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."

Monday, April 16, 2018

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 16th April, 2018.

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

General Comment

A really big when I look back – this lot will keep you browsing for a while. The first article is a ripper and ought be read if you have a moment.
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Will the tech giants ever succeed at e-Health?

Posted on by wolandscat
Amazon, Apple, and Google are all having another go at e-Health. But we have been here before: remember Microsoft HealthVault? It’s still around, and still hasn’t taken off. Google Health went live in 2008, but was retired at end of 2011, due to ‘lack of adoption’.
Fast forward to 2018, and we see Apple, Amazon, Google and Uber making new e-Health plays. Initially each corporation will probably work from its strengths – retail delivery for Amazon, booking for Uber, data for Google, and devices for Apple. In the US at least, some of them will build their own healthcare providers for the workforce, and use the environment as a place to work on next-generation health IT solutions. Some challenges, particularly in the devices area, will undoubtedly see progress – there is no doubt that the tech giants do some things really well.
But I remain sceptical about overall success.
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Digital Health CRC launches, targets care system savings of $1.8 billion

Comes at crunch time for national health system
George Nott (Computerworld) 13 April, 2018 10:00
The government is backing a Digital Health Cooperative Research Centre (CRC) which will invest more than $200 million to develop and test digital health solutions.
The CRC, which launched today, brings together 40 commercial and government organisations operating across the health, aged care and disability sectors, 24 established and start-up technology, advisory and investment companies, and 16 Australian universities.
Together they will work on a number of research priorities including tackling adverse drug reactions, mining knowledge from health data, improving the value of care and empowering consumers.
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Canberra mother questions delays to prescription monitoring laws

By Daniel Burdon
12 April 2018 — 4:55pm
A Canberra mother who lost her son to mental health and prescription drugs has questioned delays to real-time prescription monitoring in the ACT, and called for it to be mandatory for all doctors.
Ann Finlay lost her son, Paul Fennessy, in January 2010 to a prescription drug overdose, leading to a seven-year battle for an coronial inquest into his death, which was completed in August last year.
In the three years before his death, Mr Fennessy accessed 150 prescriptions from 18 different Canberra doctors, a period chronicled in The Canberra Times' investigative podcast Losing Paul.
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Ministers agree to national real time monitoring solution

All state and territory Health Ministers have committed to achieving a national solution on real time prescription monitoring

Today’s communique from the COAG Health Council said: “The Ministers agreed to progress national real time prescription monitoring as a federated model with jurisdictions committed to progressing development and adaptation of systems to connect to and interface with Commonwealth systems to achieve a national solution.”
The move was welcomed by the Pharmacy Guild.
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8 things pharmacists must know about MyHealth Record

The PSA has issued new guidelines to help navigate the legal minefield
11th April 2018
The PSA has launched guidelines to help pharmacists navigate the MyHealth Record system as it changes from opt-in to opt-out for all Australians.

Here are eight key points from the guidelines:
  • Ideally, pharmacies should display a sign advising patients whether or not the pharmacy uses MyHealth Record (MHR).
  • By signing up for a MHR, patients are giving consent for their clinical information to be uploaded to the record. But it’s a good idea to let patients know. For example, display a sign that states all prescriptions are uploaded to a patient’s MHR.
  • It’s okay to access the MHR without a patient’s permission in an emergency situation, such as a patient falling unconscious or having a seizure in the pharmacy.
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Lifting the veil

New My Health Record guidelines have been launched to help pharmacists understand and navigate the digital system

The PSA has launched new guidelines to support pharmacists in using the My Health Record system.
My Health Record is currently at a crucial stage of rolling out across pharmacies, and will be providing all Australians with a record by the end of the year unless they opt out.
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Pharmaceutical Society of Australia launches new guidelines for My Health Record system

By: Nicky Lung
11 Apr 2018
The new guidelines will increase the number of pharmacists using My Health Record and improve the health of Australians through better pharmacist care.
The Pharmaceutical Society of Australia (PSA) has announced the launch of new guidelines for pharmacists to promote meaningful clinical use of the My Health Record system to enhance patient-centred care.
My Health Record is a digital system that enables healthcare providers to share secure health data and improve the safety and quality of patient care. The system enables important health information including allergies, medical conditions, treatments, medicines, and scan reports to be accessed through one system.
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Media release - New My Health Record guidelines launched for pharmacists

11 April, 2018
Pharmaceutical Society of Australia (PSA) launched new guidelines today for pharmacists to promote meaningful clinical use of the My Health Record system to enhance patient-centred care.
The new guidelines will help increase the number of pharmacists using My Health Record, a digital system that enables healthcare providers to share secure health data and improve the safety and quality of patient care.
My Health Record enables important health information including allergies, medical conditions, treatments, medicines, and scan reports to be accessed through one system. The benefits include reduced hospital admissions, reduced duplication of tests, better coordination of care for people with chronic and complex conditions, and better informed treatment decisions.
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MedAdvisor prescription app hits one million patient mark as it eyes up hospitalisation market

Lynne Minion | 10 Apr 2018
Australian digital health startup MedAdvisor has hit a milestone, announcing one million patients have connected with its prescription management app, doubling the number of those signed up in the last year.
The growth spurt by the ASX-listed company, which integrates tools including dose reminders, script renewals, a carer incarnation, refill ordering and medication training, has been fuelled by customer demand, according to MedAdvisor CEO Robert Read.
“Customers expect the same convenience they get in other environments. Patients are people and they have been frustrated by perceived inefficiencies in the healthcare system, so where new tools arrive that make it easier it is not surprising people love it,” Read told Healthcare IT News Australia.
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E-health and minimising script harms

A group of experts are calling for clear legal principles around how a duty of care looks in the age of electronic records

Dr Jennifer Stevens, Anaesthetist at St Vincent’s Hospital, and Matthew McCrone, Director of Real Time Prescription Monitoring Implementation at the Victorian Department of Health and Human Services, recently attended an event on reducing harms hosted by MinterEllison and ScriptWise.
The event aimed to examine effective ways that hospitals, health services and primary health care services can reduce growing harms from prescription medicines.
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Tenders for the review into SA Health’s EPAS system due soon

TENDERS for the review into SA Health’s troubled electronic records system EPAS go out soon after Health Minister Stephen Wade put the rollout on hold.
Brad Crouch
The Advertiser April 10, 201811:29pm
SA Health is finalising the final process for its review into the much-maligned electronic patient record system EPAS.
Health Minister Stephen Wade put the rollout on hold — including at the Royal Adelaide Hospital — amid grave concerns over the $421 million system’s performance.
EPAS was rushed into the RAH in time for the opening, but is only partly functional.
A government spokesman said sites using EPAS now will continue its operation during the review.

