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."

Thursday, March 31, 2022

Heavens There Are Some Total Fools In The World!

This popped up last week:

Telstra Mullumbimby tower fire sparks fury

By Natalie Apostolou on Mar 18, 2022 12:58PM

Town back offline.

Pummelled by rain, decimated by floods and enraged by ineffective government support during a time of social and environmental crisis, the bucolic town of Mullumbimby, part of the Byron Bay Shire, has now suffered another total mobile communications outage following a 3am fire at its Telstra tower.

A truck driver passing the tower alerted authorities and dialled triple zero.

Telstra Regional general manager Mike Marom, this morning confirmed that the fire appeared to have been deliberately lit and described the act as ‘reprehensible’.

NSW Police and Telstra are investigating the blaze at the tower on River Terrace, Mullumbimby, which has caused extensive damage to the top of the tower and destroyed antennas, transmitters and receivers. 

“At a time like this, when communications are so crucial to flood recovery, to have our mobile site damaged and critical telecommunications taken out is reprehensible.

“What is already a difficult time for Mullumbimby has been made that much harder by what we suspect is an unnecessary, dangerous and selfish act of vandalism,” Marom said.

(Source: Fire & Rescue NSW Station 388 Mullumbimby)

Anti-5G protests

The tower has been a lightning rod for controversy, with anti-5G protestors guarding and monitoring the tower and its upgrades to 5G over the last year.

Telstra confirmed to iTnews that the tower was fully upgraded to 5G only last weekend.

The Telstra infrastructure is the carrier’s only mobile base station in the Mullumbimby area, and it services over 3600 people, many in remote properties.

There is currently no mobile coverage into Greater Mullumbimby, with no definite indication of when services can be restored, and outages in neighbouring South Golden Beach have also been reported. 

During the first and most critical week of the floods in early March, Greater Mullumbimby lost all mobile connectivity including access to 000. 

More here:

https://www.itnews.com.au/news/telstra-mullumbimby-tower-fire-sparks-fury-577546

One really wonders what should be done with these fools, given the costs of the fix and the risk not having phones poses. Maybe compulsory gardening in and around 5G sites for a period of years when not in jail!

Given every telco regulator has said 5G is safe I don’t follow other than to say this lunacy is seemingly frequent given similar nonsense went on with the introduction of 4G decades ago!

While also on 5G it seems some are not ready for other reasons.

Friday, 25 March 2022 10:19

A Deloitte Access Economics report reveals lack of business readiness for 5G adoption

By Chris Coughlan

A report from Deloitte Access Economics has warned part of the potential $94 billion boost to Australia’s GDP over the next nine years from 5G technology is at risk from delayed business readiness and slow industry adoption.

The report, titled 5G Unleashed: Realising the potential of the next generation of mobile technology, was commissioned by the Australian Mobile Telecommunications Association (AMTA) to examine the economic impact of adoption levels of 5G-enabled technologies and innovations, and the policy and regulatory principles required to support accelerated adoption.

The report found that, while Australia has been a world leader in mobile telecommunications for decades and is currently ranked 3rd globally, it is at risk of falling to 9th by 2025 due to lack of business readiness for change and a policy regime that needs to be recharged.

Australian businesses were found to be slow when it comes to readiness for adoption of 5G despite 62% of businesses leaders across four sectors agreeing 5G will accelerate the growth of their business, with 59% saying they have no strategy to realise 5G and nearly 1 in 3 (30%) having no plans to implement 5G, the report shows.


The report’s economic modelling estimates 5G will increase Australia’s GDP by $67 billion by 2030 based on the current trajectory for adoption, however an additional $27 billion can be realised by maintaining Australia’s global leadership position through accelerated adoption – a 40% uplift in economic benefit over nine years.

Deloitte Access Economics partner and technology media and communications lead John O’Mahony said technology adoption is an intense race, and the earlier Australian business can develop and see the potential for 5G applications, the larger the productivity benefits.

Lots more here:

https://itwire.com/your-it-news/5g/a-deloitte-access-economics-report-reveals-lack-of-business-readiness-for-5g-adoption.html

I really do wonder what it is that has conspiracy promoters so excited – some one must be making a buck somehow!

David.

 

Wednesday, March 30, 2022

I Have To Say This Site Looks Like A Pretty Dodgy Initiative To Me, But Many Are!

This popped up last week:

24 March 2022

Beware Big Pharma bearing free consults

By Francis Wilkins

Preconception multivitamin supplier Elevit launched a free text chat service last week that allows Australian women who are planning a pregnancy to talk to healthcare professionals online.

Elevit is Bayer’s leading prenatal brand, with Bayer Australia sole sponsor of the “Ask a Doctor” chat service. Bayer says enquiries about Elevit products should be directed to Bayer’s medical information team.

But while Elevit emphasises the Ask a Doctor service is not set up to directly spruik the company’s preconception multivitamins products – and notes the service is not intended to replace a face-to-face medical consultation – RACGP President Dr Karen Price warned such online services warrant concern.

“There are numerous risks and downsides to opportunistic services like this offering ‘GP services’ via telehealth or online,” Dr Price told Wild Health. 

A key concern is that these services are fundamentally responding to a business opportunity rather than delivering healthcare. They won’t have the patient’s medical history, and this can lead to fragmented and poor-quality care.

“Preconception care is important – it is about giving a child the best start in life. And a patient’s usual GP is best placed to provide it, because they know their patient and will provide comprehensive, longitudinal care – from preconception, through pregnancy and after birth – and they will consider their patient’s medical history, current concerns, mental health and myriad other issues involved with having a baby.”

