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, April 24, 2019

Will The Incoming Board Members Of The ADHA Make A Difference To What Happens Going Forward?

This pretty solid analysis appeared last week:
15 April 2019

The devil in the detail of digital healthcare

Posted by Penny Durham
And our health system isn’t completely different from America’s in this regard, though there’s no evidence of anything like the disastrous outcomes logged in the Thousand Clicks report.
Emma Hossack, CEO of Australia’s Medical Software Industry Association (MSIA), says the local digital health industry was also injected with global financial crisis stimulus cash, but on a scale that was orders of magnitude smaller.
“We haven’t been totally insulated from that same problem,” she tells The Medical Republic. “There were political milestones. [ADHA’s predecessor] the National Electronic Health Transition Authority was given significant funding in 2010 to basically Make It Happen.
“The prime minister [Kevin Rudd] wanted to have all of this working by July 2012, and that was an incredibly tight time frame to get an authentication system and an identification system for digital health established, let alone rolling out a My Health Record.
“But I guess we’re really fortunate to have an industry that, at the time, wasn’t thrown huge amounts of money, like the meaningful-use funding, because whenever you have a feeding frenzy like that, you’re obviously going to get the same kind of patterns of behaviour as we saw with the pink batts.
“We had a minor explosion of funding, if you like – some millions of dollars, but not anything like tens of millions of dollars and certainly not billions of dollars.”
Where our government went wrong, Ms Hossack says, was getting involved in building a centralised health record, against advice.
The 2009 final report of the National Health and Hospitals Reform Commission says, in recommendation 123, that the National E-Health Action Plan must give incentives to private providers, and “should not require government involvement with designing, buying or operating IT systems”.
“Unfortunately, within three years the government had actually done that,” Ms Hossack says, adding that both sides of politics were equally responsible. “They did get heavily involved with choosing and buying and implementing systems. They did pick winners with industry. There wasn’t transparency. They did build a government My Health Record where they essentially ignored the advice of the commission that they both supported.”
Australia should have learned from the £12.5 billion failure of the British NHS’s National Programme for IT, which was dismantled in 2011.
“Having great big systems built and standards written hasn’t been successful overseas, it hasn’t been successful here with My Health Record, so we now need to do it in a far more distributed way,” Ms Hossack says.
While no-one can point to lives saved or efficiency gained, she says, at least there’s this: “I don’t think that there have been any public instances where people have died as a result of My Health Record.”
Governments’ other biggest mistake in this space is to give businesses incentives for projects that lack a real-world business case.
“The industry is not looking for handouts, because if you’ve got a handout from the government to do the things the government wants us to do, that means there’s not an underlying business case,” Ms Hossack says.
“You have to have a little bit of incentive from government to get it going, and then if it works and it’s useful for patients and for providers, then it will have a business case. If it doesn’t, it will just fail. It’s absolutely critical for us to work with the government to make sure that there’s an underlying business case for any of the public money that is put into software development and digital health.”
She gives interoperability, the big-ticket challenge for health IT, as an example of failure to consider the business side.
“Despite the high profile of that problem, there’s not actually a lot of doctors crying out for it. It’s not just interoperability of technology. It’s interoperability of people’s data. You’ve got to look at why doctors are not sharing when they could: there’s fear of loss of clients.
“Why should GP ‘A’ who has [relevant personal] information that they’ve carefully put together about their patient share that with GP ‘B’ who’s a competitor?
“You have to make it granular so they can share the latest medications and diagnoses so that the patient gets better care. But that takes an extra 10 minutes, so there’s got to be funding for that.”
While there have been some mistakes, Ms Hossack says we have nothing like the massive failures seen in the US and none of the transparency issues.
“I think it’s an absolute credit to our industry, to the really committed and quality software developers and organisations running the systems, that you’re not getting that systemic failure which is leading to multiple deaths.