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Telemedicine in rural EDs: more questions than answers

Authored by Aniello Iannuzzi
IMAGINE this scenario: you are a young rural doctor working in a rural hospital’s emergency department (ED). Over each acute bed is a camera and microphone, and in a bigger centre 1000 km away is an emergency physician monitoring the patients’ vital signs and your actions.
A situation arises and you are required to take action. You’re in the middle of a procedure on another patient when the monitoring doctor, kilometres away, intervenes without your input.
Who is legally responsible for the patient now? Did the patient give permission to be so monitored? What does the rural doctor learn from being sidelined?
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Breach report confirms: People suck

Some muppet will probably click on that phishing email, report finds
Rohan Pearce (Computerworld) 10 April, 2018 14:01
Even in the wake of high-profile malware campaigns such as the WannaCry and NotPetya ransomware, businesses are still failing to get the security basics right when it comes to employee awareness training and patching vulnerabilities.
“People’s security maturity hasn’t really moved on in the past couple of years,” said Chris Tappin, principal consultant at Verizon.
In some cases, organisations have been worn down by the “constant doom and gloom” around security, he said. On top of that businesses are often confronted by vendors that are “trying to sell you the latest security appliances saying ‘Post WannaCry, you’ve got to have this; after Stuxnet our software is now critical to your business.’”
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OAIC sees 63 data breach notifications in first six weeks

By Ry Crozier on Apr 11, 2018 9:18AM

Majority the result of "human error".

Australian organisations reported 63 data breaches in the first six weeks of mandatory notification rules coming into effect, with human error listed as the most common cause.
By contrast, when organisations only had to voluntarily reveal breaches, they only self-reported 114 instances for the entire 2016–17 financial year.
The Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) today released the first quarterly report since the mandatory data breach notification scheme came into effect on February 22. [pdf]
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Health sector dominates in first report on data breach notification scheme

63 data breaches reported in first six weeks of scheme’s operation
Rohan Pearce (Computerworld) 11 April, 2018 10:04
Health service providers accounted for almost a quarter of the breaches reported in the first six weeks of operation of the government’s Notifiable Data Breach (NDB) scheme.
The rules require organisations to report data breaches to the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) and notify affected individuals when there is a risk of “serious harm”.
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Greens call for GDPR to serve as model for privacy protection

The Australian Greens have called on the Coalition Government to update privacy protections to stay in line with the European Union's General Data Protection Regulation that is scheduled to take effect on 25 May.
In a statement, the part's digital rights spokesperson Senator Jordon Steele-John said the government should look to the GDPR as a model for privacy protection, especially in the wake of the ongoing revelations regarding Facebook's data collection.
Senator Steele-John has in the recent past spoken out condemning Cambridge Analytica, which has been at the centre of the Facebook scandal, and seeking the removal of absolute exemptions in the privacy act for politicians and political parties. The privacy exemptions are backed by both the government and the opposition.
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NSW govt opposes mandatory data breach reporting

By Justin Hendry on Apr 13, 2018 11:08AM

But will review voluntary scheme.

The NSW government will oppose a bill that would force state government agencies to report data breaches, arguing more consideration is needed before such a scheme is introduced.
The Privacy and Personal Information Protection Amendment (Notification of Serious Violations of Privacy by Public Sector Agencies) Bill was introduced by NSW Labor last November to bring about model similar to the federal mandatory data breach notification scheme.
The bill would require state agencies to notify affected individuals and the NSW Privacy Commissioner.
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Facebook hearings: Don’t count on regulation to protect data privacy

Investors may be betting that the worst of “Facegate” could be over, but it is too soon to count on it.
  • The Australian / Economist
  • 12:00AM April 14, 2018
 “They ‘trust me’ ... dumb f--ks,” Mark Zuckerberg, the boss of Facebook, wrote in an instant message to a friend in 2004, after boasting that he had personal data, including photos, emails and addresses, of some 4000 of his social network’s users.
He offered to share whatever information his friend wanted to see.
Zuckerberg may use less profane language today, but many feel he has not yet outgrown his wilful disregard for users’ privacy.
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11 April 2018

Why are we so slow in adopting telehealth?

Posted by Julie Lambert
Digital health leaders are arguing for financial incentives and other support to speed doctors’ uptake of digital health technology.
Australian Digital Health Agency CEO Tim Kelsey said his agency was looking for solutions to the country’s slow progress on telehealth and bringing specialists into the computer age.
“Telehealth is a crucial tool. I’ve been surprised by the low uptake of services in Australia; where I’ve seen them in action they worked well,” he said.
“This is really nothing to do with technologies. It’s to do with culture, financial incentives and broader policies,” Mr Kelsey told the Australian Telehealth Conference in Sydney on Wednesday.
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When it comes to measuring clinical performance, doctors must be central

12 April 2018

GUEST EDITORIAL

When it comes to measuring performance in clinical settings, doctors need to be involved, writes Professor Stephen Leeder.
At secondary school, I was only moderately accomplished at mathematics despite my dad being a maths teacher. When, a few years later, I became interested in epidemiology, I had to contend with statistics. 
There is, of course, a whole lot more to epi than stats, but it is central. My mathematical mediocrity conferred one advantage: each basic stats course was a new experience.
I forgot, from one course to the next, how to calculate p-values. Fortunately, when I began using statistical skills, it stuck — more or less.
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Electronic Patient Report Form system live across New Zealand ambulance services

12 April, 2018
 eHealthNews editor Rebecca McBeth
With ambulance staff nationwide now using the same ePRF, paramedics can access patient information from previous call-outs, no matter where in the country they occurred.
All New Zealand ambulance staff are using a single electronic patient report form to record patient information after Wellington Free Ambulance went live with ePRF last month.
The ePRF allows frontline staff to enter patient details into a structured electronic form using a tablet device, rather than having to handwrite notes.
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NZHIT: Thoughts on clinical leadership

12 April, 2018
Guest column for NZHIT: Dr Will Reedy muses on the crucial role of clinical leadership in the digital age.
The role of the CCIO
The role of the chief clinical information officer has evolved over the past 20 years. It was initially established to support CIOs with clinical engagement for electronic medical record and electronic health record programmes.  
Traditionally the CCIO has been a doctor, but increasingly nurses and allied health professionals are being appointed to CCIO roles.
In recognition of the potential impact of digital health technologies on healthcare teams and emerging models of care, larger healthcare organisations are appointing chief nursing information officers and chief allied health information officers in addition to the CCIO.
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Why don't the various pieces of GP software talk to one another?