Ask a Doctor is staffed by Australia-qualified GPs working for independent provider Meeting Doctors, which has a head office in Barcelona, Spain, and provides similar chat services in 13 countries. The GPs have “freedom of practice and are not obligated to recommend any treatments or products”, Bayer said in a statement, with Meeting Doctors responsible for quality control of the healthcare advice.

Ask a Doctor doesn’t replace the need for a GP, said Melbourne GP Dr Preeya Alexander, whose role in the program was to emphasise the importance of preconception care.

“What it does do, I think, is it actually captures people and hopefully acts as an adjuvant to the GP preconception consults. We know that 50% of women are currently missing out on preconception care – which is huge. This is hopefully going to actually capture them and direct them to the GP for that early conversation.

“It’s not a replacement [for a face-to-face consultation] because this GP is not going to order your preconception blood tests,” Dr Alexander said. “They’re not going to be able to order genetic carrier screening if you’re going to proceed with a test of that. 

“It’s a telehealth consult in the sense that someone can find out what types of supplements they need to start, ideally preconception. Like the idea of folic acid. [And] they can find out what the physical activity guidelines are, preconception.

“You certainly get a lot of health information, but it definitely doesn’t replace the need for a GP consultation because this person can’t check your blood pressure, calculate your body mass index, and order rubella or HIV [vaccinations] – all the rest of it.” 

More here:

https://wildhealth.net.au/beware-big-pharma-bearing-free-consults/

To me a service like this runs the risk of having the user think they are getting full range of investigations and services they need when clearly a telehealth consultation cannot do that and make the patient properly aware of the aspects of care they are missing out on.

It goes without saying they are also not establishing the patient - care professional relationship which will see them through what comes next, as Dr. Price suggests.

It also goes without saying that offering the service is hardly likely to be an altruistic act. You can be sure Elevit has a profit making angle buried somewhere! (selling id data to the formula makers for example)

The site is owned by a large multinational (Bayer – Revenue of 40 Billion Euros in 2020) - and passes on data to Goggle, Facebook and so on for marketing and advertising services – enough said!

See Privacy Statement found here:

https://www.elevit.com.au/privacy

I also note the tablets are hardly cheap ($30 – 60 per 100) and come in various formulations from pre-conception to breast-feeding supplements!

Recognising that all free web services cost one way or another it is up to the user how they wish to play things I reckon!

Just go into such sites with one’s eyes open!

David.

 

Tuesday, March 29, 2022

Commentators and Journalists Weigh In On Digital Health And Related Privacy, Safety, Social Media And Security Matters. Lots Of Interesting Perspectives - March 29, 2022.

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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! It’s 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://www.digitalhealth.gov.au/about-us/strategies-and-plans/corporate-plans

ADHA - Corporate plans

An overview of our strategic direction.

Our corporate plan can be downloaded from the following links.

Australian Digital Health Agency Corporate Plan 2021-22

Download Corporate Plan 2021–22 (PDF, 3.03 MB)

This corporate plan covers a four-year reporting period, 2021–22 to 2024–25, as required under paragraph 35(1)(b) of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability (PGPA) Act 2013 and in accordance with section 16E of the PGPA Rule 2014.

Australian Digital Health Agency Corporate Plan 2020–21 

Download Corporate Plan 2020–21 (PDF, 3.23 MB)

This corporate plan covers a four-year reporting period, 2020–21 to 2023–24, as required under paragraph 35(1)(b) of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability (PGPA) Act 2013 and in accordance with section 16E of the PGPA Rule 2014.

Australian Digital Health Agency Corporate Plan 2019–20

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/anz/australias-private-hospital-operators-warn-costs-proposed-cybersecurity-law-could-cause-icu

Australia's private hospital operators warn costs of proposed cybersecurity law could cause ICU closures

The government’s new cybersecurity bill could add millions of dollars to the budgets of hospitals already contending with the price of COVID-19.

By Lynne Minion

March 24, 2022 10:43 PM

The cost of complying to the Australian government's proposed new cybersecurity obligations could lead to some hospitals closing their intensive care units, a parliamentary inquiry has heard.

The government is seeking to strengthen the defences of the nation’s critical infrastructure by imposing cyber obligations, but private hospital operators claim they simply can't afford them.

The proposed Security Legislation Amendment (Critical Infrastructure Protection) Bill 2022 will require organisations, including hospitals with ICUs, to develop a "risk management programme" to detect and defend against attacks, including threats of foreign interference to supply chains. High-risk employees who could engage in corporate espionage and sabotage will also need to be identified.

WHY IT MATTERS

In evidence to a public hearing into the bill, Toby Hall, Group CEO of Catholic Health Australia, the nation’s largest non-government provider of healthcare services, said robust cybersecurity was already in place and called for the government to pay for costs generated by the legislation.

"Our member hospitals cannot meet the prescriptive requirements of this bill without financial support from the Commonwealth Government," Hall said.

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https://digitalhealth.org.au/blog/aidh-and-ingena-welcome-a-vital-step-forward-in-australian-healthcare/

AIDH and InGeNA welcome a vital step forward in Australian healthcare

Mar 21, 2022 | Advocacy, AIDH news, Digital Health, Genomics, InGeNA

The Australasian Institute of Digital Health (AIDH) and the Industry Genomics Network Alliance (InGeNA) welcome the announcement by Minister for Health, Greg Hunt to establish Genomics Australia, a national agency to support the integration of genomic medicine as a standard of healthcare in Australia.

AIDH CEO Dr Louise Schaper said, “This is a vital step toward precision healthcare in Australia. All Australians deserve state of the art healthcare, which is tailored towards individual’s needs. Precision health promises to transform the way we prevent, diagnose, treat and monitor our health by taking into account individual genes, environment and lifestyle. The establishment of Genomics Australia is a significant step towards achieving that promise.”

