2:32PM
The Turnbull government is considering new measures to encourage more migrants to settle in regional or remote areas to relieve pressure on house prices and infrastructure in Sydney and Melbourne.
With one month until budget day, Immigration Minister Peter Dutton says his department is working closely with the treasury and finance departments to assess the likely impact of a possible shift in the migration program.
House prices rose 19 per cent in Sydney and 16 per cent in Melbourne in the year to March, locking more people out of the market.
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Scott Morrison makes the case for negative gearing change

Michael Pascoe
Published: April 11, 2017 - 12:15AM
It's hard to decide which was more impressive: the case Treasurer Scott Morrison made to the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute for changing our negative gearing rules, or the contortions he subsequently performed to deny any need for changing negative gearing. 
Having promised that next month's budget will "do something" about housing affordability, Morrison appears to have closed off all federal options beyond an improved funding mechanism for social housing. It's small beer indeed around the barbecue-stopper of housing affordability. 
ScoMo is making a considerable show of "doing something" on housing, billing his AHURI speech as the second in a series, presumably culminating in budget presentation.  
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May budget: Axe hovers over government's $648.5 million work-for-the-dole program

James Massola, chief political correspondent
Published: April 11, 2017 - 12:15AM
The Turnbull government's powerful expenditure review committee has discussed axing one of Tony Abbott's first major policy achievements, the work-for-the-dole program.
But a group of backbench MPs have lobbied Treasurer Scott Morrison as part of a rearguard action to save it, with one describing work for the dole as "red meat for the base" and warning that axing it would infuriate the party's conservative supporters.
Fairfax Media has been told axing work for the dole was discussed when the budget razor gang met last week but a final decision has not been made.
The proposal to axe the policy, introduced by Mr Abbott in 1998 as a junior minister in the Howard government, was floated as the Turnbull government continues to hunt for savings.
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Government's piecemeal housing fix simply won't work

Jenny Smith
Published: April 10, 2017 - 3:29PM
The Treasurer's highly anticipated speech on housing affordability on Monday has succeeded in articulating the depth and breadth of Australia's affordability crisis, but failed to provide a comprehensive policy response.
It is a positive development that the federal government recognises that housing affordability, for both buyers and renters, is bad and getting worse. It is also positive that the struggles of low-income households, including families and retirees, is on the agenda.
The problem is in the solutions being put forward. The Treasurer sees lack of supply and private sector investment as the root of the problem and this is driving the policy approach.
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Seniors incentive to free up housing stock, help elderly

Renee Viellaris, The Courier-Mail
April 10, 2017 7:25am
PENSIONERS would receive a financial incentive to downsize their family home under a Budget plan that will release housing stock across the country and ease the pressure on cash-strapped seniors.
Treasurer Scott Morrison is believed to be considering measures to motivate older Australians to reap the equity in their homes and improve their quality of life.
The Courier-Mail has been told that some in the Government believe there is merit in a Budget submission from National Seniors Australia that calls for aged pensioners to downsize or quarantine a portion of cash from the sale of their home to invest in Government bonds.
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Radical overhaul of middle class welfare could fix deficit

Tom Minear, Federal Political Reporter, Herald Sun
April 9, 2017 8:00pm
A RADICAL overhaul of the middle-class welfare system could be the circuit-breaker ­solution to wipe out Australia’s mammoth deficit.
Official modelling obtained by the Herald Sun shows the country could save $36.5 billion over the next decade by slowing the growth of welfare payments to inflation.
Another $28 billion could be returned to the Budget ­bottom line over 10 years if unemployment payments were frozen for as long as the recipients were out of work.
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  • Updated Apr 12 2017 at 12:01 AM

House prices 'dangerously dumb' and 30pc overvalued: Chris Richardson, Deloitte

Recession will be unavoidable if China stumbles because Australian households are being crushed by the world's second-largest debt burden and "dangerously dumb" property prices that are more overvalued than at any time since at least the early 1980s, says a top forecaster.
Modelling to shown by Deloitte Access Economics partner Chris Richardson at the National Press Club in Canberra on Wednesday shows a China crisis would wipe almost $140 billion from Australia's economy, send unemployment up, cut house prices by 9 per cent, and destroy almost $1 trillion of national wealth.
The modelling, which underscores the degree to which Australia's exposure to what happens in China is greater than at any time in the last two-thirds of a century, will also show that the federal budget would blow out by another $40 billion in over just two years.
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What happens if China stumbles? A $140 billion doomsday scenario