9 April 2018

IMPROVING PRACTICE SOFTWARE

GPs need seamless integration for all the software they use, writes Dr Oliver Frank.

THE ISSUE

There are some features and functions that GPs need in their clinical and administrative software packages that are not being provided well enough, if at all. 
Clinical and administrative software packages marketed for use in general practice in Australia are large and complex because they are trying to satisfy the needs of all their users. 
Furthermore, the lack of standards for much clinical and administrative software has resulted in an inability of most packages to interact with each other.
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4 April 2018

GPs and healthcare’s distribution Game of Thrones

Posted by Jeremy Knibbs
GPs are at the epicentre of our evolving digital health landscape. But will they be gatekeepers or pawns in an evolving Game of Thrones around control of information and data distribution in the sector?
In April 1995 in Darlinghurst in Sydney, a presentation was taking place in the boardroom of one of the most successful medical healthcare ad agencies of the day, CWFS. 
It was a plan to build an information network in the Australian healthcare system that would serve all points of the system. Present was one of the two largest global business publishing houses at that time. Both the publisher and CWFS had in mind a series of acquisitions that would put together pieces of a distribution puzzle that would build this network. 
Magazine Australian Doctor, the number one medical newspaper, was one of those acquisitions. Another, was an emerging consumer information company, doing things not dissimilar to what Tonic Health Media and Healthshare do today, which is supply key pieces of health information for GPs to pass on to their patients.
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Research finds consumers trust AI in healthcare more than banking or retail

An online survey of 500 consumers across the US, representing an age range of 18-70+, indicates 47% of people are comfortable with artificial intelligence in the operating room, while consumers were least comfortable with the idea of AI in retail.
The research was conducted by global analytics software company SAS and announced today at the SAS Global Forum 2018 in Denver, Colorado.
AI is becoming a major topic for software companies around the world. The survey posed a variety of real-world AI scenarios, and requested respondents advise their degree of comfort.
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April 9 2018 - 4:49PM

My Health Record enables healthcare providers to support people

·         Daily Liberal
Older Australians are being urged to consider the benefits of having a My Health Record during NSW Seniors Festival.
My Health Record is an individual’s safe and secure digital health information, easily accessible by healthcare providers involved in their care including GPs, pharmacists and hospitals. All Australians will have a My Health Record by the end of 2018 unless they choose not to.
Australian Digital Health Agency chief executive Tim Kelsey said on Monday the expansion of My Health Record nationally will deliver a system that provides universal functionality, clear and concise content and, critically, a safe and secure clinical health service for all Australians.
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Hawking's legacy? Better access to assisted voice tech

10 April 2018

OPINION

It’s time everyone who needs augmentative and alternative communication technology — like Hawking’s — has access to it.
Stephen Hawking was one of the most prominent people in history to use a high-tech communication aid known as augmentative and alternative communication (AAC).
His death comes in the year of the 70th Anniversary of the Declaration of Human Rights. 
Over the course of his adult life, Hawking came to represent the epitome of what effective communication with AAC systems really means: gaining access to the human right of communication enshrined in Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
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Teleconsults for abortion as successful as face-to-face, review claims

Australian provider releases review of its first 18 months
9th April 2018
Medical abortions arranged over the phone are just as successful as those involving a face-to-face consult, an Australian provider is claiming after evaluating its first 18 months of operation.
The Tabbot Foundation, which posts mifepristone and misoprostol to women screened on the phone, says that of 754 women with documented outcomes, only 26 (3%) required surgical uterine evacuation and one remained pregnant.
Dr Paul Hyland, the foundation’s medical director, says the complication rate was consistent with those from medical abortions involving in-person consults.
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How much IT contractors are costing the Commonwealth

By Justin Hendry on Apr 9, 2018 6:45AM

Agencies reveal spending.

A handful of the federal government’s largest agencies have shed light on their appetite for IT contractors, giving new clarity to the state of IT outsourcing in the Australian public sector.
Spending on IT contractors and labour hire by agencies – both procured directly and those engaged through third parties – has been disclosed in submissions to an ongoing parliamentary probe into contract reporting.
The data is not however uniform - a number of agencies have detailed their IT contractor costs where they fall into the top three categories of spending, while others have provided a limited breakdown or none at all.
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Giant federal data integration project accepts 14 ways to improve privacy and security

By Stephen Easton • 05/04/2018
The federal government’s Multi-Agency Data Integration Project has gone through an independent privacy impact assessment, and the six big agencies involved have agreed to 14 recommendations for improvement.
The Australian Bureau of Statistics has been combining data from the Tax Office, Human Services, Social Services, Education and Health for several years already, as consulting firm Galexia notes in the new PIA, under the banner of testing the system:
“Since 2015 MADIP has been operating as an evaluation – testing the technical capability of the Partner Agencies to share data in a way that delivers useful outputs, whilst preserving privacy. The evaluation phase is expected to draw to a close in 2018.”
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Jordan Nguyen’s Psykinetic offers amazing technology for disability sufferers

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM April 12, 2018

Chris Griffith

It’s heartening to see sophisticated technology that helps paralysed and immobile people communicate with the world.
Previously we reported Control Bionics’ technology which lets totally paralysed people suffering motor neurons disease and congenital illnesses communicate by rapidly moving a single muscle they still can control. Stephen Hawking was an early user.
One high profile sufferer, Michael Phillips of Tampa, Florida, cannot move. Yet he tweets, emails and writes movie and book reviews. Without technology, he would be locked out of all communication in life.
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How ‘healthy’ is our digital healthcare system?

