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."

Tuesday, November 02, 2021

Commentators and Journalists Weigh In On Digital Health And Related Privacy, Safety, Social Media And Security Matters. Lots Of Interesting Perspectives - November 02, 2021.

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This weekly blog is to explore the news around the larger issues around Digital Health, data security, data privacy, AI / ML. technology, social media and related matters.

I will also try to highlight ADHA Propaganda when I come upon it.

Just so we keep count, the latest Notes from the ADHA Board were dated 6 December, 2018 and we have seen none since! Its pretty sad!

Note: Appearance here is not to suggest I see any credibility or value in what follows. I will leave it to the reader to decide what is worthwhile and what is not! The point is to let people know what is being said / published that I have come upon.

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https://marketplace.service.gov.au/2/digital-marketplace/opportunities/16993

Australian Digital Health Agency

Test Manager

Opportunity ID 16993

Deadline for asking questions Wednesday 3 November 2021 at 6pm (in Canberra)

Application closing date Friday 5 November 2021 at 6pm (in Canberra)

Published Friday 29 October 2021

Category

Agile delivery and Governance

Overview

Reporting to the Project Manager, My Health App project, the Test Manager will be responsible for the delivery of User Acceptance Test (UAT) and Business Verification Test (BVT), as well as provide assurance of testing services, including functional and system integration testing, performed by the 3rd party delivery provider. This role will undertake work that is complex, operate under broad direction and exercise a considerable degree of independence. • Develop test strategy, test plans, status reports and test closure reports. • Facilitate development and execution of test cases for UAT & BVT. • Manage issues and defects observed during UAT & BVT. • Review third party test coverage and execution results, and execution rates against plans. • Coordinate with, and provide regular status updates to the Project Manager.

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https://www.innovationaus.com/govt-has-another-go-at-criminalising-data-re-identification/

Govt has another go at criminalising data re-identification


Denham Sadler
National Affairs Editor

27 October 2021

The federal government will again attempt to pass legislation criminalising the illegitimate re-identification of public sector data sets, despite its attempt to do this five years ago stalling due to concerns it could lead to the jailing of researchers.

The discussion paper for the broad-ranging review of the Privacy Act includes a proposal that the controversial Re-Identification Offence Bill be re-introduced to Parliament with amendments.

The bill, first tabled in 2016, introduces new civil and criminal penalties for individuals or companies who re-identified data that has been de-identified and released by public sector organisations.

The legislation included exemptions for government agencies and their service providers, but drew the ire of the research community and privacy advocates, who argued the government should instead better ensure the security of the data they release, and that the new penalties would deter public interest research.

The legislation stalled after Labor and the Greens signaled their opposition to it, saying it was “disproportionate”, and it lapsed in 2019.

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https://www.innovationaus.com/age-verification-will-be-mandatory-for-social-under-govt-tech-crackdown/

Age verification will be mandatory for social under govt tech crackdown


Denham Sadler
National Affairs Editor

25 October 2021

The federal government has unveiled “landmark privacy legislation” which will increase penalties for breaches of privacy by social media firms and require a wide range of tech firms to verify the age of their users and obtain parental consent for users aged under 16.

Many elements of the draft legislation, unveiled by Attorney-General Michaelia Cash on Monday morning, were first announced by the federal government nearly three years ago.

The draft Privacy Legislation Amendment (Enhancing Online Privacy and Other Measures) bill, increases the maximum penalty for a data breach significantly and also gives the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) further enforcement powers.

The bill also lays the groundwork for a binding Online Privacy code, to be developed by industry and apply to a wide swathe of tech firms, including the likes of Facebook, Google, Reddit, Bumble and OnlyFans.

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https://digitalhealth.org.au/blog/digital-health-and-gender-diversity-survey/

Digital health and gender diversity survey

Oct 26, 2021 | AIDH news, Surveys

Do you work in Australia’s digital health sector? We want to hear about your experiences! Complete the ‘Understanding gender diversity in digital health survey’ by Friday 3 December.

The Australasian Institute of Digital Health (AIDH) has joined with Telstra Health, the Digital Health Cooperative Research Centre (DHCRC) and CSIRO’s Australian e-Health Research Centre to launch the first survey of its kind in understanding gender diversity in Australia’s digital health sector.

In its inaugural year, this survey sets out to understand the current state of gender diversity, career progression and equity within digital health, and to be reflective of all perspectives – both men and women who work in the sector.

There is a lack of research and data in understanding this issue, both in Australia and internationally. So, with the intention to run the survey annually, the first set of findings will set the benchmark for future iterations of the survey to build upon, as well as inform what actions are needed to create change and achieve progress for gender equity and career advancement in digital health.