“You can bet your bottom dollar that if there were anything like the kind of failures that you’re reading in that report in America happening in Australia, it would be front page every day. When there is a problem, ambulance ramping for example, it’s front page.”
Indeed the Brisbane Times has recently run a series of splashes on the integrated electronic medical record (ieMR) being rolled out in Queensland’s hospitals. Because the ieMR is a government project, reporter Lucy Stone was able to use state FOI laws to obtain details of the more than 40 safety alerts raised last year relating to the software, which is operating in 10 hospitals so far.
These included a safety warning about patient deterioration that went offline for 2.5 hours; children’s weights entering incorrectly, which could have caused drug dose errors; 832 medication entries being corrupted in a software update, changing their intravenous/oral indications; an outage that disrupted pathology and radiology requests for a day; duplication of hospital encounters; medications set as “withheld” resetting themselves to “live”; and a glitch that could cause two patient charts open at once to switch spontaneously, so a doctor working in one might suddenly find themselves entering data in another.
The developer of the software is Cerner, an MSIA member and one of the biggest of the 700-odd players in the US (Cerner and Epic have 13% each of the hospital market, while Epic dominates the non-hospital market).
Ms Hossack defended the developer, saying the problems were as much about implementation as software itself.
“It’s not because Cerner’s a crappy bit of software that’s resulted in death,” she says. “There’s been poor implementation. There’s been conflict of interest with relationships. But there haven’t been people dying because Cerner hasn’t recorded medications.
“It takes all parties to get software right. You develop great code, you keep reiterating and making it better and better. Then you need doctors and nurses and other clinicians to be trained. Then you need to have the non-clinical workforce knowing how to use that and constantly being retrained because there’s a huge turnover of staff in health.
“Getting that magic to happen is extraordinarily complicated.”
Ms Hossack also dismisses concerns about usability: “The software is obviously not unusable or there would be no one using it. The fact that you’ve got, last time I heard, over 95% of clinics that are using clinical information systems would indicate that they are pretty usable.”
The KHN/Fortune reporters examined dozens of lawsuits, many of which were confidentially settled.
In one case a patient suffered irreversible brain damage from herpes encephalitis that a doctor had electronically ordered a test for, but which didn’t show up because the Epic-built software didn’t “interface” with the lab’s software, leading to a disastrous delay. Epic (whose CEO Judy Faulkner declined to speak to Shulte and Fry) settled for $US1 million.
Another patient lost her lower legs and a forearm to gangrene after being given blood-clotting drugs that the software, also from Epic, should have warned her doctors against.
And a woman died because the order for the scan that would have detected her brain aneurysm was never transmitted from her doctor’s eClinicalWorks software to the lab.
The Medical Republic contacted three of Australia’s biggest personal injury law firms, but none knew of a single lawsuit involving an EHR.
Which, given the scope for error revealed in the Thousand Clicks story, represents a tick for our health software industry.
As Ms Hossack says: “In Australia, in a country of 25 million-odd people, you’ve got millions of transactions running through our industry systems every day – as many, if not more, than there are in banking. And certainly the transactions that go through our members’ systems are more important and more sensitive than in the financial systems. You can get money back. You can’t get a life back.
“We deal with that every second, every day, so the fact that we’re not getting these reports in Australia, I think is an enormous credit to the industry.”
Here is the link:
You have been spared my awesome quotes so you can see what one of the new ADHA Board member thinks about things – and it seem she sees the #myHR as a ‘mistake’ among other things.
She also clearly understands a stifling bureaucracy like the ADHA essentially sponsoring just one approach may not be all that healthy.
I know Emma as I do another of the appointment – NT GP Dr. Sam Heard. Sam is one of the few who has been at Digital Health even longer than I have (it used to be e-Health then – as named by IBM!).
Both these people are very sound and sensible and all I am hoping is that they take a hard look at just what the last two+ years of the ADHA have brought us and see if they can steer a better way forward. A big ask but needed I reckon!
David.