Protecting patient privacy, data and health information to meet industry requirements

By Sara Jost, Global Healthcare Industry Lead, BlackBerry
The Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) has just reported that the healthcare sector suffered the most data breaches in its first Quarterly Statistics Report since the Australian Mandatory Breach Notifications scheme came into effect (February 22, 2018). With digitisation already transforming the entire healthcare sector at an accelerating pace, untreated cybersecurity vulnerabilities pose an acute threat to patient outcomes.
Paramount to the success of the digital healthcare age – and to building a sustainable healthcare system in a more mobile world – is opening the doors to increased information sharing among healthcare professionals and organisations. However, as workforces mobilise and new technologies are adopted, how secure are those digital healthcare systems that are sharing and holding valuable personal data and intellectual property?
Last year, the Australian government released the National Digital Health Strategy, which is an important step towards delivering better care for citizens. Initiatives such as My Health Record and the pharmacy profession’s intention to improve data sharing schemes are also positive steps towards deriving meaningful health benefits and operational efficiency from the massive amount of health data generated every day.
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Healthcare startup Tyde raises $3 million in preparation for 20 million potential customers later this year

Dominic Powell /

Digital healthcare startup Tyde has secured $3 million in Series A funding from an array of high net-worth and institutional investors to prepare the company’s app for an influx of Australians using it to monitor their health records, after the government launches its opt-out version of the My Health Record system later this year.
Founded in 2016 by Romain Bonjean, Shamus Cooper, and Sudeep Gohil, Tyde offers the 5 million Australians currently signed up to the government’s My Health Record program a way to connect with and access all their medical records via an app. They can then share the records with relevant medical professionals.
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G Medical Launches Mobile Health Monitoring

Small Caps | 1:09 PM
G Medical Innovations is a small medical device company with two key products it intends to distribute globally. TMT Analytics initiates coverage.
-Products to become available commercially in approved markets late in the June quarter
-Obtaining approval for Chinese manufacturing facilities crucial to tap into global market
-Should be able to generate strong gross margins over the medium term

 By Eva Brocklehurst
G Medical Innovations ((GMV)) is commercialising a range of mobile monitoring systems for vital signs that should provide major cost savings for the health system. These monitoring systems allow patients to remain mobile in hospitals and at home.
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Smart pill bottle a boost for Blackmores

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM April 11, 2018

Supratim Adhikari

Natural health company Blackmores is working on a ‘smart’ pill bottle that the company says will help it get better insight on how consumers relate to its products.
The solution being tested applies NFC tags to Blackmores products. The data from these tags can be read using hand held devices or smartphone apps and can be made available to Blackmores, the retailers or the customers via dashboards. Meanwhile, Blackmores can also use the data collected to get a clearer picture of sales and the supply chain.
Blackmores is working with Microsoft on its smart bottle pilot and the company’s chief information officer, Brett Winn, said that forging a closer relationship with customers was a big reason for it to pursue the project.
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NBN shifts another 440,000 premises to fibre to the curb

By Adam Turner
10 April 2018 — 9:30am
Almost half a million Australian premises are getting faster broadband as NBN Co dramatically extends its fibre to the curb (FttC) network and prepares to resume the troubled HFC cable rollout.
An additional 440,000 homes and businesses around the country will now benefit from fibre running to the end of their driveway, only relying on copper phone lines to cover the last few metres into the building. This offers a significant speed boost compared to fibre to the node (FttN) which can rely on copper for the last few hundred metres.
Most of these premises had been destined to connect to NBN Co's HFC cable network acquired from Telstra. The rest were previously relegated to FttN connections over long copper lines which would have made it impossible for them to access the NBN's high speed tiers.
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Comms minister still confident about HFC role in NBN

“Foot will be back on the accelerator” when HFC sales pause ends, Fifield says
Rohan Pearce (Computerworld) 09 April, 2018 15:50
Communications minister Senator Mitch Fifield has indicated he still supports the use of hybrid fibre-coaxial (HFC) in the rollout of the National Broadband Network.
NBN in November halted HFC sales while it worked to address performance problems.
“In order to meet a higher level of service quality, NBN Co will be performing advanced network testing and remediation where needed, wholesale connector replacements, signal amplification calibration, and lead-in work as required,” NBN said in its announcement.
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Government predicts 5G-driven economic productivity boost

Releases new research on impact of emerging wireless standard
Rohan Pearce (Computerworld) 09 April, 2018 14:48
Government-backed research predicts that the rollout of 5G mobile technology will deliver a boost to multifactor productivity (MFP) across Australia’s economy.
A new working paper (PDF) produced by the Department of Communications and the Arts’ Bureau of Communications Research forecasts that 5G could “add an additional $1,300 to $2,000 in gross domestic product per person” after the first decade of the rollout of the new wireless standard.
Telstra and Optus are expected to launch their first 5G-based services in 2019.
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NBN launches fibre to the curb in two suburbs

Limited launch while company fine-tunes technology
Rohan Pearce (Computerworld) 08 April, 2018 16:49
N has announced the commercial availability of fibre to the curb (FTTC). More than 1000 homes and businesses in the Melbourne suburb of Coburg and the southern Sydney suburb of Miranda can now order FTTC services, NBN said.
“Today’s announcement demonstrates that NBN Co is an adopter of new and innovative technologies to provide Australians with access to fast broadband,” NBN’s chief customer officer — residential, Brad Whitcomb, said in a statement.
“Over the past few months, we have been working closely with service providers to test our systems and processes, the performance of the NBN FTTC access technology, as well as the new self-installation experience.”
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Split up NBN Co before rollout ends: ACCC

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has recommended that the NBN Co, the company rolling out Australia's national broadband network, be split into two entities before it is privatised after the rollout ends.
The suggestion was one of eight recommendations made by the competition watchdog in its final report on the communication sector which was released on Thursday.
It said that while the government should begin to plan for future NBN Co privatisation, it should ensure that measures were in place to enable a split that would facilitate greater competition based on infrastructure.
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Enjoy!
David.

Sunday, April 15, 2018

I Wonder Just How Well This Will All Work Out? Time Will Tell!

This appeared on Friday, 13 April 2018 (An omen?)