James Massola, chief political correspondent
Published: April 12, 2017 - 2:01AM
Australia is more exposed to the economy of a single nation - China - than at any time since the 1950s, when Britain was our major trading partner.
While the gains from that economic relationship have been huge, the risk if China's economy slows are potentially just as large, new modelling warns.
The analysis, from Deloitte Access Economics' Chris Richardson, to be released on Wednesday at the National Press Club, says that if economic growth in China halved from its current rate of about 6.7 per cent to 3 per cent, Australia would be forced into recession as the nation "just doesn't have the ammo to fight it off anymore".
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  • Updated Apr 11 2017 at 5:00 PM

Scott Morrison leaves regulators to do heavy lifting on housing

by Chris Bowen
There are many reasons why negative gearing and the capital gains tax discount need to be reformed. Housing affordability. Budget repair. And importantly, financial stability.
Financial stability is important because it maintains the smooth and efficient flow of funds between savers and borrowers, making the economy more resilient in the face of shocks.
What the GFC taught economies around the world is that there is a real human cost of financial instability – financial distress for families, people losing their homes, business bankruptcies and high unemployment. If there is one thing above all else that Treasurer Scott Morrison should be focused on, it is keeping the financial system stable.
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Federal Treasurer Scott Morrison rules out plan to change negative gearing

EXCLUSIVE, Sharri Markson
National Political Editor, The Daily Telegraph
April 11, 2017 12:00am
SCOTT Morrison’s conservative Cabinet colleagues have shot down a plan to change negative gearing — a Budget policy the Treasurer was considering after new $200,000 Liberal Party research highlighted the critical issue of housing affordability.
The Daily Telegraph has confirmed Mr Morrison had been exploring the case for changes to negative gearing by limiting the deductibility of ­interest on residential investor mortgages.
The Treasurer firmly ruled out negative gearing changes after Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull told him privately he needed consensus from the leaders of the Right, Immigration Minister Peter Dutton and ­Finance Minister Mathias Cormann, before he would consider the Budget measure.
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It keeps getting rejected but the idea of using retirement savings for first homes won’t go away

April 10, 2017 10:38pm
IT’S the housing funding idea that keeps getting clubbed by the experts but won’t go away, and now it’s dividing Cabinet.
Using superannuation to help buy a first home is being condemned by ministers who insist the consequences would be harmful rather than helpful. And officially no such proposal exists.
But it keeps being raised as a live Budget option and is most associated with Treasurer Scott Morrison, who appeared to be backing it today, and his junior minister Michael Sukkar.
But it is being questioned by other ministers including Finance Minister Mathias Cormann.
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What if inflation rises and wages don't?

Michael Pascoe
Published: April 13, 2017 - 12:15AM
There's a bigger economic threat starting to rumble ominously just beyond our immediate headline hogs of housing affordability and energy: What if inflation rises and wages don't?
It's a problem exercising the minds of retail analysts as their sector (already in a spot of bother) would be the first to feel the obvious impact of such a scenario – weaker consumption spending.
And with consumption accounting for about 60 per cent of the economy and the government relying on real consumption growth of about 3 per cent to keep the overall GDP growth above trend, Houston might not have a problem but Canberra and much of the rest of the nation would. 
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Turnbull enters row over affordable housing measures to dump dipping into retirement savings

April 12, 20174:01pm

Deloitte's Chris Richardson says Turnbull was 'right' to embrace innovation during campaign

authorBlockSingleMALCOLM Turnbull has moved to settled a cabinet brawl before it erupted over using superannuation accounts to fund first homes of young people.
It’s a bad idea, he indicated.
The numbers show a dip into retirement savings isn’t going to happen, and the proposal might not even get as far as the expenditure review committee which decides the contents of the Budget.
That means Treasurer Scott Morrison will have to look elsewhere to find effective Budget measures to increase housing affordability in the crisis cities of Melbourne and Sydney — the big promise at the centre of the May statement.
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Negative gearing, the common good and the political reality