Precision health uses a wide range of information, such as clinical observations, patient generated data, and genomics. It triangulates this information within the context of lifestyle, environment, and medical history to inform and personalise prevention, diagnosis and treatment at an individual, patient cohort, and population level.

Dr Schaper added, “What is needed next is an agenda for developing the evidence-base supporting the use of genomics, establishing the right policies and mature data infrastructure to integrate genomics into healthcare, and most importantly, ensuring our workforce is ready to deliver care in the age of precision health. InGeNA and the Institute, have already commenced this work.”

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https://www.zdnet.com/article/labor-opposes-controversial-anti-trolling-bill-as-it-may-make-online-trolling-worse/

Labor opposes controversial 'anti-trolling' Bill as it may make online trolling worse

Labor Senator Kim Carr has blasted the federal government's proposed online defamation laws, saying the laws could do more harm than good.

Written by Campbell Kwan, Journalist

on March 24, 2022 | Topic: Government: AU

Australia's federal government has been pushing for new "anti-trolling legislation" that would see defamation liability shift from owners of social media pages onto social media platforms as it believes the legislative changes would go a long way towards reducing online harm, but the Labor party does not agree.

Labor Senator Kim Carr said his party would block the Bill as it does not actually address online trolling and may exacerbate its effects.

"Evidence from multiple witnesses appearing before this Committee, including the government department that drafted the bill, conclusively establishes that the bill is no such thing," Labor Senators Kim Carr wrote in a report [PDF] published by the Senate committee tasked with reviewing the laws.

"To the contrary, not only does this Bill fail to provide any practical means to combat the scrouge of online trolling, in providing blanket protection from liability to those hosting defamatory comments on the web pages they own and administer, as well as the extensive legal safe harbor it provides to social media companies hosting defamatory material, the bill is likely to make the problem of online trolling worse."

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https://www.digitalhealth.gov.au/about-us/strategies-and-plans/workforce-strategy

ADHA - Workforce Strategy

Australian Digital Health Agency Workforce Strategy 2021-2026

The Australian Digital Health Agency’s Workforce Strategy 2021-2026 has been developed to govern how we as an Agency will build, strengthen and future proof our workforce over the next five years.

Download the Australian Digital Health Agency Workforce Strategy 2021-2026  (PDF, 9.9 MB)

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https://allevents.in/cloverdale/esmart-workshop-my-health-record/10000260854632227

eSmart Workshop: My Health Record

Mon Mar 28, 2022  ADHA Propaganda

Find Tickets

eSmart Workshop: My Health Record

Learn how to access your My Health Record online.

About this Event

For adults.

This session will be held in the Innovation Lab.

It's never been more important to have a good understanding of government services and how to access your health records. Join the experts from Technologically Speaking to learn how to access your My Health Record online, download documents and so much more!

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https://itwire.com/your-it-news/home-it/video-it-s-time-for-google-s-health-check-up-event-for-2022,-on-the-way-to-google-i-o-in-may.html

Friday, 25 March 2022 10:02

VIDEO: It's time for Google's Health Check Up event for 2022, on the way to Google I/O in May

By Alex Zaharov-Reutt

Google's I/O event is on 11 and 12 May in the US, but overnight, Google held its annual The Check Up event - an 80 minute event announcing several health innovations across Search, AI, YouTube, Fitbit and more.

Technology helping track our health is either an incredible development that will keep us healthy, or it will turn into a semi-dystopian nightmare for "Islanders" as seen in Ewen McGregor's "The Island" movie, where the tech can be used so others force you to health - whether you want it, or not, and for potentially nefarious purposes.

Of course, there's a lot more to that movie, but in the interests of not spoiling it for anyone that hasn't seen it, I'll stop here.

Now, in the free world, whether you're healthy or not is a choice. Not being healthy is a silly choice, but how many people are truly 100% healthy? And how many people turn to what is known as "Dr. Google" to diagnose themselves before visiting a doctor?

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https://startsat60.com/media/opinion/bloggers/welcome-to-the-21st-century

Welcome to the 21st century

David Wilson

Mar 25, 2022

Back in the 1950s, our parents promised us the 21 st Century would be an amazing time filled with flying cars, self-mowing lawns, and holidays to the Moon. They lied.

Our lives instead are ruled by stupid little gizmos called Apps on smartphones. And sadly many Oldies are feeling increasingly shut out of this confusing new world. The Queensland Government- they who close the borders at the mere hint of a sniffle- recently declared that Queenslanders would soon be converting to a digital driver’s licence in a mobile phone app.

This will replace the little plastic licence with the photo that makes the bearer look like a serial killer. Or is that just mine?

Tech addicts are delighted. Another app to cram onto their smartphones beside the app that accesses the internet, orders a food delivery, controls the lights to your home tells the time in Kyiv and has the certificate to prove you are jabbed against the plague.

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/technology/local-innovators-need-more-support/news-story/3302f552f9a7a50362244980aa949f98

Local innovators ‘need more support’

MICHAEL BROMLEY

We find ourselves in an unprecedented health and climate crisis. We are at a critical point in history, and have a unique opportunity to hit the reset button, and put Australia on a more sustainable path. But to achieve this, we need to transform the sectors that form the backbone of our economy – our healthcare system, our industries, our infrastructure, energy and transport systems. In short, we need to transform our everyday life.

When we talk about building a ‘sustainable’ tech-driven economy, sustainable has, in this case, two meanings. It reflects both our economy and our ecology. It is about making sure that the economy is driven not just now, but also into the future. Australia’s economy is driven primarily on digging things out of the ground, mining and selling them, and that’s both not sustainable for our economy (because we eventually run out), and ecology (because we’re overloading carbon into the atmosphere).