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https://www.zdnet.com/article/home-affairs-in-talks-to-give-telco-more-blocking-powers-against-malicious-messages/

Home Affairs in talks to give telcos more blocking powers against malicious messages

At Senate Estimates, Home Affairs secretary Mike Pezzullo reiterated his department would be more aggressive in addressing cyber threats.

By Campbell Kwan | October 26, 2021 | Topic: Security

The Department of Home Affairs is in talks with the telecommunications industry to provide more powers to telcos for blocking spam and malicious content.

"We are in discussion with the telcos that provide your services … under the Telecommunications Act, section 313, there might be a possibility for the telcos to act as an authorised blocking agent -- that is to say, it's unwanted, I don't want this to come to my computer, I don't want this to come to my phone. It's malicious," Home Affairs secretary Mike Pezzullo told Senate Estimates on Monday evening.

Pezzullo noted that more work needed to be done in this area, however, as it is currently unclear whether the Telecommunications Act deems providing a link to be an offence or whether the offence is actually the subsequent action taken by a criminal actor of taking advantage of a victim after they've clicked on a malicious link.

"There are some complexities here because it has to be a nexus to an offence. So scamming, click this link, may itself not be an offence, in which case, our advice to government in due course might well be that legislative changes are required. But the act of clicking might create a nexus to an offence, that offence might be identity, theft, fraud, etc," Pezzullo said.

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/technology/facebook-needs-to-do-more-than-change-its-name-to-meta/news-story/0b54606d3a699dde1706b524382f6f42

Facebook needs to do more than change its name to Meta

DAVID SWAN

9:29AM October 29, 2021

Social media behemoth Facebook will need to do much more than change its name if it’s to win back the trust of its users – and regulators – with some major soul searching needed after years of scandals and abuses of customer loyalty.

Facebook on Friday announced a name change to Meta – a signal that it wants to focus on the future, rather than its chequered past.

But despite all the tech demos, the hype and buzzwords – and there were a lot of them – we have little reason to take Facebook at its word that the changes will amount to anything beyond the surface-level.

To date, the company and its top leadership haven’t yet demonstrated that they grasp or appreciate the sheer scale of their responsibilities, or the degree to which they’ve repeatedly failed to meet them.

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https://marketplace.service.gov.au/2/digital-marketplace/opportunities/16769

Australian Digital Health Agency

2 x Digital Health Educator (eLearning)

Opportunity ID 16769

Deadline for asking questions Monday 1 November 2021 at 6pm (in Canberra)

Application closing date Wednesday 3 November 2021 at 6pm (in Canberra)

Published Wednesday 27 October 2021

Category Training, Learning and Development

Overview

The Digital Health Educator will be responsible for the development of the Agency’s online learning resources and maintenance of the Agency Learning Management System. Key responsibilities include: • Design, develop and implement effective, flexible and innovative eLearning modules, animation videos, screen capture videos, webinars, instructional manuals, digital content and other digital solutions to build capability within the healthcare workforce • Consult with subject matter experts and stakeholders across the organisation to develop eLearning • Input relevant content into engaging eLearning storyboards • Develop and maintain effective working relationships with subject matter experts and stakeholders to provide a high level of service and advice • Provide advice on the creation of education materials • Assist with the maintenance of the Agency Learning Management System • Participate in the review process for eLearning • Project management support and coordination • Other duties as directed. Liaise within and across Education and Adoption team to ensure: • Production of high-quality education resources that draws upon the skill, knowledge and experience of all team members • No duplication of effort • Consistency of standards and messaging • Knowledge sharing • Cross-team upskilling

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https://theconversation.com/a-new-proposed-privacy-code-promises-tough-rules-and-10-million-penalties-for-tech-giants-170711

A new proposed privacy code promises tough rules and $10 million penalties for tech giants

October 27, 2021 3.22pm AEDT

Authors

  1. Katharine Kemp

Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Law & Justice, UNSW, UNSW

  1. Graham Greenleaf

Professor of Law and Information Systems, UNSW

This week the federal government announced proposed legislation to develop an online privacy code (or “OP Code”) setting tougher privacy standards for Facebook, Google, Amazon and many other online platforms.

These companies collect and use vast amounts of consumers’ personal data, much of it without their knowledge or real consent, and the code is intended to guard against privacy harms from these practices.

The higher standards would be backed by increased penalties for interference with privacy under the Privacy Act and greater enforcement powers for the federal privacy commissioner. Serious or repeated breaches of the code could carry penalties of up to A$10 million or 10% of turnover for companies.

However, relevant companies are likely to try to avoid obligations under the OP Code by drawing out the process for drafting and registering the code. They are also likely to try to exclude themselves from the code’s coverage, and argue about the definition of “personal information”.