John Warhurst
Published: April 13, 2017 - 12:15AM
The Turnbull government has doggedly defended negative gearing, the policy by which the losses on investment properties can be offset against other income, most recently through Treasurer Scott Morrison before the May federal budget. Many experts blame the policy, in part, for rising house prices, which keep many younger first-home buyers out of the property market. It lowers the taxable income of such investors and thus hurts the overall budget bottom line, too.
But the policy is also popular with many investors, almost to the point that the idea of having an "investment property" has developed something of a cult following. For some people, it seems a way of life that promises otherwise unachievable prosperity.
There is no magic bullet to reining in rising house prices that squeeze out young home buyers in favour of investors. But to just about every responsible party besides the government, reforming negative gearing should be on the table as part of a possible solution. It is the government's apparent obduracy rather than the call for change that which needs explanation.
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Reserve Bank sounds warning about new mortgages

Eryk Bagshaw
Published: April 13, 2017 - 8:03PM
One third of mortgage owners have less than a month's buffer against financial instability, the Reserve Bank has warned, in a review highlighting increased risks in the heated Sydney and Melbourne property markets.
The RBA's half-yearly financial stability review, released on Thursday, also took aim at the noticeable rise in investor credit, stating a decline could trigger a sharp downturn in the market.
"The concern is that investors are likely to contribute to the amplification of the cycles in borrowing and housing prices, generating additional risks to the future health of the economy," the RBA said.
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Scott Morrison must forget the spin and downplay expectations on housing

John Hewson
Published: April 13, 2017 - 4:45PM
Effective management of expectations is fundamental to political success. It is counterproductive, if not fatal, to create expectations and then fail to deliver. This was certainly the defining aspect of Barack Obama's presidency. It is a principal reason for the collapse in Malcolm Turnbull's standing in the polls.
However, as obvious as this may be, our politicians seem incapable of learning the lesson. They are all too anxious to grab an issue, raising the expectations that they can "solve it".
An excellent example is housing affordability. Gladys Berejiklian has sought to make it the hallmark of her premiership. Scott Morrison is happy to make it the focus of his budget this year. Yet, realistically, they can only hope, at best, to make a marginal improvement in the crisis, although admitting it as a crisis may allow them to do somewhat more than would otherwise have been the case.
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Why will no one admit that improving housing affordability means bringing down prices?

Jacqueline Maley
Published: April 15, 2017 - 12:00AM
Is there any political tradition more dispiriting and stupid than the pre-budget dance? The flying of "kites", the choreographed leaks to newspapers, the winky denials from politicians of the same ideas their press office has led journalists to believe are being seriously considered?
That's without even mentioning the infamous "rule-in/rule-out game" – which politicians are fond of saying they will not play, like it's something immoral, akin to admitting you hunt babies on weekends.
Even though they won't play it, the rule in/rule-out game was definitely invented by politicians, because they're obsessed by it. They talk about it all the time.
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Time to admit failed doctrine on low interest rates

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM April 15, 2017

Alan Kohler

So according to the Reserve Bank, one third of households have no buffer, or a buffer of less than a month’s repayments.
This was mumbled on page 21 of the Financial Stability Review, before moving on quickly to commercial property. No one ran out into Martin Place with hair on fire, no one resigned in sackcloth and ashes, or apologised and, as far as we know, there was no roast from the Prime Minister or Treasurer, declaring their loss of confidence in the central bank.
Interest rates have been cut to the lowest level in history, yet inflation remains bogged below 2 per cent, unemployment is stuck at 5.9 per cent and now a third of borrowers are so far in debt they are bufferless. They are up to pussy’s bow, full stretch, bone on bone: no cartilage.
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Health Budget Issues.

Federal budget 2017: Budget razor gang to consider medicine scheme shake-up

Adam Gartrell, Health Correspondent
Published: April 11, 2017 - 11:45PM
The Turnbull government's budget razor gang is set to consider changes to the $10 billion Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme designed to bring down the price of medicines and kill off a potentially damaging fight with pharmacists.
Health Minister Greg Hunt is close to finalising a new strategic agreement with pharmaceutical industry body Medicines Australia that will underpin the changes to go before the expenditure review committee within days, Fairfax Media can reveal.
Well-placed sources in the medicines sector say that under the agreement the industry will bring down the cost of some drugs in exchange for price certainty and stability. The agreement will fill the void left after negotiations on an earlier agreement ended in acrimony in 2015.
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You’ll soon be slugged hundreds for X-rays and scan tests, as Medicare cover shrinks