Digital Health Can Allow A Health System Transformation Done Right It Seems.

This appeared last week:

Why Denmark is reducing hospitals while we are building more

Jill Margo
Updated Feb 19, 2019 — 3.48pm, first published at 3.03pm
Denmark has become a world leader in healthcare because, long before others, it realised the existing model was broken.
While other countries have been responding to growing demand by building more hospitals along traditional lines, the Danes have been reducing them.
In 1999, Denmark had 98 hospitals. Today it has 32.
"About 15 years ago, we realised the solution to these problems is not more hospitals but to think about how we can deliver healthcare in a different way," says Hans Erik Henriksen, CEO of Healthcare DENMARK.  Janie Barrett
The Australian Financial Review Healthcare Summit in Sydney was told on Tuesday that against some domestic opposition, the Danish health system was radically transformed to make it financially sustainable for the multiple challenges ahead.
All first-world countries are facing the same challenges from an ageing population with more chronic disease among a fast-food generation with lifestyle issues that lead to chronic illness.
While this puts pressure on health budgets, so does the emergence of informed patients with larger expectations and research, technology and innovation proffering expensive new treatments.
……
He explained how his personal experience of the healthcare system had changed.
"Twenty years ago, if I went to the GP, typically he was sitting alone in his office. If I needed a blood test I'd be sent off to the hospital. Then I would get an appointment two weeks later to see him.
"Today GPs are in groups of four or five, with nurses and labs. I'll see a GP and then wait maybe 15 minutes before the lab takes my test. Two days later, I'll see the results in my electronic health record and with it, maybe, notes from the GP telling me what I have to do.
"As a patient, you spend less time travelling around the healthcare system. Many issues are solved through digitalisation and you feel the coherence of the system."
Denmark has embarked on a new $10.5 billion phase in healthcare reform to develop 16 new super specialised hospitals as the backbone of its future hospital structure.
This phase will see patients as active participants, taking more responsibility for becoming educated about their health, while the system works on making them feel heard.
Denmark's goldmine of electronic data about the population, going back 30 years, has given it a head start. So has the fact that its healthcare IT strategy is linked to the public sector IT strategy.
By November 2014, all Danes had to get an electronic mailbox because letters from public authorities would no longer be sent by snail mail.
Hendriksen says the elderly have rapidly become online users and one aim was for all Danes to have a doctor in their pocket. This is not smartphone access to Google but an instrument for their digital relationship with their GP.
Crucial to the success of the reform is trust. To date, he says, Denmark has the finest cyber security in the world.
Lots omitted from the middle of article.
I understand all the arguments about the size of countries etc. as enabling more dramatic and swifter change but Australia is divided into a series of bite size chunks (called States) where hospital systems could benefit from the sort of transformation that has been achieved here.
Sure there are barriers with payments, independence of GPs and so it goes but there are ways to work such issues out of the eyes are pointed firmly on the prize of a better, safer and more patient centric system.
Digital Health may be a part of such a transformation but the MyHealthRecord most surely is not!
At least there is some hope – but we need a little more political and ADHA vision!
David.

Tuesday, April 23, 2019

Commentators and Journalists Weigh In On Digital Health And Related Privacy And Security Matters. Lots Of Interesting Perspectives - Week 40.

Note: I have excluded (or marked out) any commentary taking significant  funding from the Agency or the Department of Health on all this to avoid what amounts to paid propaganda. (e.g. CHF, RACGP, AMA, National Rural Health Alliance etc. where they were simply putting the ADHA line – viz. that the myHR is a wonderfully useful clinical development that will save huge numbers of lives at no risk to anyone – which is plainly untrue) (This signifies probable ADHA Propaganda)
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Note: I have also broadened this section to try to cover all the privacy and security compromising and impacting announcements in the week – along with the myHR. It never seems to stop! Sadly social media platforms get a large run this week.
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Fake news is warping democracy, says ADFA’s Tom Sear

Australian Defence Force Academy cyber security expert Tom Sear argues that there will be no simple fix for fake news warping our democracy, but we ignore the threat at our peril.
Tom Sear
News Corp Australia Network April 17, 20191:58pm
As we head into a federal election, Australian democracy is not ready to defend itself against the cyber manipulation of our political process.
The threats are coming from within and beyond our borders.
There’s been a lot of talk about foreign influence in the 2016 US election. There, the Russian Internet Research Agency’s (IRA) aim was to exploit cultural divisions like race and religion to create conflict and undermine trust in institutions and the political process.
The same operatives who spiked America’s social media with disruptive content are also active here.
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‘Serious consequences’: Voters concerned fake news will impact on the Australian federal election

Fake news has real consequences, and a new poll shows just how quickly this has become a major issue for voters, while Kerryn Phelps has revealed her concern about being a target once again.
Claire Bickers
News Corp Australia Network April 17, 20191:43pm
Sixty per cent of Australian voters are concerned about fake news hitting the election campaign, with young people most worried about its impact.
It comes as Wentworth MP Kerryn Phelps and cricketer Shane Warne were hit by fake news within days of the election being called.
A majority of Australians in all age groups are worried about the spread of misinformation, a YouGov Galaxy poll taken exclusively for News Corp shows.
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Better connections: Your health, your say

Australian Digital Health Agency
Closes: 14 June 2019Consultations & Surveys  ADHA Propaganda
Currently, most digital health systems are unable to talk to each other. Information collected about a patient – for example in a hospital or a GP practice – often can’t be made available to others involved in a patient’s care.
The Australian Digital Health Agency is facilitating a national conversation to develop a blueprint for a more modern, digitally connected health system. The Better Connections: Your health, your say conversation aims to capture the expectations and priorities of a better-connected healthcare system. The outcome of these consultations will be a set of national standards that will provide a roadmap to industry partners and government for the future development and implementation of digital health technologies and system connectivity.
The Interoperability Program seeks to connect patient information from multiple systems and sources to enhance clinical outcomes, improve healthcare delivery and improve patient experiences within the health system.
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Roger McNamee on Mark Zuckerberg and ‘the Facebook catastrophe’