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Connecting Care in Victoria

Bronwyn Taylor

HIMAA 2021 National Conference

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8OkGpCVHm1A

What is Victoria up to with state-wide EHR System?

Note: Link no longer works as they have made presentation secret!

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ADHA

Dear Valued Industry Partner,

The Australian Digital Health Agency is offering healthcare software developers financial assistance to design new or enhanced My Health Record–related functionality in clinical information systems and electronic medications management systems used by residential aged care facilities.

The Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety released their Final Report on 1 March 2021 containing 148 recommendations. Recommendation 68 specifically refers to the Agency’s support for universal adoption by the aged care sector of digital technology and My Health Record.

The Agency has been working with healthcare professionals who interact with aged care sector, and the Industry Offer is the first part of a work program to ensure residential aged care facilities have the ability to adopt and interact with My Health Record and use digital technologies more broadly.

The offer is targeted at software developers whose Clinical Information Systems and/or electronic Medication Management Systems are currently used by residential aged care facilities in Australia.

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https://theconversation.com/the-government-wants-to-expand-the-digital-identity-system-that-lets-australians-access-services-there-are-many-potential-pitfalls-170550

The government wants to expand the ‘digital identity’ system that lets Australians access services. There are many potential pitfalls

October 26, 2021 5.01pm AEDT

Author

Kelsie Nabben

Researcher / PhD Candidate, RMIT Blockchain Innovation Hub / Digital Ethnography Research Centre, RMIT University

The federal government has been asking the public for feedback on proposed legislation to create a “trusted digital identity” system. The aim is for Australians to use it to prove their identity when accessing public services.

I first found out about the draft Trusted Digital Identity Bill not through my research at the intersection of society and technology, but through my mother-in-law. She found out about it in private social media channels, and her local women’s group was seeking support to craft their feedback, which emphasises concern for privacy and civil liberties in Australia.

After asking around among major stakeholders, it seems this piece of legislation has largely slipped under the radar since it was unveiled on October 1.

But what will a national digital identity system actually involve, who will it serve, and if we need it, how should it be implemented?

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/nation/politics/online-privacy-code-for-big-tech/news-story/fdf06d68e57d915c82bbb5cc2067588d

Online privacy code for Big Tech

Max Maddison

David Swan

5:24PM October 25, 2021

Social media giants will be ­“punished heavily” if they don’t give primary consideration to the best interests of children when handling personal information under draft legislation ­released by the Morrison ­government.

But critics of Big Tech have warned the social media media giants should not be involved in the drafting of the code, saying it had the potential to “dramatically reshape children’s experiences in the digital world for the better”. The release of the Privacy Legislation Amendment (Enhancing Online Privacy and Other Measures) Bill 2021 by Attorney-General Michaelia Cash will enable the creation of an online privacy code for social media services, data brokers and other online platforms in Australia.

Digital entities like Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and TikTok will be required to comply with new privacy requirements. This includes stronger protections for children using social media, requiring social media platforms to take “all reasonable steps” to verify a users’ age, while giving primary consideration to the best interests of the child when handling children’s personal information.

Rys Farthing, director of data policy at Reset Australia – a lobby group dedicated to ‘‘countering digital threats to democracy’’ – warned that the proposed code should not be written by industry. If done correctly, the code could immensely improve children’s digital experience, he said.

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https://www.itwire.com/technology-regulation/government-proposes-stricter-privacy-rules-for-social-media.html

Monday, 25 October 2021 17:02

Government proposes stricter privacy rules for social media

By Sam Varghese

The Federal Government has proposed stricter rules for social media services, data brokers and other large online platforms operating in Australia.

The government has given industry first option to draft the code, failing which it will take on the task itself.

Attorney-General Michaelia Cash on Monday released an exposure draft of the Privacy Legislation Amendment (Enhancing Online Privacy and Other Measures) Bill 2021.

It would lead to creation of a binding Online Privacy code. Platforms covered by the code would need to have stronger protections for children on social media, and take all reasonable steps to verify their users' age.

The platforms will also have to put the child first when handling children's personal information. Parental consent will be required for users under the age of 16.

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https://www.ausdoc.com.au/news/discharge-summaries-riddled-alarming-abbreviations-study-reveals

Discharge summaries riddled with 'alarming' abbreviations, study reveals

On average the letters contain 17 abbreviations, most of which mean different things to different doctors, shows Australian research

25th October 2021

By Carmel Sparke

For any GP who has puzzled over a hospital discharge summary, Aussie findings reveal they contain dozens of abbreviations that can be interpreted in an “alarming” number of ways.

On average, a patient discharge summary has 17 different abbreviations, with one notable example containing 86 short forms, according to Queensland researchers.

Not only were hospital summaries riddled with abbreviations, but they meant different things to the more than 300 doctors in the study.