Sue Dunlevy, National Health Reporter, News Corp Australia Network
April 11, 2017 10:00pm
YOU’LL pay more for X-rays and scans with out of pocket costs to rise to over $200 per screening, as the Turnbull Government prepares to ditch its election promise to raise Medicare rebates for the tests.
The broken promise will be a particular slug on cancer patients who need multiple tests for diagnosis and to check their cancer has not returned.
On the eve of the 2016 election, the Turnbull Government pledged to index the Medicare rebate for medical imaging for the first time in 19 years to head off a damaging advertising campaign from radiologists.
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How a $40 medical test became a $1000 test overnight

Harriet Alexander
15 Apr 2017, 12:32 a.m.
Some doctors have increased their fees by up to 400 per cent, knowing the bill would be footed by taxpayers and not their price sensitive customers.
The federal government has parked its attempts to rein in the Extended Medicare Safety Net, despite a blowout in costs that the Department of Health warned in 2015 was largely the result of medical practitioners increasing their prices.
It will not be included in the May budget.
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Health reporting in sickly condition

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM April 15, 2017

Sean Parnell

Australia has been ranked sixth on a global health transparency index, marked down for a lack of routine, uniform reporting on hospital rates of unexpected death, avoidable infections and unplanned readmission.
While Australia shared top place on the KPMG International analysis for finance, and earned a bonus point for publishing contract and procurement information, deficiencies in ­reporting quality issues held Australia back behind Scandinavian countries and Britain.
KPMG Australia healthcare partner Dan Harradine said there was a need for better and more consistent reporting of poor quality outcomes, and also better measurement and publication of patient outcomes and sentiments, to improve the ­system.
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Health Insurance Issues.

Med-techs propose new prostheses price model

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM April 10, 2017

Sarah-Jane Tasker

A group of Australian med-tech companies is seeking a meeting with Health Minister Greg Hunt to push a new pricing model for the Prostheses List to end the bitter battle with private health insurers.
LifeHealthcare chief executive Matt Muscio is spearheading the proposal, saying the next couple of months are critical, given a senate inquiry on the controversial pricing list for medical devices is scheduled to report its findings.
“If we’re not part of the solution we are going to remain part of the problem,” Mr Muscio said.
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Private health funds to stop paying to fix botched surgeries

April 15, 20179:19pm
John Rolfe News Corp Australia Network
EXCLUSIVE
PRIVATE health insurers will stop paying for public hospital surgeries that leave policyholders with scalpels or scissors inside them.
Currently a fund, and possibly a policyholder, could end up having to pay twice — once for the bungled surgery and again for the fix.
News Corp Australia can also reveal that with the number of private patients in public hospitals increasing, insurers will seek binding contracts with state governments or public hospitals stipulating quality levels and costs.
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Private health insurance complaints on the rise

Editor: Amy Coopes Author: Amy Coopes on: April 12, 2017 In: private health insurance
Complaints about the private health insurance industry have skyrocketed in recent years and new memberships have slowed, according to a new report from the Private Health Insurance Ombudsman.
The PHIO’s annual State of the Health Funds report showed an uptick in complaints across a range of insurers and regarding a host of issues including refunds for canceled memberships and administrative hurdles switching from one insurer to another, as well as problems with automated payments or delays and glitches in responding to queries.
In 2015-16 the private health insurance industry experienced growth of just 1.35% with 86,939 new memberships, compared with some 158,000 the previous year.Three major funds — HCF, Medibank and Westfund — saw their membership base contract.
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Pharmacy Issues

Pharmacists set for $600m Budget boost to stop overdoses

Wednesday, 12 April 2017 10:28AM
Chemists are in line for a $600 million windfall to expand community pharmacy programs in a bid to stop patients suffering bad reactions or overdoses from their medicines and having to be admitted to hospital.
The West Australian understands the money is likely to be announced in the Budget, helping boost pharmacists’ role in providing primary care services such as screening for chronic disease and ensuring medicines can be supplied in the bush and to indigenous communities.
It comes as the Federal Government gets closer to a deal with major drug makers to slash the cost taxpayers pay for some prescription drugs in return for five years of price certainty.
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I look forward to comments on all this!
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David.

I Wonder Why Discharge Summaries Are Not Discussed With The Patient Before Being Uploaded To The myHR.

