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."

Wednesday, December 06, 2017

The Heat On The Way The NBN Is Being Implemented Is Really Rising. Pollies Take Note!

Last week we had a very disappointing announcement on the NBN that was ‘spun’ as an initiative to improve the ‘customer experience’.
Basically the issue was that the Hybrid Fibre Coaxial (HFC) roll out was found to be not fit for use without considerable changes and that the roll-out to about 3 million homes was to be delayed by six to nine months.
The Fin Review put it best with this article:
  • Nov 27 2017 at 4:24 PM

Glitter-to-the-turd NBN applies world class positivity to our broadband woes

For a supposedly apolitical government-owned business, the company rolling out Australia's beleaguered National Broadband Network has certainly developed an ability to spin bad news in a way that would make even the most brass-necked government minister blush.
On Monday NBN introduced Australia to yet another new phrase to add to the broadband list. Alongside fibre to the node, fibre to the premise and fibre to the kerb, we can now add 'glitter to the turd.'
In the morning journalists had received advanced warning that NBN's chief executive Bill Morrow was poised to make a "major announcement regarding customer experience improvements," at a lunchtime press conference.
What could it be? we wondered. New pricing plans? Removal of CVC charges to make capacity more affordable for ISPs? Upgrading unfortunate fibre to the node customers to the superior technology their luckier neighbours are getting?
Nope, nope and nope.
Morrow announced that NBN would be halting the rollout of the HFC part of the NBN (which will eventually cover 3 million metropolitan customers) in order to fix up problems experienced by some of its initial 370,000.   
There will be delays of about six to nine months for customers who thought they were about to be connected, while its workers go back and work out why some of its existing users have had problems with patchy connections and disappointing performance. 
What great news for all customers eh? Three cheers for the NBN.
Of course it is better that NBN sorts out its problems with the HFC deployment before over 2 and a half million more people join the party, but (most) Australians are not mugs and should resent the bizarre attempts by the company to claim kudos for fixing problems many had predicted in the first place. 
The current HFC footprint (which for the non-indoctrinated is the cables that supply Pay TV) already only consists of cables formerly owned by Telstra, because NBN dumped the ones acquired from Optus after finding they weren't up to scratch.
HFC was one of the key aspects of Malcolm Turnbull's pitch for switching from Labor's "gold plated" fibre to the premise NBN, to a multi-technology-mix. He regularly pointed out the folly of Labor discarding it because it is capable of delivering fast speeds in the right conditions, and said it was already laid and good to go.
The fact that NBN is scrambling to fix problems should be acknowledged as yet another embarrassing setback, rather than dressed up as some kind of triumph of customer service.
This is how NBN announced the delays in its press release: "NBN Co takes customer experience improvement program to new levels ... New HFC rollout initiatives announced to help improve end user experience and retailer satisfaction." 
I'm all for looking on the bright side, but that is like an attempt at satire that would be rejected by the writers of ABC's Utopia for taking things too far .
More here:
ItWire also has a good take:

Turnbull's magic-mushroom NBN is slowly unravelling

For months now, we've been told that fast broadband would be arriving sooner because of the change in technology that the Coalition Government decided upon, with HFC cable and fibre-to-the-node being the saviours of the project. Now that dream is unravelling. 
The brakes have been well and truly slammed on by the NBN Co, with delays of six to nine months in getting any HFC connections up.
The Telstra HFC cable network is being shared by the NBN Co, Telstra and Foxtel; the NBN signal travels at a low frequency, the other two at higher frequencies. Apparently, at lower frequencies the signal does not travel all that well.
The equivalent of bandages will have to be applied. But the long-term solution will be to replace cable with fibre.

What was to have been a marathon — fibre-to-the-premises for 93%, satellite and fixed wireless for the rest — was attempted to be turned into a sprint by the agile and innovative Malcolm Turnbull.
Alas, the dream of the silver-haired visionary now seems to be dead.
Lots more here:
Really this is going severely pear shaped and it really is difficult to see and great outcomes.
The only good thing is, for me, that I get to keep my present decent service for a further 6-9 months!
Thank heavens! Maybe things will be better by then!
David

Tuesday, December 05, 2017

Digital Rights And Privacy Are Important To Many Of Us. Here Is Some Current Evidence.