  • The Deal
  • 12:00AM April 18, 2019
Roger McNamee was an early investor in Facebook. But that has not stopped him from attacking the giant in articles, interviews and more recently a book. Zucked: Waking up to the Facebook catastrophe, was published by Penguin in February. As he notes in the book, almost three years “have passed since I first observed bad actors exploiting Facebook’s algorithms and business model to harm innocent people. I could not have imagined then the damage to democracy, public health, privacy, and competition that would be enabled by internet platforms I loved to use.”
McNamee argues that the politics of countries including the United States and Brazil “have been transformed in ways that may persist for generations”. If you live in Myanmar or Sri Lanka, he claims, “your life may have been threatened”.
He writes: “We are running an uncontrolled evolutionary experiment, and the results are terrifying. We were not prepared for the social turmoil and political tumult unleashed by internet platforms. They emerged so quickly, and their influence over both person and commerce spread so rapidly, that they overwhelmed cultural, political, and legal institutions. Some will be tempted to relax now that the (US) 2018 midterm elections have come and gone without obvious foreign interference. Instead, I hope they will see that foreign meddling in campaigns is merely one symptom of a much larger problem ... for which the internet platforms themselves must be called to account.”
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Why Denmark is reducing hospitals while we are building more

Jill Margo
Updated Feb 19, 2019 — 3.48pm, first published at 3.03pm
Denmark has become a world leader in healthcare because, long before others, it realised the existing model was broken.
While other countries have been responding to growing demand by building more hospitals along traditional lines, the Danes have been reducing them.
In 1999, Denmark had 98 hospitals. Today it has 32.
The Australian Financial Review Healthcare Summit in Sydney was told on Tuesday that against some domestic opposition, the Danish health system was radically transformed to make it financially sustainable for the multiple challenges ahead.
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18 April 2019

I Am Not an InstaDoc*; This Is Not InstaMedicine*

Posted by Dr Hans Duvefelt
 *(I know these words are used for Instagram pictures of beautiful medical professionals and gory surgical procedures, but I choose to use them as words of instancy in the practice of medicine.)
The other day a patient called every hour to inquire about the status of her elective cardiology referral. She had been thoroughly evaluated twice at the hospital for chest pain and wanted a consultation.
Another patient called three times the same day because she had seen “Ambulance Chaser” legal firm advertisements about lawsuits against manufacturers of generic valsartan, which may have traces of Chinese cancer causing chemicals.
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EU law will force takedown of extremist content in an hour

New European legislation will make it mandatory for Google, Facebook and Twitter to remove extremist content within an hour of it being posted or else face fines up to 4% of turnover for repeat offences.
The European Parliament voted 308 to 204 with 70 abstentions to back the proposal meant to solve the problem of internet hosting services being misused for terrorism.
The EU move comes in the wake of the killing of 50 Muslims at a mosque in Christchurch by an Australian white supremacist gunman on 15 March.
The shooter live-streamed his rampage on Facebook and it remained on the social media site for more than an hour. Numerous copies were uploaded to YouTube and linked off Twitter as well.
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Your ship is sinking. What's the one medical resource you'd save?

Dr Fogarty is a GP on the NSW Central Coast. He is a long-time columnist and is much-loved for his Fog’s Blogs that offer a humorous insight into general practice.
18th April 2019
Which one medical information resource would you take with you to the desert island?
Put another way, what is your most valued medical resource?
Australian Doctor’s How to Treat (conflict declared) is great, and is essential reading, but it’s about how to treat, less about how to access services.
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The eight pillars of the digital health revolution

Authored by Bianca Phillips
This article is the final in a series on the making of the digital health revolution. It provides an overview of what has been discussed to date as well as some additional thoughts.
Personalised medicine
In the article Digital health success hinges on four principles, co-authored with Dr Bernard Robertson-Dunn, we provided an overview of personalised medicine and an overview of pharmacogenomics, epigenomics, exposomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, phenomics, microbiomics and metabolomics.
We proposed the idea that the shift to a personalised medicine model of care would require the application of four principles:
  • the acquisition of more and better data from the patient at the time and point of care;
  • diagnostic tools and models that understand and interpret these data;
  • treatment that addresses the cause of the problem; and
  • a health care system that efficiently uses this radically different approach to clinical medicine.
Telemedicine for diabetes and heart failure
In the article Telemedicine for diabetes and heart failure: an evidence review, co-authored with Dr Denise O’Connor and Professor Leonard Gray, we observed that the “evidence from systematic reviews and overviews indicates that telemedicine can improve blood glucose control in people with diabetes and provide similar health outcomes in the management of heart failure as to face to face or telephone delivery of care.”
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When can I access My Health Record?