The good news is, we have a unique window of opportunity to transform our economy, but there is work to be done to get there.

Evolving the business model

Companies now overwhelmingly embrace sustainability as integral to their mission. While encouraging, there is a larger blind spot we need to address when it comes to sustainability – the pathway for sustainable technology innovation in Australia doesn’t exist.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/anz-completes-its-first-stablecoin-transaction-577809

ANZ completes its first stablecoin transaction

By Kate Weber on Mar 24, 2022 12:56PM

Enables A$DC payment.

ANZ Banking Group announced it has completed its first Australian stablecoin transaction with a cryptocurrency called A$DC.

The stablecoin transaction was successfully completed for Victor Smorgon Group via private wealth management firm for digital assets, Zerocap.

A stablecoin is a type of cryptocurrency pegged to a commodity or currency for greater price stability.

ANZ stated it “minted” 30 million A$DC using an ANZ built Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) via a smart contract through digital assets platform, Fireblocks.

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https://wildhealth.net.au/postcard-from-the-possible-future-orlando-florida-himss-2022/

24 March 2022

Postcard from the possible future – Orlando, Florida HIMSS 2022

Government HIMSS Interoperability

By Jeremy Knibbs

After the huge success of Disneyland Anaheim California, which launched in 1955, Walt Disney, realising that 70% of the population of the US resided East of the Mississippi river, went hunting for an East coast location for something even bigger than Anaheim. 

Of all possible locations, he found it flying over swampland in Orlando Florida, where, at the time, for every 16 residents, of which there was only about 80,000 back then (over 2 million today), there was one alligator. That’s a lot of alligators. 

When news first hit the press that Disney was planning on transforming empty swamp wasteland in nowheresville Florida, into the next big thing in family entertainment, the press pounced on the project as the likely biggest white elephant in the history of theme parks, and the probable beginning of the end of the Disney company’s incredible run of success and growth.  

Disney, as he did so much through his career, broke ranks with convention and “the norm”, saw a future, and then went about obsessively building it.  

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https://www.digitalhealth.gov.au/initiatives-and-programs/my-health-record/whats-inside/advance-care-planning/advance-care-document-custodian

Advance care document custodian

Someone who holds a copy of your advance care planning document.

Making sure your wishes are known

An advance care document custodian is either a person or an organisation that holds a copy of your advance care planning document. A healthcare provider may contact your custodian to get access to your documents.

People who can access your record will be able to view your advance care document custodian information. Find out more about who can access a record.

​​​​​Details of up to two custodians can be stored in your record. Saved custodians will be displayed on the Advance Care Document Custodian page

Advance care document custodian consent

The Advance Care Document Custodian section in your Advance Care Plan is where you can add the details of the contact person, or organisation. You must obtain their consent before uploading their details to your record.

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https://www.hospitalhealth.com.au/content/clinical-services/news/digital-twins-cut-surgery-time-for-children-with-severe-hip-deformities-941520610

Digital 'twins' cut surgery time for children with severe hip deformities

Wednesday, 23 March, 2022


Dr Martina Barzan and her team at Griffith University have created computerised ‘twins’ of child patients that would enable surgeons to better plan, test and execute complex surgeries for severe hip deformities.

The development is said to halve surgery time, which means getting back to normal walking and sitting sooner.

Dr David Bade from the Queensland Children's Hospital has trialled the technique and agrees that using the 3D-printed guides reduces his surgical time.

“This is particularly so with very difficult deformity cases,” he said. “With less surgical time, there are less X-rays and radiation doses, and less blood loss for these young patients.”

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https://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=a80b781e-407c-4336-a1a7-632b99976c2c

Australia: ACCC consults on regulatory reform for digital platforms
Blog Global Compliance News

Baker McKenzie   Adrian J. LawrenceAnne L. PetterdAnne-Marie AllgroveToby PattenGeorgina Foster and Lynsey Edgar

Australia March 21 2022

In brief

On 28 February 2022, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) opened a public consultation on options for legislative reform to address concerns relating to the perceived dominance of certain digital platform services in Australia.

The consultation discussion paper outlines options for addressing potential perceived harms to competition, consumers, and business users across a range of digital platform services markets, such as the social media, search, app, online retail and ad tech markets. The ACCC seeks stakeholder views on the need for further regulatory tools to address competition and consumer issues in the digital platform services market, as well as potential options for regulatory reform.

Contents

  1. Key takeaways
  2. In depth

The many significant proposals in the paper include:

  • algorithm transparency obligations;
  • prohibitions on so-called “dark patterns” in platform design; and
  • a tailored merger control regime for certain digital platforms.

Submissions to the consultation are due by 1 April 2022, and these will inform the ACCC’s fifth interim report in the Digital Platform Services Inquiry, which is due by 30 September 2022.

This is an important opportunity for stakeholders to have their views heard and potentially influence the direction of future regulatory reform.

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https://itwire.com/government-tech-news/technology-regulation/the-acma-releases-disinformation-report-with-government-to-introduce-new-disinformation-laws.html

Tuesday, 22 March 2022 12:52

The ACMA releases disinformation report with Government to introduce new disinformation laws

By Chris Coughlan

The report includes an examination into the online disinformation and misinformation environment in Australia and the ACMA’s assessment of the Australian Code of Practice for Disinformation and Misinformation.

The ACMA says the report finds that most Australians are concerned about, and have experienced, online misinformation.

The propagation of falsehoods and conspiracies undermines public health efforts, impacts businesses, causes harm to democratic institutions, and in some cases, incites individuals to carry out acts of violence, the ACMA states.

The digital platform industry in Australia, steered by the industry association, DIGI, navigated a range of complex matters to put in place a voluntary industry-developed code of practice to address this issue.