While most doctors agreed that Hb meant ‘haemoglobin’ and IV meant ‘intravenous’, GPs and junior doctors provided 32 different versions of what the letters LC might mean.

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https://wildhealth.net.au/resistance-is-futile-how-covid-is-ripping-the-band-aid-off-virtual-cardiac-rehabilitation/

22 October 2021

Resistance is futile: How covid is ripping the band-aid off virtual cardiac rehabilitation

Clinical Cloud COVID-19 Technology

By Jeremy Knibbs

Covid has forced a somewhat recalcitrant healthcare sector into understanding and accepting a lot more sophisticated digital health delivery than the simple utility that is telehealth.

For medical futurist and doctor Bertalan Meskó, covid must have been something like getting access to a time machine.

“The reason why [digital health] hasn’t been implemented yet is purely human,” he explained in November last year.

“It’s rooted in the belief that change can be stopped. Well, 2020 made it obvious that it can’t.

“It’s the three R’s of healthcare gatekeeping: Rejection by individual medical professionals, good Regulations that are lacking, and the Resistance within the existing healthcare system, which is rooted in the belief that change can be stopped. Well, 2020 made it obvious that it can’t.”

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https://insightplus.mja.com.au/2021/40/telehealth-sustaining-video-conferencing-in-covid-19-normal/

Telehealth: sustaining video conferencing in “COVID-19-normal”

Jeetendra Mathur Sandeep Reddy

Issue 40 / 25 October 2021

THE COVID-19 pandemic has had an impact on various societal levels but has also led to concerns about the quality and safety of patient care being delivered. Further, it has led to decreased access and use of health care services, particularly primary care services.

To address the decreasing in-person consultations and improve safety for health care practitioners and patients, telehealth — an approach to delivering health care at a distance — emerged as a remarkably important and valuable tool. Telehealth allowed for timely access to care and supported efforts to prevent the transmission of SARS-CoV-2 by reducing in-person contacts at health clinics.

Telehealth is not new for Australian health care, it has existed for decades. However, uptake before the COVID-19 pandemic was generally low due to limited funding support. Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) items for telehealth were previously available only to specialists providing care to patients in rural areas. GP telehealth consultations were not eligible for Medicare and, therefore, were not eligible to receive any payment

With the advent of COVID-19, the situation has changed. In response to restriction of movement during the pandemic, the Australian Government announced changes to MBS items to support the use of telehealth-based care. Temporary Medicare items for telehealth consultations, for both audio and video, were introduced so they can be used by allied health, GPs, nurse practitioners, and other specialists. As a result, between 13 March 2020 and 6 May 2021, more than 83 800 providers used telehealth services, and 57.5 million COVID-19 MBS telehealth services were delivered to 13.7 million patients, with $2.9 billion in Medicare benefits paid. As per a survey by the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners of 1782 GP Fellows, compared with the same period in 2019, there was a dramatic increase in the number of telehealth services in 2020 and 2021. For example, 97% of the GP respondents provided telehealth care compared with just 15% before the COVID-19 pandemic. Also, in the same survey, 67% of GPs reported a positive attitude towards the use of telehealth, with 89% of them citing “The MBS items now support me to use telehealth” as the most common reason behind the positive attitude towards telehealth.

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https://www.itwire.com/guest-articles/guest-opinion/how-data-can-better-support-mental-health.html

How data can better support mental health

By David Dembo, Australia and New Zealand director, Health Catalyst

GUEST OPINION: Mental health issues were growing at an alarming rate before COVID-19, with one in five Australians experiencing a mental or behavioural disorder in any given year. The pandemic has accelerated this trend and made it harder for already stretched mental health services to deal with demand.

Mental health hospitalisations among children have increased substantially during the pandemic, while mental health distress levels have doubled for young workers. While this data is startling, a lack of data is one of the key issues in the gaps we have in mental healthcare, much more-so than other chronic and acute healthcare issues.

Improving our data on mental health is made harder by the fact that those suffering seek help from a range of services that are not necessarily interconnected, creating a fragmented record of their care.

From a data gathering perspective, many people suffering with mental health issues are hesitant to come forward. Incomplete data makes it difficult to identify the true extent of mental health issues.

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David.

 

Monday, November 01, 2021

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 01 November, 2021.

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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Quite a lot going on this week – good to see Qld moving forward on RTPM!

I think we need to keep a close eye on what the PHNs are up to as they may stray from their core mission from time to time I fear

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https://www.ausdoc.com.au/news/realtime-script-monitoring-becomes-mandatory-queensland-gps

Real-time script monitoring becomes mandatory for Queensland GPs

Non-compliance before writing scripts could result in fines

26th October 2021

By Kemal Atlay

GPs who fail to check Queensland’s new real-time script monitoring system before prescribing drugs of dependency will face fines of up to $2800.