PDL has issued guidance on the use of My Health Record, including on privacy, consent and emergency access

With the participation rate in MHR ranked as 90.1% by the Government at the end of the opt-out period, it’s important pharmacists know and understand the circumstances in which it can be accessed, PDL says in its latest practice alert.
“Currently, patients provide ‘standing consent’ when they register for an MHR, which enables health care providers directly involved in a patient’s care to upload clinical information to their record,” observes PDL.
“Generally, there is no requirement for a health care provider to obtain the patient’s consent prior to viewing, or uploading clinical information to the MHR system.”
However, it is good practice to advise patients when information is being uploaded.
PDL highlights that a patient’s record can be accessed outside a consultation, as long as the access is for the purpose of providing health care to the patient.
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A healthy dose of caution: An analysis of Australia's My Health Record

Digital health records provide an array of benefits. Emergency care can be enhanced through quick access to important patient information. The duplication of diagnostic tests can be avoided and patients no longer need to recant their medical history and pharmaceutical prescriptions to every new health professional they see.[1]

Australia, along with other countries, has acknowledged the significant improvements in efficiency, quality and delivery of healthcare services that shared digital health systems can provide. My Health Record (MHR) is Australia's version of such a digital health system, acting as a national e-health record system operated and maintained by the Australian Digital Health Agency (ADHA). Although the window to ‘opt out’ of the MHR system has closed, Australians are still able to choose whether they maintain their MHR, restrict access to certain information or delete their online record entirely. Universal issues regarding data privacy, security, use and participation continue to undercut the utility of the MHR platform, with the Australian public maintaining a healthy sense of caution regarding the Government’s ability to safeguard some of Australia’s most sensitive personal information.


Australia's My Health Record program

MHR is Australia's national eHealth record system, operated and maintained by ADHA. Implemented initially in 2012 as the Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record (PCEHR), the system operated on an opt-in basis whereby individuals voluntarily registered for a PCEHR and consented to their health information being uploaded.[2] In 2018 the Australian Government announced the PCEHR would be renamed 'My Health Record' and legislation was introduced to transform the model to an opt-out program.[3] Under the new system, an MHR is created for every Australian unless he/she elects to opt-out. The deadline for opting out was originally mid November 2018 but was extended to 31 January 2019 due to widespread controversy regarding data security, privacy and how the MHR system will operate,[4] as well as the delayed release of a Senate Inquiry report into the MHR system (MHR Inquiry).[5]  

Notwithstanding such controversy, the Australian Government's decision to migrate across to an opt-out model was well-intentioned, with aims of increasing the number of individuals and healthcare providers participating in the system.
[6] Further, the transition formed part of Australia's broader National Digital Health Strategy with the strategic outcome of ensuring that health information is available whenever and wherever it is needed.[7]
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Life is too short to not love what you do


By Laini Bennett
Tuesday, 16 April, 2019
Around the same time as the ‘#Metoo’ movement began in the US, Dr Louise Schaper was being introduced as a panellist at a technology conference in Australia. Unsurprisingly, she was the only female on the panel.
Dr Schaper waited patiently as, one by one, her male counterparts were introduced and their long biographies read out. When it came to her turn, instead of reading her bio, the MC instead chose to comment on her dress.
“Isn’t Louise looking lovely today everyone?” he asked the audience, her PhD and position as CEO of the Health Informatics Society of Australia (HISA) seemingly forgotten.
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Today's tip: read the fine print on health apps – if you can

Antony is a medical reporter with a special interest in technology and pharmacy.
17th April 2019
A few weeks ago, ­Australian Doctor reported on a study that exposed how far and wide health data can spread when patients enter it into ‘free’ medicine-related apps.
It showed that information added into 24 apps ended up in the hands of 237 organisations.
But the study didn’t answer the question of whether patients can make informed decisions on how their health data is used.
The way people gloss over online terms and conditions has been exposed before — perhaps most colourfully by a UK video games store.
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Infant health record

Your baby’s infant health record is an important book that records information, in one place, about their health, growth and development. It’s a permanent record of their early years which will be useful throughout their life. So, it’s important not to lose this book and to take it with you to all your baby’s appointments.
Take your baby’s health record book to every health check so your doctor or nurse can record their growth and development.

What is the infant health record?