This appeared a few days ago:

It's not too late to fight for our digital rights. Here's how we start

By Ariadne Vromen, Kimberlee Weatherall, Fiona Martin and Gerard Goggin
27 November 2017
Uber's admission that it covered up a major data hack affecting 57 million users is the latest example of a mass infringement of digital rights.
As our worlds move ever more online, to the benefit of major technology firms such as Uber, Facebook, and Google, the need for a frank and open discussion about our digital rights has become urgent.
Government, as a central home to so much of our personal data, must be part of this mix.

Why it matters

Voicing concerns about technology is not new.
As David Brooks noted in the New York Times, "the left is attacking tech companies because they are mammoth corporations; the right is attacking them because they are culturally progressive."
If we leave politicised critiques to one side and look at why the public is concerned about their data, we see their worries are often well-founded.
Take this account of a former Facebook Operations Manager tasked with addressing its privacy issues, who speaks of an organisation that "prioritised data collection from its users over protecting them from abuse".
Australians are some of the world's greatest users of social media and mobile broadband, and our nation is in the top ten globally for internet use.
We adapt early to new technologies and our high uptake of smartphones paired with our relative level of wealth means we meet the digital archetype.
At a time when our use of technologies is redefining aspects of our personal and professional lives, researchers are compelled to explore our rights now and into the future.
This means taking a deep look at the role of private, transnational digital platforms in reshaping the way we work, study and conduct business and our interactions with government and each other.

What we've learnt

This week, our digital rights and governance project at the University of Sydney released a major report, detailing the attitudes and opinions of 1600 Australians on key rights issues.
We conducted our survey through Essential Media and held an online focus group discussion about scenarios (much like that of the Uber data breach), as well as analysing legal, policy and governance issues.
What we have learnt is that Australians have real concerns about digital privacy and how it is impacted by profiling and data analytics.
Australians' opposition or support for government surveillance depends on a complex set of scenarios around justice and anti-terror.
In the workplace, Australians think digital privacy matters just as much.
Most of us don't want our employers looking at our private social media posts, but concern for such practices breaks down through levels of education.
High-school educated, blue collar Australians and those over 40 are most concerned about employers accessing their social media posts.
This raises questions about how complacent or even complicit some companies may be about the monitoring of social media activity.
It also suggests that existing employment law may not adequately protect employee rights to digital privacy.
And we also grapple with wider realities of the digital disruption that gallops apace through our myriad interactions.
Real-world inequalities are being writ large on the digital plain, with our online experiences filtered by our age, gender, and social background.
More here:
There is also some coverage here:

Most Australians concerned about digital privacy: study

A majority of Australians surveyed about digital rights, the need for governance and the responsibilities of social media platforms have indicated that they are concerned about their digital privacy.
The survey, carried out by the Digital Rights and Governance Project at the University of Sydney, found that of 1600 survey subjects 67% were taking steps to protect their privacy online. But only 38% felt they were in control.
The study found that about 80% wanted to know what information of theirs was being accessed, by whom, and how to report and correct inaccuracies.
“Australians’ personal and professional lives are being transformed by digital disruption, while lawmakers, technology elites and corporate boards fail to keep up," said the report’s co-author, Professor Gerard Goggin.

"Data hoarding and seemingly opaque decision-making has given rise to community concern and an urgent need for our digital rights to be clearly laid out by the government.”
Another co-author, Professor Ariadne Vromen, said: “Our results provide a snapshot of the nation’s attitudes and behaviours in the digital world and show Australians’ clear concerns about how their information is being used and accessed by governments, social media platforms and corporations."
The report also shows support for state-led surveillance of internet activity is dependent on what it is for. Some 57% favour collecting communications data for anti-terrorism purposes. However, the same percentage oppose a broader requirement for Internet service providers to store customer metadata.
More here:
This link provides more info.
It seems concern about privacy and associated issues has not died out – despite many saying it has!
The implications for Digital Health need to be carefully considered.
David.

Addition 5:30pm

"Conclusion
The Legislative Instrument is compatible with human rights because it advances the right to health.  Any limitation of the right to privacy is proportionate, necessary and reasonable to achieving improved healthcare for Australians.  Increased use of the My Health Record system, which will occur as a result of opt-out arrangements, will result in a number of privacy positives compared to use of paper-based records."
This is from the Explanatory Memorandum published a day or so ago. 
To me the evidence-free assertions and unsupported judgment claims being made by Government / The ADHA here are just gob-smacking!
What do you think?
D.

Monday, December 04, 2017

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 4th December, 2017.