The ACMA’s report identifies several opportunities for industry to make improvements to the Code and raises concerns regarding the quality of platform reporting and the strength of administrative processes.

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https://insightplus.mja.com.au/2022/10/now-is-the-time-for-advance-care-planning-with-patients/

Now is the time for advance care planning with patients

Authored by Craig Sinclair

Issue 10 / 21 March 2022

IT’S National Advance Care Planning Week and there is no better time to engage with patients and their loved ones about future health care wishes.

Over recent years, the global COVID-19 pandemic along with the impact of extreme weather events and natural disasters have reminded us of our vulnerability to sudden health events, and the limitations of our health, aged and social care systems. Providing quality care for our ageing population will call on health care professionals to assist patients and their loved ones in making decisions in the context of this uncertainty.

Advance care planning is a person-centred process, in which patients can discuss their future health care wishes with family members, health care professionals and trusted others. These discussions may lead patients to document their wishes, specifying future treatment preferences or identifying one or more substitute decision makers. Across all Australian states and territories, people with decision-making capacity are able to legally document their wishes in advance care directives.

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https://www.theguardian.com/media/2022/mar/21/digital-code-of-conduct-fails-to-stop-all-harms-of-misinformation-acma-warns

Digital code of conduct fails to stop all harms of misinformation, Acma warns

Need for damage to be serious and imminent before Facebook and Google take action means ‘chronic’ problems build, watchdog says – citing mistrust of vaccines

Paul Karp @Paul_Karp

Mon 21 Mar 2022 16.30 AEDTLast modified on Mon 21 Mar 2022 16.31 AEDT

The code of conduct adopted by digital platforms, including Facebook and Google, is “too narrow” to prevent all the harms of misinformation and disinformation, Australia’s media regulator has warned.

The requirement that harm from social media posts must be both “serious” and “imminent” before tech companies take action has allowed longer term “chronic harms” including vaccine misinformation and the erosion of democracy, according to the Australian Communication and Media Authority.

The Morrison government released Acma’s June 2021 report on the misinformation and disinformation code on Monday, promising to help boost the regulator’s power to demand information from digital platforms and give it reserve powers to create new rules for the industry.

Labor accused the government of promising the new powers in the “dying days of the 46th parliament”.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/acma-to-government-digital-platforms-code-needs-to-be-stronger-577665

ACMA to government: digital platforms code needs to be stronger

By Richard Chirgwin on Mar 22, 2022 11:36AM

Government releases report it sat on since June.

The Australian Communications and Media Authority could have its powers to try and regulate online misinformation expanded, communications minister Paul Fletcher has announced.

The ACMA received its regulatory powers in February 2021, following the government’s 2019 Digital Platforms report.

In a report dated June 2021 but released yesterday, the ACMA now says the code of conduct it oversees, developed by industry association DIGI, defines ‘misinformation’ so narrowly that platforms like Facebook and Twitter rarely have to take content down under the code.

“In our view, the scope of the code is limited by its definitions. In particular, a threshold of both ‘serious’ and 'imminent’ harm must be reached before action is required under the code”, ACMA said in the report.

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https://www.smh.com.au/politics/federal/government-to-introduce-laws-to-combat-misinformation-disinformation-20220320-p5a68e.html

Government to introduce laws to combat misinformation, disinformation

By Zoe Samios

March 20, 2022 — 10.30pm

The federal government has pledged to introduce new laws to help reduce the spread of harmful content on social media, as the world’s most powerful tech companies try to combat the deluge of misinformation and disinformation about the coronavirus pandemic and the war in Ukraine online.

Communications Minister Paul Fletcher is planning to introduce legislation that will give Australia’s media watchdog more regulatory power over tech companies who fail to meet the standards of a voluntary misinformation and disinformation code of practice.

Under the code, misinformation is defined as false or misleading information that is likely to cause harm, while disinformation is false or misleading information that is distributed by users via spam and bots.

The new laws, which are expected to be introduced to parliament later this year, will make it easier to assess the effectiveness of self-regulation and help the government decide whether a compulsory code of practice needs to be introduced to tackle the issue.

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https://itwire.com/government/government-tech-policy/government-opens-new-afp-led-centre-to-tackle-online-crime.html

Monday, 21 March 2022 11:25

Government opens new AFP-led centre to tackle online crime

By Sam Varghese

The Federal Government has opened a new centre to combat online crime, to be led by the Australian Federal Police, alongside a national plan to combat online crimes.

The plan was agreed to by ministers in the states and territories last week.

Home Affairs Minister Karen Andrews said in a statement on Monday that the centre and the plan meant bringing together the experience, powers, capabilities and intelligence needed for a strong response to online crime.

“During the pandemic, cyber crime became one of the fastest growing and most prolific forms of crime committed against Australians," Andrews claimed.

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https://www.afr.com/companies/media-and-marketing/new-laws-to-fight-misinformation-online-20220320-p5a68l

New laws to fight misinformation online

Miranda Ward Media writer

Mar 20, 2022 – 10.30pm

The Morrison government will legislate to combat misinformation published online after a report found four of five Australian adults had seen incorrect information about COVID-19.

Communications Minister Paul Fletcher will announce plans on Monday to provide the industry regulator, the Australian Communications and Media Authority, with new powers to hold tech companies to account for harmful content on their platforms.

He will also release a report by the ACMA on the adequacy of the digital platforms’ disinformation and news quality measures one year after the launch of a voluntary code of practice designed to reduce the risk of online misinformation and disinformation.

“ACMA’s report highlights that disinformation and misinformation are significant and ongoing issues,” Mr Fletcher said.