From Thursday, it will be mandatory for doctors and pharmacists to use QScript to stop doctor-shoppers accessing opioids and monitored medications.

The system, launched by the State Government, will also record when the drugs are prescribed in hospital settings.

QScript uses a traffic-light system integrated with GP software, issuing red, amber or green alerts at the point of care.

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https://medicalrepublic.com.au/what-gps-think-about-their-phns/56586

22 October 2021

What GPs think about their PHNs

Comment PHNs Political TheHill

By Jeremy Knibbs

Unbeknown to most primary health networks, the Department of Health recently awarded a contract to consulting firm PwC to do a review of the sector.

Precisely what the DoH wants reviewed isn’t entirely clear, however. 

PwC has asked PHNs to submit complaints that they have received from providers as a part of the review, but they aren’t taking direct input from providers (one smart provider tried) – which seems like a strange way to go about reviewing the sector. If you ask only the PHNs, surely you will end up skewing any findings towards what PHNs want you to see?

Earlier this year, PwC surveyed PHNs themselves to understand their challenges better. The insights aren’t particularly enlightening. Most of the issues facing PHNs mirror the problems facing practices: funding pressure, workforce issues, covid-19 and managing a new telehealth regime.

The PwC report summarises by saying PHNs increasingly see a role for themselves in capability- and capacity-building activities such as supporting the uptake of telehealth. 

There is no mention of the rapidly growing role of PHNs in aggregating the data of their practices, analysing it and feeding it back to the practices in order to help their practices understand better the population health needs of their region.

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https://www.seek.com.au/job/54616409?type=standard

Digital Health Lead

SNPHN Ltd

Sydney North Shore & Northern Beaches

Healthcare & Medical Management

Full time

Sydney North Health Network (SNHN), is one of 31 Primary Health Networks (PHNs) established by the Australian Government to increase the efficiency and effectiveness of medical services for the community. Our focus is on patients who are at risk of poor health outcomes and we work to improve the coordination of their care so they receive the right care, in the right place at the right time. Better health outcomes for patients is achieved by working together with a network of health professionals including general practitioners, practice nurses, allied health providers, the Northern Sydney Local Health District and other health services. This partnership approach and community focus is reflected in our vision: Achieving together – better health, better care.

Position purpose: The Digital Health Lead works closely with stakeholders with relevant stakeholders, driving adoption of digital health connectivity, deemed beneficial for improvement of community health outcomes. They are responsible for implementation of the SNHN Digital Health Strategy and are responsible for  overseeing the co-design, delivery and evaluation of programs that support primary health care services. 

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https://wildhealth.net.au/home-quarantine-app-falls-foul-of-digital-privacy-group/

21 October 2021

Home quarantine app falls foul of digital privacy group

COVID-19 Technology

By Holly Payne

Digital rights groups are pushing for more robust digital privacy regulations as Australia moves into the next phase of the pandemic, warning that regulations around personal data collection are not up to scratch.

The blowback is directed at South Australia’s home quarantine app, which works by contacting people in quarantine at random and requesting proof of their identity and location within 15 minutes.

The app uses facial recognition and smartphone geo-location as verification tools.

Failing a check-in – which happens when the person misses their 15-minute window, is located outside their home or is unable to be recognised by the app AI – prompts a visit from SA police.

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https://www.ausdoc.com.au/news/racgp-winds-oxygen-commercial-venture

RACGP winds up Oxygen commercial venture

All business for profit will now be conducted from within the college, the RACGP says

25th October 2021

By Geir O'Rourke

The RACGP has finally wound up its for-profit subsidiary, Oxygen, with all the college's commercial ventures now being run in-house. 

Launched in 2011, Oxygen was meant to “refresh the way general practice does business” by partnering with industry to develop and promote health technology. 

Since then, the company’s work has mostly remained a mystery — even to college members — with its board operating independently and its finances not appearing in the RACGP’s annual reports. 

But wholly owned by the college, Oxygen came under fire in 2018 when it announced a three-year deal with a Canadian firm called Myca Health to endorse a prescribing software package called Hello Health.

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https://www.smh.com.au/business/entrepreneurship/from-the-heart-pandemic-no-barrier-for-medtech-s-asx-listing-20211025-p592t8.html

From the heart: Pandemic no barrier for medtech’s ASX listing

By Emma Koehn

October 26, 2021 — 12.15am

The founders of heart disease fighter Artrya got their tech up and running less than one year before the coronavirus pandemic hit, but co-founder John Barrington says that’s no barrier to the Aussie medtech taking on the world.