Here are a few I have come across the last week or so.Note: Each link is followed by a title and a few paragraphs. For the full article click on the link above title of the article. Note also that full access to some links may require site registration or subscription payment.

General Comment

An interesting week with the ADHA out all over the place. Will be interesting to see how it all plays out…
Otherwise a few other interesting initiatives…
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E-health revolution gather pace as more services pledge their backing

  • The Australian
  • 1:00AM December 2, 2017
The e-health revolution is gaining pace as Australia’s largest pathology labs agree to upload reports to patients’ My Health Record and diagnostic imaging providers are set to link up next year.
Last week the Australian Digital Health Agency announced new agreements with pathology companies Primary Health Care and Australian Clinical Labs and seven software vendors and labs, after Sonic Healthcare’s ­decision to sign up to My Health Record.
More than 5.3 million Australians have a My Health ­Record. There was a 400 per cent increase in the number of shared health summaries uploaded in 2016-17 and a 200 per cent rise in links with private hospitals. The new links with ­diag­nostic ­imaging and pathology pro­viders will give clinicians even more reason to be involved and provide a critical mass of information to demonstrate the value of e-health.
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Correcting recent but inaccurate media reporting for My Health Record

Posted on 01 December, 2017
Recent articles in the media have raised concerns relating to privacy, security and consumer communications for My Health Record. This media reporting contained a number of false claims and inaccuracies. Tim Kelsey, CEO of the Australian Digital Health Agency (ADHA) has issued a letter to the editors of each publication that carried this article requesting a correction to the record.
The ADHA has prepared a document which outlines and corrects inaccuracies related to the following issues:
  • Consumer communication activities for opt out in 2018
  • Does My Health Record mean that private health information is available on the ‘open’ internet?
  • Who can view information in My Health Record?
  • Is information in My Health Record available to researchers or for other purposes?
The document also provides contact details, if you have questions or would like additional information.

My Health Record still not worth its $2b investment

A new report shows it has a long way to go
24th November 2017
The future looks grim for the Federal Government’s My Health Record unless its inherent problems are addressed, new figures suggest.
GP groups have been scathing about cost blowouts and its slow implementation - it has taken five years to develop at an estimated cost of $2 billion.
However, take up is painfully slow.
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Hardly anyone uses Australia's My Health Record service

Signature policy has cost AU$1.7bn, looks rather sickly

By Richard Chirgwin 29 Nov 2017 at 02:39
One of the Australian government's signature policies, the electronic health record, has been all-but-abandoned by the healthcare sector.
While the AU$1.7 billion spent on the My Health Record system so far has attracted registrations from more than five million Australians, the government's dashboard [PDF] for the system reveals a collapse in the rate of new registrations.
In May 2017, registrations (excluding “bulk registrations”, in which the government creates the record in an opt-out process) peaked at more than 40,000 new users for the month, and the graph below shows the decline since then.
Comments:
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It's a Christmas miracle - two secure messaging systems now talk to each other

From last month Argus was able to send messages to ReferralNet and vice versa
Antony Scholefield
30th November 2017
It may be four weeks to Christmas, but a miracle has already occurred: two secure messaging programs used by GPs have started to talk to each other.
Like a grumpy family on Christmas Day, the four main messaging systems have been unable to reconcile their past differences and have been refusing to communicate for many years.
This has forced GPs, at least those doggedly determined to move on from fax machine technology, to invest in multiple software packages so they can conduct the simple business of exchanging clinical information with specialists or hospitals.
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Concern grows about the opt-out function as healthcare industries sign up to connect with My Health Record

Lynne Minion | 28 Nov 2017
As the Australian Digital Health Agency endeavours to improve the usefulness of its My Health Record, a flurry of announcements has celebrated the signing of agreements with pathology laboratories, pharmacy groups and diagnostic imaging practices for the sharing of clinical records.

Following recent criticism of the incomplete information contained within My Health Record and the impact on its clinical value, the ADHA’s efforts to populate the national repository of Australians’ health information with clinically relevant documents have kicked into gear.
But the uploading of people’s most private and consequential personal information onto a Federal Government server is causing concern for the lack of a true opt-out function and little communication with the public.
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Most Australians concerned about digital privacy: study

A majority of Australians surveyed about digital rights, the need for governance and the responsibilities of social media platforms have indicated that they are concerned about their digital privacy.
The survey, carried out by the Digital Rights and Governance Project at the University of Sydney, found that of 1600 survey subjects 67% were taking steps to protect their privacy online. But only 38% felt they were in control.
The study found that about 80% wanted to know what information of theirs was being accessed, by whom, and how to report and correct inaccuracies.
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More pathology labs and pharmacies in Australia connecting to My Health Record