Announcing the $200 million Digital Health CRC

Publicly released: Fri 13 Apr 2018 at 1001 AEST | 1201 NZST
The $200 million Digital Health CRC will be launched on Friday. The Digital Health CRC will join up data in the health system creating an improved system benefiting all Australians. Our researchers, from 16 universities, will work with our health partners to develop and test solutions that work for real patients in real hospitals and other settings of care. And our business partners will work alongside them to ensure that the solutions are scalable and implementable. We’ll develop them in Australia, then take them to the world.
Organisation/s: CRC Association, Digital Health CRC

Media Briefing/Press Conference

From: Digital Health CRC
Announcing the $200 million Digital Health CRC
Embargo: 10 am, Friday, 13 April 2018
Media call: 10 am, ‘Fountain Courtyard’, Sydney Hospital, Macquarie Street, Sydney
A $200+ million opportunity to transform health delivery: improving health outcomes; reducing waste in the health system; building businesses and jobs.
With

  •     Senator Zed Seselja, Assistant Minister for Science, Jobs and Innovation
  •     Professor Christine Bennett, Interim-Chair of the Digital Health CRC
  •     Dr Bronwyn Evans, Chair of MTP Connect
  •     Dr Zoran Bolevich, Chief Executive, eHealth NSW
  •     David Jonas – CEO Designate of the Digital Health CRC

Australia’s health system has contributed to a transformation in the human condition. We’re living longer – a child born today will on average live to 83 and see in the 22nd Century. We’ve largely defeated infectious diseases and our roads and workplaces are safer than they’ve ever been.
But
·         Our longer lives bring with them a greater risk of chronic and degenerative diseases which are difficult and expensive to manage and treat.
·         Obesity and Type 2 diabetes are on the rise. The health system can’t keep up. Australia’s annual health expenditure has passed $170 billion which is more than 10 per cent of GDP.
·         And the system is splitting at the seams. It’s too complex: for patients and their families, for health professionals, for industry, and for government. For example, adverse drug reactions in Australia are responsible for over 400,000 GP visits a year, and for 30 per cent of elderly emergency admissions. The cost is over $1.2 billion. We believe that half the cost is avoidable.
The Digital Health CRC will
§  Improve the health and wellness of hundreds of thousands of Australians
§  Improve the value of care and reduce adverse drug events
§  Join up data in the health system creating an improved system benefiting all Australians
§  Save the Australian health system $1.8 billion
§  Create at least 1000 new jobs in the digital health and related industry sectors
§  Create new companies and products for Australian and global markets
§  Create a new digital workforce and build the capacity of clinicians and consumers to become digital health ‘natives’
The Digital Health CRC’s 80-member organisations represent every segment of the health system from patient to community, hospital to insurer, start-up to big government. Our researchers, from 16 universities, will work with our health partners to develop and test solutions that work for real patients in real hospitals and other settings of care. And our business partners will work alongside them to ensure that the solutions are scalable and implementable. We’ll develop them in Australia, then take them to the world.  To catalyse the latter, we are partnering with US-based company, HMS, that provides solutions and services to health insurers and their customers across 48 US states.
---- End release:
There is some excellent coverage of the announcement found here:
and here:
I have had a wander around the website and this page especially struck me.

Research Themes

Purpose and research themes Potential outcomes
While the research agenda will be shaped around industry partners’ challenges and opportunities, it is expected that the potential outcomes will be in the following three major areas:

1. Improve health, welfare, quality of life, and wellbeing of citizens through
  a. Improved safety & quality in the provision of healthcare & social services
   b. Increased participation of consumers in all aspects of their health & healthcare
   c. Prevention: reduction in unnecessary procedures & drug interventions
   d. Improved medicines adherence/persistence
   e. Getting sick and injured people back to their regular daily activities faster
2. Improve the efficiency & integrity of Health Services
   a. Reduce fraud, abuse, waste and errors
   b. Ensure efficient and complete data flows to enable seamless care
3. Increase the value of every health dollar spent
   a. Direct majority of funding to appropriate and timely care
   b. Reduce consumer out-of-pocket health expenses
   c. Increase the value derived from public & private health insurance
Here is the link to the page:
I also noted the overall purpose:

“PURPOSE

Optimising the use of evidence to improve personal healthcare, wellbeing and health & human services policy, planning & management and in doing so advance the Australian economy.”
Now all this sounds wonderful until you start to wonder just what the problem is that the CRC is aiming to solve and just what the co-ordinated framework is that is to bring this rather large number of partners together to solve the priority problems which are not yet clearly defined as far as I can see. I have seen similar lists from all sorts of health entities for at least the last 30 years.
The mission statement has the same issue - To improve the quality of healthcare for all, through evidence – of wanting to act in some way without diagnosing the problem!
Additionally there does seem to be a much more “financy” rather than clinically focussed and trying to solve health / clinical problems – but that is probably my bias!
Overall I get the feeling that the CRC leaps from problem (not really clearly defined) to action without an evidence gathering and problem definition step.
I also would want to have strong public disclosure and accountability so we can all see what progress is being made! I bet no one ever proves the claimed benefits of $1.8 Billion and I doubt they will accrue! (Why do these projects keep making these silly claims?)
In summary I want to stand back for a year or so and take another sounding on how it is going. If good things flow great – if not it is not really a huge investment (compared with the myHR) as long as the CRC does not get subverted as an arm of the myHR / ADHA project, which has to be a risk!
David.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 418 – Results – 15th April, 2018.

Here are the results of the poll.

Is It Risky For Digital Health Startups To Base Their Business Model On The ADHA's Continuing Support And Operation Of The myHR?

Yes 74% (99)

No 25% (34)

I Have No Idea 1% (1)

Total votes: 134

Looks like most believe that not having all your eggs in one basket is a good plan! Government policy change is a risk for many businesses.

Any insights welcome as a comment, as usual.

A really, really great turnout of votes!

It must have been an easy question as just 1 reader was not sure what the appropriate answer was.

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

David.