“The pandemic has accelerated the use of tech and telemedicine...we have benefited from that trend and been able to raise significant capital,” he says.

Barrington and co-founder John Konstantopoulos started work on their artificial intelligence-driven tool for detecting coronary artery disease just three-and-a-half years ago.

Now they are following in the footsteps of multi-billion dollar imaging medtech Pro Medicus in looking to list on the ASX. The company dropped a prospectus last week to raise $40 million from shares at $1.35 to list on the local market.

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/anz/latest-digital-health-project-enhance-decision-making-across-australian-hospitals

Latest digital health project to enhance decision making across Australian hospitals

It will utilise Alcidion's Miya Precision platform to identify priority areas where decision support tools will add value.

By Adam Ang

October 28, 2021 02:34 AM

The government-backed Digital Health Cooperative Research Centre has set up a A$1.5 million ($2.1 million) research project that will evaluate and improve clinical decision support tools across regional and metropolitan hospitals settings in Australia.

The project is a three-year collaboration between Sydney Local Health District (LHD), eHealth NSW, Murrumbidgee LHD, NSW Health, University of Sydney, Queensland University of Technology (QUT) and Alcidion.

WHY IT MATTERS

Clinical staff are facing challenges in decision making when treating patients, especially during this pandemic. 

In a media release, Melissa Baysari, associate professor at the University of Sydney, noted that while hospitals have implemented decision support systems, these are either "poorly taken up or worked around". 

"We need to improve the ‘fit’ between decision support technologies and the people who use them," she stressed.

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https://www.hinz.org.nz/news/584967/Health-apps-vulnerable-to-hacking-through-APIs.htm

Health apps vulnerable to hacking through APIs

Wednesday, 27 October 2021  

NEWS - eHealthNews.nz editor Rebecca McBeth

New research showing third-party apps integrating with electronic health record (EHR) systems are vulnerable to hacking comes as no surprise to a New Zealand cybersecurity specialist who says the local situation is likely “even worse”.

Cybersecurity company
Approov had an analyst and ‘recovering hacker’ test the vulnerability of three production application program interfaces (APIs), that allow a mobile app to pull data from EHRs in the US.

With a single patient login account, the analyst was able to access more than 4 million patient and clinician records and more than half of the mobile apps tested had hardcoded API keys and tokens that would enable hackers to attack the APIs

The APIs tested use the Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) standard for healthcare data.

Chief executive of local managed security provider Medical IT Advisors, Faustin Roman, says the FHIR standard is great, but like any other standard or policy, the key is how it is being implemented and maintained.
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https://www.crn.com.au/news/brisbanes-act-logistics-scores-25-million-ehealth-queensland-it-services-contract-571896

Brisbane's ACT Logistics scores $25 million eHealth Queensland IT services contract

By Nico Arboleda on Oct 28, 2021 1:00PM

Brisbane-based IT product lifecycle services specialist ACT Logistics has secured a multi-year contract with eHealth Queensland for IT services.

The seven-year contract, which ACT estimates would be worth some $25 million, is for the provision and support of product lifecycle management services, working with IT hardware supplier Dell Australia. ACT said the two companies were chosen from a field of eight candidates.

ACT is tasked to provide onsite hardware installation, hardware decommissioning, image creation and management and customised hardware support services.

eHealth Queensland, operating under the state's Department of Health, supports the IT needs of Queensland's health services and its 16 hospitals.

“Although ACT Logistics is not a hardware supplier, we have come to be known as the leaders in ICT hardware asset and logistics management by challenging and disrupting the traditional way the market has approached this space,” ACT Logistics managing director Alex Farenden said.

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http://www.healthintersections.com.au/?p=3072

Under the hood: Australian International Covid Certificate

Posted on October 28, 2021 by Grahame Grieve

I’ve just spent a day looking under the hood at the Australian international covid certificates, and I thought I’d post a few observations here.

You can get these covid Vaccination Certificates in various ways, but I got mine from the medicare express app. In order to get it, you have to enter your passport details, and they have to match government records or your Australian passport or visa. I have at least one friend who can’t get one because he doesn’t have either of those (some people legally here don’t).

What you get is a PDF that contains a QR code. The QR code represents the following JSON (not encoded or encrypted – this is what any bar code scanner will give you):

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https://www.hospitalhealth.com.au/content/technology/news/eastern-health-teams-up-with-my-emergency-doctor-to-deliver-virtual-care-323953844

Eastern Health teams up with My Emergency Doctor to deliver virtual care

Tuesday, 26 October, 2021


Melbourne’s Box Hill Hospital has bolstered its Emergency Department workforce through an arrangement that provides them scalable access to virtual senior emergency specialists My Emergency Doctor.