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https://www.afr.com/companies/healthcare-and-fitness/how-traumatic-childbirth-led-to-creation-of-medtech-device-oli-20220317-p5a5ks?\

How traumatic childbirth led to creation of medtech device Oli

Yolanda Redrup Reporter

Mar 21, 2022 – 5.00am

When mechatronics engineer Sarah McDonald experienced the traumatic birth of her second child, Oliver, she knew there had to be a better way to monitor fetal and maternal health.

At 31 weeks, Ms McDonald spent a week in a hospital bed before undergoing a C-section – unable to move because doctors were afraid she could lose her baby, or her own life.

Neither occurred, but Ms McDonald discovered there had been no genuine innovation in maternal-fetal monitoring since the 1960s. In 2013, women in childbirth were still being monitored with the same technology used on their grandmothers.

The experience was the trigger for Ms McDonald to combine her engineering background with a PhD in medicine to create maternal-fetal monitoring medical device Oli – appropriately named after her son.

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https://www.digitalhealth.gov.au/initiatives-and-programs/my-health-record/whats-inside/medicare-information

Medicare information

Some information held by Services Australia may be available in your record.

Medicare information available in your record

Medicare information is collected by Services Australia and the Department of Veterans' Affairs (DVA). Some of the information held by Services Australia may be available in your record.

Information that may be available:

  • Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) information or, if applicable, Repatriation Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (RPBS) information – This includes information sourced from Medicare that the pharmacy sends to them.
  • Australian Immunisation Register (AIR) – This includes immunisations you have received that are recorded on the Australian Immunisation Register.
  • Australian Organ Donor Register (AODR) information – This includes details of any organ and/or tissue donation decisions you have made. Only decisions recorded with the Australian Organ Donor Register will be visible.
  • Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) information or, if applicable, Department of Veterans' Affairs (DVA) claims information – This includes details of any successful claims you have made in the past two years.

People who can access your record will be able to view this information. Find out more about who can access a record

-----

David.

Monday, March 28, 2022

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 28 March, 2022.

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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It was the busiest week since last year with all sorts of things going on – have fun browsing!

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https://www.ausdoc.com.au/news/plaintiff-lawyer-says-gps-should-record-every-telehealth-consult

Plaintiff lawyer says GPs should record every telehealth consult

Nick Mann says it will help doctors defend any medical negligence claims made against them

24th March 2022

By Antony Scholefield

A plaintiff lawyer is encouraging GPs to routinely record telehealth consultations, saying it can short-circuit medicolegal proceedings by removing arguments over what transpired in a consult.

Nick Mann, from the civil law firm Polaris Lawyers, says that over the past five years, an increasing number of his clients have told him they record their medical consultation without informing the doctor.

“Sometimes it’s because of medicolegal concerns but other times, they’re just stressed about remembering and want to be able to play it back,” he said.

“So, for doctors, I think the better way forward is to flip it, and to say, with your permission I will record the consultation.

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https://www.ausdoc.com.au/news/wanted-1000-gps-willing-stress-test-racgps-fellowship-exam-software

Wanted: 1000 GPs willing to 'stress test' the RACGP's fellowship exam software

They will be asked to work through a series of clinical questions for 45 minutes

23rd March 2022

By Siobhan Calafiore

The RACGP wants 1000 members to sit a written clinical exam on their computers next month so it can put its new exam software to the ultimate pressure test. 

The mock assessment on April 5 will form part of a series of trials ahead of the college’s return to online fellowship exams, which is expected to occur later this year.  

Any college member can sign up as a candidate. They will be asked to work through exam questions to test the platform’s functions for 45 minutes. 

It’s unclear whether doctors who take part will receive results, but they will be asked to give feedback on what they think of the process.  

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SafeScript NSW

SafeScript NSW is now available in your area.

 

Dear David More

To begin using SafeScript NSW, the real-time prescription monitoring system for NSW, you need to register. Registration is simple and will take less than 5 minutes.

Register Now

Visit the SafeScript NSW education and training webpage to access resources that cover:

·         how and when to use the SafeScript NSW system

·         information about monitored medicines and clinical practice

·         communication and care for patients using monitored medicines

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https://wildhealth.net.au/beware-big-pharma-bearing-free-consults/

24 March 2022

Beware Big Pharma bearing free consults

Technology Telehealth

By Francis Wilkins

Preconception multivitamin supplier Elevit launched a free text chat service last week that allows Australian women who are planning a pregnancy to talk to healthcare professionals online.

Elevit is Bayer’s leading prenatal brand, with Bayer Australia sole sponsor of the “Ask a Doctor” chat service. Bayer says enquiries about Elevit products should be directed to Bayer’s medical information team.

But while Elevit emphasises the Ask a Doctor service is not set up to directly spruik the company’s preconception multivitamins products – and notes the service is not intended to replace a face-to-face medical consultation – RACGP President Dr Karen Price warned such online services warrant concern.

“There are numerous risks and downsides to opportunistic services like this offering ‘GP services’ via telehealth or online,” Dr Price told Wild Health. 

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/bupa-elevates-digital-data-chief-to-apac-executive-team-577830

Bupa elevates digital, data chief to APAC executive team

By Staff Writer on Mar 25, 2022 6:45AM

Role filled by Belong’s former CTO.

Bupa has formally named Natalie Field as its chief digital and data officer for Asia Pacific, noting her role elevated the technology-based functions to the health insurer’s executive team.

Field joined Bupa in November last year; she was previously the chief technology officer for Telstra’s budget brand, Belong.

The insurer said in a LinkedIn post on Thursday that the chief digital and data officer role is newly created and that it came with a seat on the Asia Pacific executive leadership team.

“In her new role, Natalie will focus on supporting our customers and people to thrive in a digital world,” Bupa said in the post.