Your baby’s infant health record is a coloured book that records important information about your baby, including their growth, vaccinations and any health issues. The book might be blue, purple, red, green or yellow, depending on which state or territory you get it in.
The infant health record will be in the newborn information pack given to you in hospital when you have your baby.
The book helps all the health professionals who look after your baby to work together — and with you. It records all the important information they need, from when your child is born to when they start school.
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Hospital Pathology Reports and My Health Record

15 April 2019  ADHA Propaganda
Did you know you can view hospital pathology reports via the My Health Record system?
In addition to discharge summaries and other types of clinical documents, pathology reports requested by hospitals within both the SLHD and SESLHD catchment areas are now being uploaded to patient records. This provides numerous benefits and supports delivery of patient care by reducing unnecessary duplicate testing and time spent locating or requesting copies of results.
Uploaded reports are immediately available for healthcare professionals to view and become visible to patients after seven days.
If you have any enquiries regarding My Health Record, please contact the team via myhealthrecord@cesphn.com.au.
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Building a digital-literate workforce in healthcare

Hafizah Osman | 16 Apr 2019
With an ageing population and the introduction of new technologies, the healthcare industry in Australia is, no doubt booming. But is this growth substantiated with the relevant skilled employment it requires? 
Australia has been paving the way for the growth in healthcare. Federal and state governments have recently been investing millions towards building and upgrading healthcare precincts, such as the South Australia healthcare precinct, and universities are opening their doors to institutes that focus on digital transformation. 
And according to a McKinsey Australia report, powerful new automation technologies such as machine learning, artificial intelligence (AI) and advanced robotics are already transforming the Australian economy, workplace, education system and community. 
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EU govts give approval for tougher copyright rules

New copyright rules in the member states of the European Union will mean that Google will have to pay publishers for any snippets it uses from their publications, while Facebook will have to change its algorithms to filter out protected content.
The new rules were backed by a majority of the bloc's governments on Monday, after they were passed by the European Parliament in Brussels last month.
Nineteen countries, including France and Germany, backed the Copyright Directive, while Belgium, Estonia and Slovenia abstained. Finland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Poland and Sweden opposed the changes.
Online platforms will now have to sign licensing deals with individuals, companies or organisations to use their work online.
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15 April 2019

The devil in the detail of digital healthcare

Posted by Penny Durham
The benefits of moving from paper to electronic medical records hardly need stating: metal cabinets full of dead-tree files and illegibly handwritten notes and prescriptions are health hazards that don’t belong in the 21st century.
But digital systems can also endanger patients in new ways and make life harder for doctors, which prompts the question: have we exchanged one set of problems for another?
You’d think so after reading “Death by a thousand clicks”, a months-long investigation into electronic health records (EHRs) in the US, one of a series of stories by Kaiser Health News and Fortune, published last month.
Journalists Fred Schulte and Erika Fry spoke to more than 100 doctors, patients, IT experts and administrators, policy leaders, lawyers, government officials and software company executives to uncover a $A5 trillion healthcare system “idling at the crossroads of progress”.
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Is this the start of pay for performance?

Zilla is a freelance reporter.
15th April 2019
As D-Day for the biggest shake-up in the history of the multimillion-dollar GP Practice Incentives Program looms, the Department of Health is wrangling a growing array of last-minute changes.
A new and improved Practice Incentives Program (PIP) was slated to begin more than three years ago with the scrapping of five PIP payments covering asthma, quality prescribing, cervical screening, diabetes and aged care access.
The funding was then to be redirected to a new PIP Quality Improvement (QI) Incentive to reward practices for showing improvements in their patient care.
The problem was that the QI incentive was something of a mystery to GPs, with little information forthcoming from the federal Department of Health.
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Comments welcome!
David.

Monday, April 22, 2019

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 22nd April, 2019.

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

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With Easter and ANZAC day looming everyone seems to have disappeared – so only a few items to report.
Enjoy the break!
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GPs demand fix for 'hopeless' new death certificate system

There are concerns that funerals could have to be rescheduled because of issues with the system
15th April 2019
GPs in Victoria are warning families of deceased patients they could be forced to delay their loved ones’ funerals due to problems with the state’s new system for processing death certificates.
The Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages launched a new online portal for medical paperwork in February, promising to be “easy to use and navigate” for doctors.
It was claimed the new system would allow doctors to complete a medical cause of death certificate in less than 10 minutes.
At the same time, the registry stopped distributing paper forms for the certificates.
But that decision needs to be reversed, according to Dr Ralph Audehm, who spent three days earlier this month attempting to file a death certificate for one of his patients.
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April 18 2019 - 4:33PM

Doctors slam 'reckless' Qld pharmacy trial

·         Robyn Wuth
Doctors have slammed the Queensland government's decision to allow pharmacists to dispense the contraceptive pill and antibiotics, warning it could create superbugs.
Pharmacists will be allowed to provide the contraceptive pill on a one-off basis and antibiotics for urinary tract infections under a statewide trial being rolled out by the health department.
Details on the Queensland Health measures are yet to be determined, but pharmacists will be able to access a patient's medical history on the My Health Record database.
Health Minister Steven Miles said Queensland Health would work with industry stakeholders to firm up the details of the trial.
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Deakin Uni’s $33m AI institute launches