Saturday, April 14, 2018

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links – 14th April, 2018

Here are a few I came across last week.
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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GAO: Lack of security controls put Medicare beneficiary data at risk

Published April 06 2018, 7:19am EDT
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services needs to improve its oversight of security controls for Medicare beneficiary data used by research organizations and qualified entities, according to an audit by the Government Accountability Office.
While CMS has developed guidance for Medicare Administrative Contractors (MAC), GAO says the agency has not developed similar guidance for research organizations such as colleges, universities and non-profit institutes, which is putting Medicare beneficiary data at risk.
“Without providing comprehensive, risk-based security guidance to researchers, CMS increases the risk that external entities possessing agency data may not have applied security controls that meet CMS standards,” states the audit.
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Almost 14m patients using online GP services across England

Hannah Crouch
3 April 2018
Almost 14 million patients across England are now using online GP services to book appointments, order repeat prescriptions and view their records.
According latest figures from NHS England, there has been a 42% increase in the number of people who are signed up for online services compared to the same time last year.
This means 24 per cent of patients (13.9 million) in England are now registered, which NHS England hopes will ease pressure on GPs and their staff and save patients time.
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UK can be ‘world leader in AI’ if NHS data can be tapped

3 April 2018
The parliamentary under secretary for the Department of Health and Social Care has said the UK could be a world leader in AI research and “unlock a wake of innovation throughout the NHS” by harnessing patient data sets.
Speaking at the Spectator Health Summit on Monday 26 March, Lord James O’Shaughnessy suggested that citizen data held by the NHS was “an asset that no other country can bring together”, further claiming that it was the key to transforming Britain’s healthcare industry and making it “the global centre for life sciences trials, genomics and personalised medicine”.
However, O’Shaughnessy said the public first needed to be convinced about the benefits of data collection and assured that their information would be used safely and responsibly.
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69% of providers plan to move more patient data to the cloud: 6 survey insights

Written by Jessica Kim Cohen | April 04, 2018 | Print  |
The majority of healthcare providers — 84 percent — store sensitive data in the cloud, according to a Netwrix survey.
For the survey, the data security company asked 853 IT professionals from a range of industries, including roughly 90 participants from the healthcare sector, about cloud adoption and security practices at their respective organizations.
Here are six things to know about cloud adoption in the healthcare industry.
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Study: Restricting EHR notifications saves VA providers 1.5 hours per week

Written by Jessica Kim Cohen | April 03, 2018 | Print  |
Four researchers affiliated with various Veterans Affairs facilities across the U.S. developed a program to reduce "low-value" EHR notifications, according to study results published in BMJ Quality & Safety.
Seventy percent of primary care practitioners at VA facilities cite EHR inbox notifications, which communicate a range of clinical information, to be of "unmanageable volume," the study authors wrote. The researchers opted to create a national quality improvement program to address the challenges associated with EHR-related information overload and alert fatigue.
To develop the program, researchers assessed primary care practitioners' daily notification load at 148 VA facilities. Based on their review, the researchers restricted mandatory notification types to one standardized list across all VA facilities and provided hands-on training for primary care practitioners on how to customize and process notifications more effectively.
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Patient safety check-up: Promise, progress and a need for vigilance

Healthcare leaders Robert Wachter, David Bates, Leah Binder and Tejal Gandhi take the pulse of how far patient safety has come in recent decades – and point toward the work that lies ahead.
April 06, 2018 06:09 AM
Long-time patient safety advocate Tejal Gandhi, MD, has seen the U.S. health system improve when it comes to patient safety over the past 15 to 20 years. But it's harder to nail down just how fast, she said.
Gandhi, president and CEO of the National Patient Safety Foundation, the NPSF Lucian Leape Institute and the Certification Board for Professionals in Patient Safety, recognizes the advances that have been achieved in patient safety over the past several years.
"I don't think we necessarily know the trajectory of how fast we're moving," she said. "We've absolutely improved, but the researcher in me says, 'Do I know last year, versus this year?'"
She does not. Gandhi takes a longer view of progress.
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6 things keeping CIOs up at night

CIOs are acutely aware of the security complications medical devices and telehealth bring.
April 06, 2018 07:00 AM
Last month, LexisNexis brought together 30 high-level executives, most of whom were CIOs from hospitals, nursing homes and health plans of all sizes from across the county to find out what data-related issues are weighing on them most as we get further into 2018. Ed Domansky, LexisNexis manager of media and analyst relations, and Erin Benson, Director of market planning, said six major themes emerged from their responses.
It seems merger and acquisition activity and sent waves through the information security sector as well, adding complexity in several areas. Also, innovation continues to be a multifaceted undertaking in that while it can yield clinical and operational gains it also means adding another dimension of risk, especially where security is concerned.
Here are six areas CIOs said they are focused on in 2018.
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Vanderbilt creates AI and natural language processing voice assistant for its Epic EHR

Caregivers can interact with the EHR using natural language queries and more quickly get the answers they need in an unobtrusive manner.
April 05, 2018 06:23 AM
Vanderbilt University Medical Center has developed a voice assistant for caregivers to use navigating the hospital's Epic electronic health record.
The new tool processes requests using natural language processing and understanding technology, and not just macros, officials say – noting that it could represent an important paradigm shift in how providers interact with their EHRs in more natural and intuitive ways.
The name of the voice assistant is V-EVA, which stands for Vanderbilt EHR Voice Assistant. The Vanderbilt University Medical Center Department of Biomedical informatics and Health Information Technology Innovations developed it.
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Seeking 'transformation,' health systems hire chief digital officers

By Rachel Z. Arndt  | March 31, 2018
Hoping for nothing short of transformative change, more healthcare executives are adding a new member to their teams: the chief digital officer. Whereas the chief information officer might focus on implementing and managing electronic health records, the chief digital officer may concentrate on moving everyone in the organization to a digital mindset to engage consumers.
Last week, Ascension CEO Anthony Tersigni announced his health system would be hiring a CDO later this year. Tersigni intends the CDO to streamline clinical practices, unify the billing system and make costs more transparent.
"The chief digital officer is really more business-focused," said David Chou, chief information and digital officer of Children's Mercy Kansas City. "The CIO is more about keeping the lights on and the CDO is about driving organizational change through technology."
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Report: Healthcare excels in data optimization, lags in customer engagement

Written by Jessica Kim Cohen | April 02, 2018 | Print  |
The healthcare industry continues to lag in customer engagement compared to other major industries, according to a Virtusa Corp. report.
Virtusa, an IT outsourcing services company, tapped Forrester Consulting to develop the report on digital maturity. For the report, Forrester surveyed 606 executives from six industries — banking, healthcare, insurance, media, retail and telecommunications — about customer experience, company operations and business innovation.
Forrester determined healthcare ranked as the third-highest industry on digital maturity, based on responses from 101 executives from provider, payer, pharmaceutical and device-maker organizations.
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CMS hints at Blue Button 2.0 mandates for Medicare Advantage plans in 2020