By: Priyankar Bhunia
29 Nov 2017
Primary Health Care, Australian Clinical Labs, and 7 other software vendors and labs signed agreements with the Australian Digital Health Agency. Chemist Warehouse and Corum have also announced their upcoming connection to My Health Record system in 2018. 
Primary Health Care, Australian Clinical Labs, and seven other pathology software vendors and labs have signed agreements with the Australian Digital Health Agency (the Agency) to share reports with their patients via My Health Record.
This announcement made on November 27, follows Sonic Healthcare’s agreement to connect with My Health Record in June. The Agency made a private sector market offer to support other pathology software vendors. This offer included labs managing their own software to update and connect with My Health Record.
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40 agents of digital change

Community, hospital, and academic pharmacists have formed a Pharmacists Digital Health Leaders Network to enhance use of My Health Record by pharmacists and pharmacies

The 40 network members will support local pharmacists in their area to engage with and use My Health Records through digital health workshops and education events.
Pharmaceutical Society of Australia National President Dr Shane Jackson says that the PSA, the Pharmacy Guild of Australia and the Society of Hospital Pharmacists of Australia handpicked the network members as positive agents of change.
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How good is your webside manner?

Preserving the doctor-patient relationship via video link
28th November 2017
Doctors in the US are being called on to develop new communication skills to treat patients via video link.
More than 15 million Americans received remote medical care in 2015, and the  American Telemedicine Association predicts this will grow to more than 158 million by 2020.
The US has a serious shortage of doctors, and this shortfall is predicted to reach 90,000 by 2020.
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With data breaches, Australia needs zero tolerance

  • Tom Uren
  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM November 30, 2017
From early next year, Australian companies will be obliged to tell you if personal information entrusted to them has been stolen by hackers.
But the notifiable data breaches scheme of the Privacy Act does not go far enough — companies and organisations are obliged to notify only breaches they consider very serious, too many organisations are exempt and the penalties are too low
Every month there is a new announcement that a large trove of personal data has been stolen or lost. This year we have learned of data breaches from Equifax, a US credit reporting agency; the US Securities and Exchange Commission; professional services firm Deloitte; Hyatt Hotels; and online comment service Disqus. We’ve also learned that data on all Yahoo accounts was stolen back in 2013.
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Planning to have a baby in 2020? Here's the question you should prepare for

Aisha Dow
Published: November 30 2017 - 12:15AM
The parents of all Victorian babies born in 2020 and 2021 will be asked to hand over their child's health records, as part of an ambitious research project aimed at solving the nation's pressing health problems.
Detailed information about more than 160,000 children is set to be stored in an enormous "data repository" through the Generation Victoria (Gen V) program unveiled on Thursday.
The repository could keep information such as health checks, weight and blood test results as well as school records including whether children arrive at class hungry, if they are left or right-handed, if they can hold a pen and if they are able to read.
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Vic babies recruited to fix health woes

More than 100,000 Victorian babies' medical records will be analysed in a world-first research project aimed at solving a “tsunami” of health problems.
Benita Kolovos
Australian Associated Press November 30, 201711:09am
The parents of Victorian babies born in 2020 and 2021 will be asked to hand over their child's medical records as part of a world-first research project aimed at solving a "tsunami" of pressing health problems.
Generation Victoria, or Gen V, is an opt-in program that will track the health of more than 100,000 children in order to supercharge research into health problems including obesity, autism, diabetes and mental illness.
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Big data project offers ‘better return’ on health services

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM November 30, 2017
In a world first, medical data from an entire generation of Victorian babies will be pooled to fast-track research into diseases like autism, depression and obesity.
Parents of all children born in the state in 2020 and 2021 will be invited to join the “Gen V” project and help transform Victoria into a “living laboratory”.
The initiative’s architects say it will accumulate medical information at the scale needed to tackle big health issues, allowing researchers to analyse existing data rather than being forced to recruit medical trial participants from scratch.
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Better health care for people with chronic conditions

Up to 65,000 Australians will soon be receiving improved care for their ongoing chronic conditions, with the expansion of the Australian Government’s trial of Health Care Homes.
Page last updated: 01 December 2017
12 December 2017
Up to 65,000 Australians will soon be receiving improved care for their ongoing chronic conditions, with the expansion of the Turnbull Government’s trial of Health Care Homes.
An additional 168 general practices and Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services (ACCHS) will offer Health Care Home services from today, building on the 22 clinics already in the trial.
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Samsung targets healthcare with Australian summit