This blog appeared last week:

My Health Record in General Practice

Monday, 10 April 2017
Dr Steve Hambleton, MBBS FAMA FRACGP (Hon) GAICD
Follow Dr Steve on Twitter @SteveJHambleton
Amongst my other roles, I've been a GP at the Kedron Park 7-Day Medical Centre in Brisbane for the past 29 years. Many of my patients have been in my care for a long time and I know them very well but I cannot be there for them every day. Like a lot of GPs who have been in the same practice for a long time, I mainly treat people with chronic and complex disease.
I believe one of the responsibilities of General Practitioners is to facilitate patients’ interactions with the health system as a whole, and it’s particularly important for those with chronic ailments. For this reason, I am an early adopter of My Health Record – the secure, online digital summary of a patient’s pertinent medical information, including diagnosis, outcomes, medications, reactions and allergies.
The benefits of the My Health Record cannot be understated. One of my patients with a list of chronic diseases – heart disease, Parkinson’s disease, peripheral vascular disease, kidney disease and chronic myeloid leukaemia – was recently taken to a Queensland public hospital with an acute deterioration in his heart condition. As a result of his various illnesses, the patient had several different specialist doctors attending him, and each of these doctors was able to consult his My Health Record for information on his latest treatments, medications and outcomes. These details informed their own treatment plans. Ultimately, everyone involved, and particularly the patient, benefited from having all of his crucial medical information stored in one accessible digital file avoiding duplicate testing and the inevitable phone calls needed to find bits of information from multiple sources.
Another example benefit of My Health Record adoption involves the automatic inclusion of a patient’s hospital discharge summary. I’ve had patients come to see me so soon after a stint in hospital that their discharge summary hasn’t had time to arrive. Although sketchy on the details, my patient recalled that there were changes in their medications which I should to be aware of. In the old days, I’d have had to chase up the discharge summary, or call the hospital pharmacy, wasting time and resources. Now I can simply check the patient’s My Health Record, which in Queensland public hospitals, now usually contains a recently added copy of the summary that includes all the relevant information – a streamlined system in which, once again, the patient wins.
More here:
Note the last paragraph mentioned: I was given a copy of the discharge summary from my last admission and at the time I said to the intern not to upload the Summary. She had not heard of the myHR etc. so was more than happy to comply.
A day ago I checked and somehow it had been uploaded as there as one detail I was not happy with.
Seems to fascists have taken really taken over.  Looks like automatic does really mean automatic despite consent being specifically being denied.
Might make a call or two and see what is going on.
David.

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

The myHR Becomes A Touch Political Would Seem. Interesting.

This came up in the discussion re access to Opt-Out myHR Records.
Media Release – Catherine King MP
Shadow Minister For Health And Medicare = Member For Ballarat

ANOTHER HEALTH BUNGLE – OPEN SLATHER ON YOUR HEALTH DATA UNDER TURNBULL

” The revelation that hundreds of thousands of health practitioners will be given open access to sensitive health data is extremely concerning.
Reports today say that electronic health records will be automatically set to “universal access” under the Turnbull Government’s opt-out scheme, meaning health practitioners will automatically have access to an individual’s full medical history – whether it is relevant to the treatment they are administering or not.”
This means that a dentist or optometrist could know if someone has had an abortion, or their history of mental illness, even if a person has not disclosed it to them.
“Given the Turnbull Government’s appalling IT record, Australians have every right to be worried about their rollout of this project,” Ms King said.
“Last year, one billion lines of Medicare data with private claims information were freely available for download in a massive data breach on the Government’s watch.
“They need to tell Australians what is happening, or they risk people losing confidence in the system before it even gets off the ground.”
When Labor originally set up the Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record it was an opt-in system, with users setting up access preferences and controls. Now that the system has moved to opt-out, it seems that the Turnbull Government has not set up the same automatic safeguards.
“The information in these records is too important to be another addition to the Government’s list of health bungles. Australians deserve to know how their information will be protected.”
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Here is the link to this release and a lot of other commentary:

https://nacchocommunique.com/category/e-health-my-health-records/

I would have expected the Labor Party to stay well out of this discussion. It seems political warfare means they will really leap on any grist for the mill. (BTW - does anyone have a link to Ms King's current press / media releases? They are not easy to find.)

It really is quite interesting that the Labor spokesman finally has an adverse comment to make given the way the ALP has totally failed to push any accountability for the myHR mess over the last few years. Surely enough time has passed for them to develop a little objectivity as to where their 'baby' has wandered off into a wasteful swamp. I guess this might be the first sign of the worm turning, or not!

David.