Apr 4, 2018 7:38am
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) is considering a mandate for Medicare Advantage plan sponsors to adopt data-sharing platforms that can interact with Blue Button 2.0 beginning in 2020.
For now, the agency “encourages” health insurers to use data release platforms for members that “meet or exceed the capabilities of CMS’s Blue Button 2.0,” according to an announcement (PDF) this week that raised MA payment rates 3.4% in for fiscal year 2019.
Unveiled at the HIMSS18 annual conference last month, Blue Button 2.0 uses Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) standards to allow app developers to deliver Medicare claims to beneficiaries. Following a speech in which she called on insurers to “give patients their claims data electronically,” CMS Administrator Seema Verma told a group of reporters that the agency would be “evaluating every single relationship” with insurers, including changes to the Medicare Advantage star-rating program.
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ONC Releases Resource to Guide Consumers on Accessing, Using their Health Data

April 4, 2018
by Rajiv Leventhal
To further support its recently-announced MyHealthEData initiative, the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) has just released a new online resource to help consumers make better use of their digital health records.
The resource, the “Guide to Getting & Using Your Health Records,” supports both the 21st Century Cures Act goal of empowering patients and improving patients’ access to their electronic health information, according to an April 4 announcement from federal health IT officials.
Last month at the HIMSS18 conference in Las Vegas, Seema Verma, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS Administrator, announced the launch of a new initiative called “MyHealthEData,” aimed at revolutionizing the relationship of U.S. healthcare consumers to their patient data.
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ONC issues new guide to help patients access their medical data

Apr 4, 2018 1:25pm
The federal government’s health IT agency has released a new resource to help patients access their health data, following a new initiative to give consumers more control of their medical information.
The new guide, released by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC) builds on provisions of the 21st Century Cures Act that requires the agency to improve patient access to electronic health information, and also supports the MyHealthEData initiative unveiled last month by Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Administrator Seema Verma.
New data released (PDF) by ONC shows 52% of consumers were offered online access to their medical records in 2017, up from 42% in 2014. Of those that were offered access, 28% viewed their medical record in the last year.
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Digital health funding continues its strong trajectory in 2018 as providers eye strategic investments

Apr 4, 2018 10:35am
After a historic year of digital health funding, investment dollars continued to pour in during the first quarter of the new year.
Across the U.S. digital health funding reached $1.62 billion in Q1, according to data compiled by Rock Health. It was the largest first quarter on record, surpassing the $1.41 billion in venture funding in the first three months of 2016. Digital health investments reached $5.8 billion for all of 2017.
StartUp Health, which analyzes digital health deals across the globe, reported a record 191 deals during Q1 totaling $2.8 billion, identical to Q1 funding totals the previous year.
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HHS Offers Online Guide for Accessing EMRs

John Commins, April 4, 2018

More Americans are accessing their personal electronic medical records, and find the data helpful and easy to use, but policymakers say half of the nation doesn’t see a need to do so. 

The federal government today released a new online guide to help patients and their caregivers access personal electronic health records.
The guide, put out by the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, is designed to support the 21st Century Cures Act goal of improving patient access to electronic health information, and the MyHealthEData initiative , HHS said.
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Can the EHR be fixed by eliminating typing and clicking?

Robert Wachter, MD, and healthcare futurist Jeff Goldsmith make a case for addressing physician burnout.
April 02, 2018 12:40 PM
In a recent Harvard Business Review article, two prominent healthcare experts call for fixing what is wrong with electronic health records. And they find a lot wrong. 
As they see it, if an array complexities were eliminated, it would not only alleviate physician burnout, it would also dramatically improve healthcare.
Robert Wachter, MD, who heads the Department of Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco, and Jeff Goldsmith, national adviser to Navigant Consulting and an associate professor of public health sciences at the University of Virginia, collaborated on the article.
"Clinicians are spending almost half their professional time typing, clicking and checking boxes on electronic records," they write.
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Was Shulkin fired or did he resign? Why the distinction matters for the VA's EHR contract

Written by Jessica Kim Cohen | April 02, 2018 | Print  |
The distinction between termination and resignation may pose a legal hurdle for the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs' $10 billion-plus EHR contract with Cerner, the Politico Morning eHealth newsletter reports.
President Donald Trump revealed plans to replace former VA Secretary David Shulkin, MD, with White House physician Rear Adm. Ronny L. Jackson, MD, March 29. Dr. Shulkin claims he was fired from his post, while the White House reports he resigned.
Robert Wilkie, an undersecretary at the U.S. Department of Defense, will assume the role of acting secretary. However, Mr. Wilkie may not have the ability to sign the VA's long-running EHR contract with Cerner, which Dr. Shulkin first announced in June 2017.
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How much do EHRs impact heart failure patient care?

Post a comment / Apr 2, 2018 at 12:40 PM
A new study from the Journal of the American Heart Association found there was not an association between a hospital’s degree of EHR implementation and improved quality of care and outcomes for heart failure patients.
The research examined participants in the Get with the Guidelines—Heart Failure program who were admitted to the hospital with heart failure in 2008. Get With the Guidelines is a national registry of hospitalized patients with heart failure.
The hospitals involved had differing degrees of EHR implementation, categorized as “no EHR, partial EHR and full EHR.”
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Machine learning, EHR data helping to combat hospital infections

Published April 03 2018, 7:20am EDT
Hospitals continue to grapple with clostridium difficile infections, caused by bacteria that are resistant to many common antibiotics and that kill about 30,000 Americans each year. However, machine learning can help predict patient risk in developing C. difficile much earlier than current methods of diagnosis.
Using electronic health records for nearly 257,000 patients, researchers from Massachusetts General Hospital, MIT and Michigan Medicine have built hospital-tailored machine learning models that they contend are an improvement over a “one-size-fits-all” approach that ignores important factors specific to medical facilities.
“When data are simply pooled into a one-size-fits-all model, institutional differences in patient populations, hospital layouts, testing and treatment protocols, or even in the way staff interact with the EHR can lead to differences in the underlying data distributions and ultimately to poor performance of such a model,” says Jenna Wiens, assistant professor of computer science and engineering at U-M. “To mitigate these issues, we take a hospital-specific approach, training a model tailored to each institution.”
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HIT Think Why big data initiatives are spurring cloud adoption in healthcare