The partnership will provide additional specialist emergency physician support to the hospital to see low-acuity presentations at peak times using telehealth. It will allow them to treat non-urgent patients more quickly and extend their overall emergency department capacity to cater for an even higher volume of patients.

Eastern Health Director of Medical Services Dr Peter Jordan said the model was designed to service patients who were relatively stable but needed assessment.

“At times of high demand we can access highly skilled and qualified senior medical staff to help us see the large number of patients who come to us. It is a better experience for patients,” Dr Jordan said.

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Alcidion

Q1 FY22 Quarterly Activities Report and Appendix 4C

 

Melbourne, Australia – Alcidion Group Limited (‘Alcidion’ or the ‘Company’) today releases its Appendix 4C for the quarter ended 30 September 2021 (Q1 FY22) and a business update detailing its operational highlights.
Highlights:

  • New contracted revenue sold in Q1 of $2.7M - with $2.4M of that to be recognised in FY22
  • Total contracted revenue to be recognised in FY22 stands at $17.2m at the end of Q1 - up 17% on prior year Q1. With a further $2.2M of scheduled renewal revenue expected to be converted to contracted revenue over the course of the year
  • Cash receipts of $6.6M, an increase of 2.3% on the prior corresponding period (pcp)
  • Strong cash balance of $21.5M as at 30 September 2021
  • Since the end of the quarter a further $3.1M of revenue has been sold, this includes significant contracts with Queen’s Hospital Burton (ExtraMed) and Sydney Local Health District (Miya Precision, virtual care) and a 3-year extension for support and maintenance with Royal Derby Hospital (ExtraMed)

Alcidion’s Managing Director Kate Quirke said, “Alcidion has continued to build on the momentum of FY21, adding $2.7M of new contracted revenue, including renewals, during what is historically the slowest quarter of the year, resulting in contracted revenue at the end of Q1 of $17.2M”.

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ANDHealth CEO Appointed as a Member of the Council of the National Health and Medical Research Council   

 

 

ANDHealth is delighted to announce that CEO and Managing Director, Bronwyn Le Grice, has been appointed by the Hon Greg Hunt, the Australian Minister for Health and Aged Care, as a Member of the Council of the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) for the 2021-2024 triennium.
 
The NMHRC funds high quality health and medical research to build research capability, support researchers, encourage the translation of research into better health outcomes and promote the highest ethical standards for health and medical research.
 
“It is deeply humbling to receive this appointment,” Le Grice commented. “The NHMRC represents the highest level of leadership in the funding of health and medical research and training, in providing advice on improving health outcomes, through prevention, diagnosis and treatment of disease and the provision of health care, and it is deeply flattering to be asked to play a small role in this very big purpose.”
 
Gavin Fox-Smith, Chair of ANDHealth, applauded the appointment. “As a dedicated digital health and commercialisation professional, Bronwyn’s appointment recognises the increasingly important role of technology and digital health in the future of Australia’s healthcare system and the need for our health and medical research to result in translation into improvements in the health and wellbeing of all Australians.”
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https://www.itwire.com/business-it/guardant-health-deploys-rafay-systems%E2%80%99-kubernetes-operations-platform.html

Tuesday, 26 October 2021 12:47

Guardant Health deploys Rafay Systems’ Kubernetes Operations Platform

By Rafay Systems

COMPANY NEWS: Precision oncology company Guardant Health has deployed Rafay Systems’ Kubernetes Operations Platform to manage and maintain the medical research team’s high-compute analytics applications.

Guardant’s high-performance computing (HPC) solution analyses biological samples from clinics and laboratories for oncology research. It combines healthcare research and clinical data with developers’ algorithms, and requires the most stringent internal service level availability.

Given the critical nature of the team’s research, it is imperative that the HPC never go down. If it fails, the company delays critical oncology data that have the potential to save lives.

Given Guardant Health’s prior experience with managing the complexity of Kubernetes, the DevOps/SRE team knew exactly what it needed to streamline Kubernetes operations and ensure critical availability of its HPC solution.

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https://www.itwire.com/guest-articles/guest-events/intersystems-shares-vision-for-innovations-in-data-at-virtual-summit-2021.html

Tuesday, 19 October 2021 14:39

InterSystems shares vision for innovations in data at Virtual Summit 2021

By InterSystems

EVENT INVITATION: InterSystems, a creative data technology provider dedicated to helping customers solve the most critical scalability, interoperability and speed challenges, today announced that it will share its vision for Innovations in Data with the healthcare industry at the InterSystems Virtual Summit 2021.

Every year, the InterSystems Summit event provides technology information and peer interaction. This year it takes the form of a virtual event for the second time, with sessions running from 26 October to 29 October. Sessions can be viewed live or on demand so organisations around the world can easily attend, and participation is free.