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https://itwire.com/science-news/health/intersystems-health-connect-cloud-automates-operations-to-improve-healthcare-services.html

Monday, 21 March 2022 11:43

InterSystems Health Connect Cloud automates operations to improve healthcare services

By Kenn Anthony Mendoza

InterSystems unveils the Health Connect Cloud, a platform-as-a-service which streamlines interoperability and data integration between clinical systems and applications while managing the entire infrastructure.

Health Connect Cloud provides data automation and management capabilities to help improve patient outcomes.

Seventy percent of organisations have migrated some of their workloads to the cloud.

InterSystems says in healthcare, migrating and storing data in the cloud is a sensitive process that requires a high level of security.

“Health Connect Cloud meets healthcare organisations at the intersection of the cloud and data exchange, providing them with the integration engine required to automate the secure delivery of patient data across multiple disparate systems,” says InterSystems director of healthcare commercial initiatives Alex MacLeod.

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/anz/magic-nsws-etoc-goes-live-prince-wales-hospital-saving-time-and-reducing-errors

'Magic': NSW's eTOC goes live at Prince of Wales Hospital, saving time and reducing errors

The rollout of eTOC continues across the state, with eHealth NSW's head Dr Zoran Bolevich saying it improves clinical productivity and patient care.

By Lynne Minion March 21, 2022 03:30 AM

Sydney's Prince of Wales Hospital has gone live with the Electronic Transfer of Care platform, a first of its kind innovation in Australia that speeds up medications information sharing between intensive care units and general wards.

The first ICU patient transfer using eTOC at Prince of Wales occurred on Wednesday, 2 March, with a doctor describing the system as "magic" after using it for the first time.

WHY IT MATTERS

Dr Zoran Bolevich, Chief Executive of eHealth NSW and CIO of NSW Health, said web-based eTOC ensures patients' medication details are available when they are moved from ICU to wards in a way that reduces the chances of errors and saves valuable time.

"Historically, this was a time-consuming manual process reliant on clinicians' physically transcribing details into different systems. eTOC was developed to resolve this, improving both clinical productivity and patient care," Dr Bolevich told Healthcare IT News.

Faster transfers and reducing the potential for medication errors are other advantages to the system, which digitally transfers medication orders from the electronic record for intensive care (eRIC) to the Cerner EMR used in NSW public hospitals.

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/technology/omniscient-neurotechnology-backed-by-gina-rinehart-set-to-reach-unicorn-status/news-story/6179bc73c57ae0e6692c88a473c91c29

Omniscient Neurotechnology backed by Gina Rinehart set to reach unicorn status

David Swan

4:30AM March 23, 2022

Gina Rinehart-backed start-up Omniscient Neurotechnology was the star of the show at last week’s South by Southwest innovation festival in Texas and is shaping up to be Australia’s next tech unicorn, with investors lining up to back the company that uses AI and big data to provide personalised maps of connections within the human brain.

Backed by billionaire investors Gina Rinehart and Will Vicars, and co-founded by Dr Charlie Teo, Omniscient’s technology gives doctors a detailed view of each person’s brain networks, and can build a personalised precision brain map from a standard MRI in less than one hour.

The company last week took out SXSW’s 2022 Innovation Award and chief executive Stephen Scheeler, the former boss of Facebook Australia, says he sees parallels between the huge global potential he saw in Facebook years ago, and with this new start-up.

“The guy at the heart of Omniscient is American neurosurgeon Michael Sughrue, and he’s a genius. I’ve worked with Mark Zuckerberg, and he and Mark are in the same kind of category. They’re just translational geniuses who can cut across domains,” Mr Scheeler said.

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https://www.theaustralian.com.au/science/hope-for-quadriplegics-as-miracle-treatment-gets-green-light-from-regulator/news-story/eea14440b3fd21d20e777ac510de4fd3

Hope for quadriplegics as ‘miracle treatment’ gets green light from regulator

Alasdair Belling

7:36PM March 21, 2022

In a major step forward for treating victims of paralysis, Australian regenerative medicine company Orthocell has won regulatory approval for a groundbreaking nerve repair device.

The news heralds an opportunity for thousands of quadriplegic patients to receive potentially life-changing treatment with the device, Remplir, deemed primarily effective for restoring the use of arms and hands in patients.

Clinical trials of Remplir (formerly known as CelGro) found 82.6 per cent of recipients regained use of the muscles controlled by the repaired nerve after 24 months of treatment.

Remplir is a collagen membrane that mimics the outer layer of the peripheral nerve.

Surgeons join a damaged nerve with a healthy one – taken from another part of the body – using minimal tension, and wrap the device around the area to create a ‘healing chamber’ that allows the nerve endings to reform organically, eventually restoring muscle function.

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https://itwire.com/business-it-news/enterprise-solutions/snowflake-launches-healthcare-life-sciences-data-cloud.html

Tuesday, 22 March 2022 11:54

Snowflake launches Healthcare & Life Sciences Data Cloud

By Stephen Withers

Data cloud specialist Snowflake has launched its Healthcare & Life Sciences Data Cloud, said to be a single, integrated, and cross-cloud data platform that eliminates technical and institutional data silos.

Healthcare & Life Sciences Data Cloud is intended to allow organisations to securely centralise, integrate, and exchange critical and sensitive data at scale

Customers including Anthem, IQVIA, Komodo Health, Novartis, Siemens Healthineers, Spectrum Health, and others, are using Healthcare & Life Sciences Data Cloud to to deliver improved patient outcomes and care experiences, optimise care delivery, and enhance clinical and operational decision-making, the company said.

And life sciences organisations such as Novartis are using it to improve omnichannel engagement, accelerate time-to-market, and collaborate more closely than ever with their healthcare partners.