  • Chris Griffith
  • The Australian
  • 4:06PM November 29, 2017
Samsung picked Australia to host its first global summit on health today, in an event designed to build a network with locally available health partners.
“We’re thrilled that through the smart summit we’re able to bring so many experts together, encouraging a culture of collaboration that will potentially help the healthcare community in Australia and around the world, “ said Samsung’s Steven Sherry.
At today’s event Samsung announced a clinical trial with St Vincent’s Hospital’s Department of Pain Medicine and the University of New South Wales Art and Design. Patients will take part in a clinical trial of the use of virtual reality (VR) for acute pain management.
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Samsung CMO talks clinical credibility as the tech giant announces a partnership with St Vincent’s Sydney

Lynne Minion | 30 Nov 2017
With some of the world’s largest tech companies seeking a foothold in the lucrative global healthcare market, Samsung has announced a partnership with Sydney’s St Vincent’s Hospital designed to solidify its clinician cred.
This latest hospital collaboration will add to the company’s research into virtual reality as a powerful pain management tool, according to Chief Medical Officer and Head of Healthcare and Fitness at Samsung Electronics America Dr David Rhew.
“We've spent a lot of time proving it and that's a perfect example of what we're doing here at St Vincent’s. Once you've got that proof then you've got the opportunity to combine the clinical perspective with the patients’ and create a program that is sustainable and highly effective,” Rhew told Healthcare IT News Australia.
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Pelvic mesh problems need register now

  MEDIA RELEASE THURSDAY, 30 NOVEMBER 2017
The Consumers Health Forum welcomes the tighter regulation of pelvic mesh implants and calls for the introduction of a mandatory register to record problems with implants so that action is initiated at the earliest opportunity to reduce risk of harm to other patients.
 The Therapeutic Goods Administration has today announced the de-registering of a number of mesh products whose sole use is the treatment of pelvic organ prolapse by means of transvaginal implantation.  The ban follows a review of the latest international studies and the clinical evidence about products supplied in Australia.
 “The TGA says the overall benefits of using these products for treatment of pelvic organ prolapse do not outweigh the risks that these products pose to patients,” the CEO of the Consumers Health Forum, Leanne Wells, said.
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No playing online games at work, advises RACGP

30 November 2017

TECH TALK

We know you wouldn’t. But just in case you’re ever bored and tempted, you shouldn’t try to play a sneaky game of Minesweeper on your work computer.
The same goes for visiting gambling and “objectionable” sites. So says the RACGP in new draft advice to practices when they are drawing up their internet policies for staff.
The guidance is part of the college’s new accreditation standards for general practice. These fifth standards were released in October “to keep pace with the changing medical environment”. 
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Depression trial puts smartphones to test

  • Sarah Wiedersehn
  • Australian Associated Press
  • 1:11PM November 29, 2017
Mental health apps will be trialled by thousands of Australian teenagers to test their effectiveness in preventing depression.
The Black Dog Institute will recruit 20,000 Year 7 students to trial the apps as part of a landmark study announced by Federal Minister for Health Greg Hunt on Wednesday,
Lead by Professor Helen Christensen, researchers will examine sensor data collected from smartphones such as GPS, use machine learning analysis and link this to hospital and birth records to develop reliable signals to flag the onset of depressive symptoms in young people.
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27 November 2017

New cancer database a key resource for GPs

Posted by Felicity Nelson
Cancer Australia’s new searchable database is giving GPs quick access to population data on cancers.
The National Cancer Control Indicators website, launched this month, brings together information on 17 cancers from trusted sources.
Quick fact cards present up-to-date data on prevention, incidence rates, treatment, and five-year relative survival.
“Cancer is a pretty scary word,” says Dr Liz Marles, the director of the Hornsby GP Unit in Sydney and member of Cancer Australia’s Advisory Council. “Getting a cancer diagnosis is probably one of the biggest personal challenges for people.”
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RACGP to govt: Don't use My Health Record data to judge doctor performance

Consultation is under way to work out what additional use the data could have
27th November 2017
The Federal Government has been told not to use patient data in the My Health Record to carry out competency checks on doctors, detect MBS rorts or use it for pay-for-performance.
The system, which has been running since 2012, contains millions of health summaries, along with pathology and imaging results, and MBS and PBS claims.
Consultation is under way to work out what additional use the data could have once it is de-identified.
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Big Vic govt agencies fail disaster recovery audit

By Justin Hendry on Nov 29, 2017 11:54AM

Hampered by old systems.