A²I² merges PRaDA, DSTIL
Rohan Pearce (Computerworld) 15 April, 2019 12:14
Deakin University has formally launched its Applied Artificial Intelligence Institute.
The university has invested almost $33 million in the institute, dubbed ‘A²I²’, which merges the Pattern Recognition and Data Analysis (PRaDA) Strategic Research Centre and the Deakin Software and Technology Laboratory (DSTIL).
“Much is made of the potential for AI to replace human intelligence, but AI’s true potential lies in its capacity to enhance human abilities rather than replace them,” said Deakin vice chancellor Professor Jane den Hollander.
“We’re not building robots to take the place of humans, but we are creating technology that will work alongside people to help them make more informed and better decisions.
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Swinburne University of Technology partners with Coviu for telehealth education

April 17, 2019 12:13 AM
Swinburne will embed Coviu’s technology into the curriculum of nursing, occupational therapy, psychology, dietetics, health science, and digital health and informatics.
Swinburne University of Technology, a public university located in Melbourne, Australia, has partnered with Coviu, a telehealth software platform, to further embed digital health technology in the classroom, clinic and research.
What’s it about
The partnership will engage students studying health-related courses, and the wider community, in using the latest telehealth technology, equipping them to treat Australians remotely and redefine models of healthcare.
Coviu, a company that specialises in online health consultations, will provide access to its technology for Swinburne students, researchers and clinical services. Coviu is also a finalist and winner of the 4th Innovations Challenge Award for their PhysioROM solution at the HIMSS AsiaPac Conference in 2018.
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Ransomware attacks still common in Australia, and half pay up

By Tim Biggs
April 16, 2019 — 4.02pm
Australian companies are increasingly paying off online hackers, who demand money to unlock computers, as the number of cyber attacks rises.
A Telstra survey of  IT professionals from more than 300 Australian companies found 48 per cent of those surveyed had experienced a cyber attack in the past 12 months. This is up from 33 per cent in 2018. Of those who suffered an attack, 81 per cent experienced a ransom incident, and 51 per cent of them paid it.
Common advice from security professionals is not to pay extortionists, because it only encourages further attacks and there's never a guarantee the attackers can restore files or unlock computers. The safer approach is to keep systems patched against new vulnerabilities, and ensure regular offline backups and "versioning" so systems can be restored if locked down.
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iPad test could detect dementia years earlier

  • By Andrew Gregory
  • The Times
  • 9:22AM April 14, 2019
The UK’s National Health Service is conducting trials of a five-minute iPad test to spot the early signs of dementia.
The “quick and easy” check could offer “huge benefits” to patients and their families, potentially detecting it years before symptoms appear.
Experts say earlier diagnosis could lead to effective therapies. At present, dementia has no cure. It could also cut the number of “worried well” people who are referred for scans, saving the health service time and money.
The test, which requires no medical supervision, uses artificial intelligence to assess brain function. Participants are shown about 100 photographs and asked if they contain an animal. The images appear for a split second. Some clearly depict an animal. Others have one that is less obvious, or no animal at all.
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NEC scores $23m WAN deal at WA Health

By Justin Hendry on Apr 16, 2019 7:00AM

To enhance connectivity at rural health sites.

NEC Australia has scored a $23 million deal with Western Australia’s health department to improve connectivity at health sites across regional and rural areas of the state.
The deal will see NEC deliver WAN services at more than 500 health locations to enhance IT interconnectivity across WA’s two-and-a-half million square kilometre network.
It is part of WA Health’s $409 million infrastructure replacement project HealthNext, which is being led the department’s health support agency, health Support Services (HHS).
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Location, location, location: How Australia is getting precise about positioning

A diverse range of industries are expected to benefit from a major project to augment Australia’s positioning infrastructure
Rohan Pearce (Computerworld) 17 April, 2019 10:12
Businesses in sectors ranging from agriculture to aviation, construction, mining, shipping and road transport are expected to benefit from a major project that will deliver highly accurate positioning capabilities across the Australian continent and surrounding maritime zones.
The 2018-19 federal budget earmarked $160.9 million over four years to develop and operate a satellite-based augmentation system (SBAS), which is capable of determining position with accuracy far greater than standard GPS.
The program is spearheaded by Geoscience Australia, which has been overseeing an SBAS test-bed service. As part of that project, the first test signals were transmitted in mid-2017, with the test-bed fully operational from October 2017.
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Digital health sites get zero-rated data