InterSystems thought leaders will present on new developments in healthcare analytics, interoperability and FHIR, cloud computing, and patient engagement and virtual care. Healthcare providers, and healthtech and medtech suppliers, can also hear from other organisations about turning data into actionable knowledge, insights and value.

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https://www.areanews.com.au/story/7484280/local-leader-help-set-future-direction-of-national-health-strategy/?cs=9363

October 27 2021 - 10:00AM

Griffith can help set future direction of national health strategy

·         Margaret King

Community News

Time is running out to participate in the National Digital Health Strategy survey which closes in November.

All Australians are invited to provide feedback which take approximately 15 minutes to complete.

During the survey you will be asked about how technology can make a difference and your experience with the healthcare system.

Australians are more digitally connected now than we have ever been before with nine out of 10 of us owning a smartphone and are accessing all sorts of online services and information.

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/companies/telstra-to-buy-digicel-in-25bn-deal/news-story/3566e93dafa3c129ebc9d4f20555d86e

Telstra links with Canberra to buy Digicel in $2.5bn deal

David Swan

October 25, 2021

Telstra has finalised a deal in partnership with the Australian government to buy the Pacific operations of telecommunications firm Digicel for $US1.6bn ($2.14bn), plus an additional $US250m subject to business performance over the next three years.

Telstra is contributing $US270 in equity, with the federal government providing the remaining $US1.33bn.

Digicel, founded by Irish billionaire Denis O’Brien, is the largest mobile phone carrier in the Pacific and operates 3G and 4G networks across Papua New Guinea, Fiji, Samoa, Vanuatu and Tahiti with about 2.5 million subscribers.

Its acquisition by Telstra has been widely viewed as a political move to block the rising regional influence of China. The Australian previously reported there were fears that Chinese ownership of Digicel Pacific would give it an enhanced ability to intercept communications across the Pacific nations.

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https://www.afr.com/companies/telecommunications/telstra-snaps-up-digicel-for-2-1b-with-government-backing-20211025-p592s7

Taxpayers bankroll Telstra’s $2.1b Digicel buy

Lucas Baird and John Kehoe

Updated Oct 25, 2021 – 9.47am, first published at 9.05am

Telstra has agreed to buy strategically important South Pacific-based telco Digicel Pacific for $US1.6 billion ($2.1 billion) in a joint venture deal funded mostly by taxpayers.

The price tag could even get a $US250 million boost if Digicel meets certain business targets over the next three years, according to Telstra’s ASX statement.

“Digicel Pacific has already invested significant capital in PNG, which is its largest market, to achieve extensive network coverage including 4G to 55 per cent of the population,” Telstra boss Andy Penn said. 

The Morrison government has stalked Digicel with Telstra in tow in recent months due to national security concerns if the asset were to fall into Beijing’s hands through a buyout by a Chinese state-owned company.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/nbn-price-inquiry-encouraged-to-give-in-depth-consideration-to-keeping-cvc-571808

NBN price inquiry 'encouraged' to give 'in-depth consideration' to keeping CVC

By Ry Crozier on Oct 27, 2021 12:37PM

Revamped pricing model proposed.

A regulatory inquiry examining the feasibility of flat-rate NBN pricing has been asked to give “in-depth consideration” to a heavily tweaked version of NBN Co’s current model pricing model that would retain bandwidth charges but introduce volume discounts.

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) revealed last week [pdf] that a pair of papers were presented to the working group that appear to push some elements of NBN Co’s agenda.

The first paper proposed maintaining the connectivity virtual circuit (CVC) instead of scrapping it as the five retail service providers (RSPs) representing over 96 percent of fixed-line connections want.

A second “confidential” paper tackles the “long-run cost of adding network capacity” to the NBN.

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https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/australia-post-nbn-pay-out-300-million-in-bonuses-during-covid-20211025-p592yu.html

Australia Post, NBN pay out $300 million in bonuses during COVID

By Lisa Visentin

October 26, 2021 — 5.00am

Taxpayer-owned businesses Australia Post and NBN have collectively shelled out almost $300 million in personal bonuses to employees over the past two years as the COVID-19 pandemic has wreaked havoc on businesses and families.

Both companies reined in their total spending on bonus payments in the 2021 financial year, with NBN splashing $46.5 million on staff, down from $78 million in the 2020 financial year, while Australia Post rewarded employees to the tune of $79 million compared with $92 million last year.

This amounts to $295.9 million across the two years of the pandemic, the companies’ annual reports show.

Public fury prompted a government crackdown on generous executive bonuses, with the Australian Public Service Commission recently issuing updated guidance to Commonwealth entities on senior executive bonuses, saying not to pay them unless there were “exceptional circumstances or a contractual obligation”.

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Enjoy!

David.