Published April 03 2018, 5:14pm EDT
As data analytics continues to transform the healthcare industry, many health IT executives are being tasked with implementing the right data governance structures, identifying the most suitable technology and employing the appropriate IT skills that will help them facilitate successful big data projects.
Producing metrics that support value-based payment programs, population health management initiatives, evidence-based medicine and many other healthcare efforts depends on identifying accurate, actionable information that will improve treatments and patient outcomes while driving costs down.
There has been a huge uptake in big data projects, but gathering meaningful data with direct correlation to a wide patient demographic against multiple use cases can be challenging. Organizations increasingly look for actionable information that will help them improve care for patients with chronic illnesses, identify higher-risk patients for hospital readmissions or find several other patient trends around medication consumption. Electronic patient records continue to increase in size. To harvest best results, healthcare organizations need to utilize highly integrated systems that enable not only swift computing but also offer infinite scalability.
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3 large health insurers, 2 vendors begin test of blockchain

Published April 02 2018, 7:37am EDT
Three of the nation’s largest health insurers and two health information technology vendors have launched a collaborative pilot program to use blockchain technology in a cross-industry initiative designed to improve and validate the information in provider directories.
Participants in the initiative include insurers Humana, MultiPlan and UnitedHealthcare, as well as vendors Optum and Quest Diagnostics.
The insurers’ listings of providers are crucial for consumers who are looking to choose a doctor, but ensuring the information contained on the lists has been a vexing problem for insurers; participants in this pilot program acknowledge that they spend about $2.1 billion annually chasing and maintaining provider data.
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Device able to quickly and accurately detect stroke

Published April 02 2018, 7:30am EDT
A new visor-like device worn by patients can help providers and emergency medical personnel detect a stroke that requires comprehensive care within seconds and with greater than 90 percent accuracy.
The volumetric impedance phase shift spectroscopy (VIPS) device, made by neurotechnology vendor Cerebrotech Medical Systems, identifies patients having a stroke by sending low-energy radio waves through the brain that assess fluid volume differences (asymmetry) between the cerebral hemispheres—which are indicative of stroke.
The radio waves change frequency when passing through fluids and are reflected back through the brain, with small changes and asymmetries in electrical properties detected by the VIPS device.
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Aneesh Chopra urges innovators to embrace 'Digital Hippocratic Oath'

The former U.S. CTO and speaker at the upcoming HIMSS Dev4Health event explains why innovators should include the perspectives of patients, clinicians and patients when building apps.
April 02, 2018 09:45 AM
Aneesh Chopra said that the healthcare industry needs to start looking at privacy and ethics, especially in the midst of recent Cambridge Analytics and Facebook problems. 
That is as true among upstarts and innovators as anywhere else. Chopra, who is the president of Care Journey and formerly served as White House CTO under President Barack Obama, explained that it is important for digital health developers to embrace regulation, and to get out ahead of the problem and hold apps up to a standard of conduct — what Chopra is calling a “Digital Hippocratic Oath.”
Part of the oath includes bringing in three perspectives: patient, providers and payers. 
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Four Reasons Why Data Breaches Continue

Sue Marquette Poremba |   Data Security   |   Posted 30 Mar, 2018
One of my predictions with GDPR is that data breaches are going to be in the spotlight more than ever. Right now, unless you regularly follow security news or have contact with security experts like I do, a lot of data breaches go under the wire. We tend to hear about the mega-breaches (Yahoo, Equifax, OPM), but not the smaller breaches that affect a lot of smaller businesses and communities.
This is why when James Stickland, CEO of Veridium, offered to talk to me about the four major reasons why breaches continue to happen, I jumped at the chance. I think we need to continue to look at what we’re up against. The better we understand the why behind data breaches, the better we’ll be able to plan and budget our defenses.
Here are Stickland’s thoughts on the reasons why data breaches will continue. Do you agree?
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GE Healthcare sells off health IT unit for $1B

Apr 2, 2018 3:09pm
GE Healthcare has sold a suite of IT tools that make up its value-based care division to private-equity firm Veritas Capital for $1.05 billion in cash.
The deal includes GE Healthcare’s revenue cycle, workforce management and ambulatory care EHR solutions, according to a joint announcement. It is expected to close by the end of the third quarter.
The divestiture comes as GE is making an effort to slim down its offerings under new CEO John Flannery and refocus its work. Kieran Murphy, president and CEO of GE Healthcare, indicated the company would continue investing in “core digital solutions” including “smart diagnostics, AI and enterprise imaging.”
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27 more health systems join Apple Health Records platform

Mar 30, 2018 12:08pm
Two months after Apple launched a beta version of its Health Records platform with a dozen partners, 27 more healthcare providers have jumped on board.
Nearly 40 health systems are now sharing their medical records with patients through the Health Records app on the iPhone, using Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) standards to pull data from the EHR, Apple announced on Thursday.
NYU Langone Health, Thomas Jefferson University Hospitals, Adventist Health System and Stanford Medicine are among the new participants. 
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Government is 'running too fast,' warns one critic

Despite privacy concerns, Israel to put nation’s medical database online

Government hopes research and commercial use of info will provide $600b. injection to digital health sector; PM stresses that 'consent of each and every person' will be required

25 March 2018, 5:57 pm 4
The Israeli government on Sunday approved a National Digital Health plan, which, despite mounting privacy concerns, plans to create a digital database of the medical files of some 9 million residents and make them available to researchers and enterprises.
The government has vowed to protect the privacy of individuals and is touting the NIS 1 billion ($287 million) program as a huge boon to the medical research industry. But critics pointed to risks of a massive breach in patient confidentiality and urged the government to slow down.
To promote the initiative, Israel will unify the existing database of the digital medical records it has collected over a period of 20 years — which holds the medical files of more than 98 percent of the population — to create a single database, in which one’s participation is optional, that will help attract researchers and industry leaders from across the globe, the Prime Minister’s office said Sunday.
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Enjoy!
David.