Wednesday, 17 April 2019  
eHealthNews.nz editor Rebecca McBeth
New Zealanders will be able to visit some digital health websites for free as part of a three-month trial run by the Ministry of Health, Health Promotion Agency and WellSouth.
Three telecommunications companies – Spark, Vodafone and 2degrees – are involved in the proof of concept to provide zero-rated data for three websites run by the Health Promotion Agency and two patient portals used in the southern region, starting on 1 May.
Ministry of Health group manager digital strategy and investment Darren Douglass says key metrics around data volumes and usage will be measured, with the aim of improving the use of digital technologies to access to health services, particularly for people in low socioeconomic groups.
If the pilot is successful, the Ministry aims to create a framework agreement with the telecommunications providers that allows specific digital health services to quality for zero-rated data.
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ASD says 'sophisticated, state actor' behind Parliament attack

The Australian Signals Directorate has ascertained that hackers who breached the networks of the Australian Parliament and those of three main political parties — Liberal, Labor and National — are nation-state actors, but the agency's director-general, Mike Burgess, has said he cannot name the country involved in a public forum.
Burgess told the Senate Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Legislation Committee on 5 April that the attackers had exfiltrated a small amount of data.
Asked whether the ASD had identified whether it was a state actor, Burgess said: "The level of sophistication here leads us to believe it has to be a state actor. That's our assessment. Of course, that could still be just a very, very clever individual, but we think that's highly unlikely."
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The need for new ways of protecting health data

Hafizah Osman | 17 Apr 2019
Despite increased industry efforts, healthcare is experiencing cyberattacks at an increasing rate. So what does the industry need to do to salvage the situation? 
According to Forcepoint Information Security Senior Director Alvin Rodrigues, the industry needs to embrace new ways of protecting data. 
At the recent Australian Healthcare Week conference, he mentioned that a behaviour-centric, analytics driven approach to cybersecurity is necessary. 
“Having just a reactive mindset to cyber threats doesn’t work anymore. Cyber attackers have expanded the boundaries of attacks beyond the horizon of just the healthcare organisation to reach other players or partners of these organisations,” he said. 
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Tech laws need more consultation, AIIA tells govt

The speed at which two crucial pieces of technology-related legislation have passed through Parliament has alarmed the Australian Information Industry Association which has called for more consultation between government and industry.
The AIIA, the peak member body for the ICT industry, said in a statement that the Telecommunications and Other Legislation Amendment (Assistance and Access) Act 2018 — better known as the encryption law — was passed on 6 December 2018, and more recently amendments to Australia's Criminal Code were passed in the wake of the massacre of 50 Muslims in a Christchurch mosque on 15 March.
AIIA chief executive Ron Gauci said more dialogues was needed between the government and industry to ensure that whatever laws were passed kept pace with the development of technology.
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Telcos wary of ACCC push for scrutiny of dark fibre, NBN wholesale markets

Rivals network operators say ACCC proposal would impose unjustified compliance costs
Rohan Pearce (Computerworld) 12 April, 2019 12:12
Network operators have called for the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission to back away from proposed rules that would allow the ACCC to collect a range of new data about the state of Australia’s dark fibre and NBN wholesale aggregation markets.
The ACCC’s 2018 report into the state of Australia’s telco market said that the information the commission had gathered suggest there was “limited competition in the supply of dark fibre services” including to NBN points of interconnect (POIs).
The ACCC said that as a result of concerns over the “slow development of the wholesale markets for NBN aggregation services and dark fibre availability” it would consult with the telco sector on implementing new record keeping rules (RKRs).
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Optus sets $85 a month as its new entry-level NBN price

By Ry Crozier on Apr 15, 2019 11:57AM

Second rise in less than a year.

Optus has set $85 a month as the new minimum cost of an NBN product on its network as part of a move to court a “premium” consumer audience.
The telco today unveiled new NBN pricing, starting at $85 a month.
For that, customers can choose either a broadband-only product bundled with Optus Sport, or a product that also includes a home phone line and calls to landlines and mobiles.
The next step up is a $99 a month product which also includes fetch TV.
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Optus launches NBN plans ahead of ‘new customer initiatives’

Optus has launched three new NBN plans promising more speed for selected home users, and with unlimited data for “data hungry” streamers.
Optus’ new offerings include two new NBN broadband bundle plans which includes a phone line at no extra charge for $85/mthi and $99/mth and a broadband only plan for $85/mth.
The plans have unlimited data on Optus’ Speed Pack 3, which Optus says delivers 40Mbps typical evening speed (7-11pm) across its new NBN plans.
Optus Head of Product, Shawn Van Graan said, “We are unveiling our new NBN plans, offering customers fast NBN speeds, with some great features that are perfect for families and data-hungry streamers.”
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Enjoy!
David.