Five key Victorian government service agencies would not be able to recover all their critical systems in the event of disruption due to woeful disaster recovery processes, the state's auditor has found.
Auditor-general Andrew Greeves today revealed the problems were exacerbated by a "relatively high number" of obsolete systems.
The disaster recovery processes of Victoria Police and the Transport, Environment, Health, and Justice departments were assessed using the COBIT 5 model by the audit office.
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Govts scope national emergency mobile broadband network

By Justin Hendry on Nov 28, 2017 1:11PM

After all state and territories agree on terms.

Australia's state and territory governments have turned to industry for suggestions on how to create a national mobile broadband network for emergency services.
The work is being spearheaded by the NSW Telco Authority, which has asked telecommunications market participants for information and ideas to influence the direction of the project.
The NSW Telco Authority said it aims to begin trialling service delivery models by the end of January 2018.
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9 November 2017

Wild Health: Interoperability improves patient safety

Posted by TMR Staff
Interoperability has few financial imperatives, but it is very important from a patient safety and population health perspective, says Dr Ged Foley, the CEO at IPN Medical Centres.
“Good coordination of chronic care is essential,” he said, speaking with The Medical Republic at the Wild Health Summit last month.
“Having proper interactive care planning where different stakeholders of care can communicate to each other in real time … is becoming increasingly important,” he said.
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'What the hell's going on?': How NBN could become Canberra's next big headache

Judith Ireland
Published: December 3 2017 - 12:30AM
When Brigitte House received a letter in July to let her know she could connect her North Fitzroy home to the national broadband network, she was excited. 
"I thought, 'this is great, it's my turn'," House says, adding she imagined she would soon be able to get a faster, more reliable internet connection. 
But four months after she joined up to the network, her faith in the NBN is severely shaken. After several short-term outages (which were quickly fixed by her service provider, Telstra), the Melbourne counsellor was left without internet for 11 days last month due to an NBN outage.  
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  • Nov 27 2017 at 4:24 PM

Glitter-to-the-turd NBN applies world class positivity to our broadband woes

For a supposedly apolitical government-owned business, the company rolling out Australia's beleaguered National Broadband Network has certainly developed an ability to spin bad news in a way that would make even the most brass-necked government minister blush.
On Monday NBN introduced Australia to yet another new phrase to add to the broadband list. Alongside fibre to the node, fibre to the premise and fibre to the kerb, we can now add 'glitter to the turd.'
In the morning journalists had received advanced warning that NBN's chief executive Bill Morrow was poised to make a "major announcement regarding customer experience improvements," at a lunchtime press conference.
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NBN Co freezes new HFC orders

By Ry Crozier on Nov 27, 2017 12:14PM

Delays go-live for parts of network.

NBN Co is putting a temporary freeze on all new HFC orders and delaying go-live for some of the HFC network as it tries to improve the quality of service for all end users.
The company said it would “temporarily pause all new orders" over its HFC access network.
“This pause will be in effect until incremental field work is undertaken to raise the quality of service for end users,” NBN Co said in a statement.
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  • Nov 27 2017 at 12:33 PM

NBN halts HFC rollout 'effective immediately' as issues mount

NBN is immediately halting the rollout of super-fast broadband delivered over pay television cables due to mounting issues with service dropouts, forcing Telstra to flag it will need to reassess its full-year guidance.
NBN chief executive Bill Morrow said poor experience with the hybrid fibre-coaxil rollout, which currently provides cable internet and Foxtel, resulted from the lower frequency band NBN was using.
Those customers slated to be connected to the National Broadband Network via HFC technology, but are not yet connected, will face a delay of six-to-nine months before they will be able to get NBN.
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November 28 2017 - 12:01AM

Australian scientists capture Milky Way as it eats another galaxy

Liam Mannix
In deep space, it's kill or be killed.
Simulation shows what will happen when the Milky Way and Andromeda collide and come together to merge into an even bigger galaxy. Courtesy ICRAR-UWA.
Large galaxies like our own need to continually eat smaller galaxies to get fuel for making new stars. Otherwise, they run out of fuel and die. It's the circle of life – in space.
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Enjoy!
David.