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https://themarketherald.com.au/beamtree-asxbmt-accelerates-international-growth-with-first-nhs-contracts-2022-03-22/

Beamtree (ASX:BMT) accelerates international growth with first NHS contracts

Yvette Ogilvie Markets Reporter   22 March 2022 16:51 (AEDT)

  • Beamtree (BMT) secures its first NHS (National Health Service) contracts worth about $540,000 in combined annual revenue with four hospital trusts in England
  • The contracts represent the first international clients for the company’s RippleDown decision support technology as well as the first time its coding and analytic services have been used in England
  • Beamtree says applications of the RippleDown technology and data analytics at the UK hospitals will include automating the coding of clinical records as well as a trial implementation to automate clinical documentation such as discharge summaries
  • The company expects the initial contracts will lead to multi-year agreements and hopes to spread its services into Europe, the Middle East, the US and Asia via similar international partnerships
  • BMT shares up 3.03 per cent to 34 cents

Beamtree (BMT) has nailed down its first NHS (National Health Service) contracts worth about $540,000 in combined annual revenue with four hospital trusts in England.

The company said the NHS trusts were the first international clients for its proprietary RippleDown decision support technology in hospital-based care.

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https://itwire.com/science-news/health/engineers-develop-surgical-glove-built-with-sensors-for-surgeon-trainees.html

Thursday, 24 March 2022 10:55

Engineers develop surgical glove built with sensors for surgeon trainees

By Kenn Anthony Mendoza

A glove which gives surgical trainees instant and accurate feedback and could also be used by musicians and artists is being trialled at Liverpool Hospital.

Engineers at Western Sydney University have invented a surgical glove built with low-cost sensors which can record hand movements in fine detail, giving trainee surgeons and their mentors actionable data to evaluate and improve on intricate surgical procedures.

Researchers are working with surgeons and students at Liverpool Hospital to develop the technology. The gloves will augment rather than replace traditional surgical training.
Dr Gough Lui who leads the research believes the device could measure intricate hand manoeuvres of surgeons to give clear feedback to trainees.

“Training surgeons in a more objective and evidence-based manner ensures evidence-based competency,” says Dr Lui. “Teachers will be able to give precise feedback on minute details post-surgery, and students can analyse their performance.”

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https://bmcpublichealth.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12889-022-12939-x

Published: 24 March 2022

Data sources for precision public health of obesity: a scoping review, evidence map and use case in Queensland, Australia

·         Metrics details

Abstract

Background

Global action to reduce obesity prevalence requires digital transformation of the public health sector to enable precision public health (PPH). Useable data for PPH of obesity is yet to be identified, collated and appraised and there is currently no accepted approach to creating this single source of truth. This scoping review aims to address this globally generic problem by using the State of Queensland (Australia) (population > 5 million) as a use case to determine (1) availability of primary data sources usable for PPH for obesity (2) quality of identified sources (3) general implications for public health policymakers.

Methods

The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses extension for scoping reviews (PRISMA-ScR) was followed. Unique search strategies were implemented for ‘designed’ (e.g. surveys) and ‘organic’ (e.g. electronic health records) data sources. Only primary sources of data (with stratification to Queensland) with evidence-based determinants of obesity were included. Primary data source type, availability, sample size, frequency of collection and coverage of determinants of obesity were extracted and curated into an evidence map. Data source quality was qualitatively assessed.

Results

We identified 38 primary sources of preventive data for obesity: 33 designed and 5 organic. Most designed sources were survey (n 20) or administrative (n 10) sources and publicly available but generally were not contemporaneous (> 2 years old) and had small sample sizes (10-100 k) relative to organic sources (> 1 M). Organic sources were identified as the electronic medical record (ieMR), wearables, environmental (Google Maps, Crime Map) and billing/claims. Data on social, biomedical and behavioural determinants of obesity typically co-occurred across sources. Environmental and commercial data was sparse and interpreted as low quality. One organic source (ieMR) was highly contemporaneous (routinely updated), had a large sample size (5 M) and represented all determinants of obesity but is not currently used for public health decision-making in Queensland.

Conclusions

This review provides a (1) comprehensive data map for PPH for obesity in Queensland and (2) globally translatable framework to identify, collate and appraise primary data sources to advance PPH for obesity and other noncommunicable diseases. Significant challenges must be addressed to achieve PPH, including: using designed and organic data harmoniously, digital infrastructure for high-quality organic data, and the ethical and social implications of using consumer-centred health data to improve public health.

Note: Found the #myHR not much use

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https://au.hudson.com/jobview/aps-6-complex-services-manager/e596dbb6-5902-4d18-83c7-4ff81cd02b77/

APS 6 Complex Services manager

Sydney NSW

Full time

$100,000 - $114,800 Annually Total Package


·         Brisbane, Canberra or Sydney based role

·         Ongoing position

·         High profile national program

The APS6 Complex Services Manager reports to the Director, Customer Support and provides operational oversight and governance of consumer support operations. The APS6 Complex Services Manager will be expected to offer knowledge and training tools for escalations case work, allocate time-sensitive work tasks, monitor and report on team activities, research and respond to feedback and complaints, and review requests, recommendations and decisions regarding access to My Health Records. They also provide expert knowledge, guidance and advice to other teams within the Agency.

About the Agency

The Australian Digital Health Agency is responsible for national digital health services and systems, with a focus on engagement, innovation and clinical quality and safety. Our focus is on putting data and technology safely to work for patients, consumers and the healthcare professionals who look after them.

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https://www.digitalhealth.gov.au/careers/program-support-officer

Program Support Officer

APS4 ($84,807 - $89,609)
Digital Strategy Division > Programme Management
Brisbane, Canberra, Sydney

Closing - 27 Mar 2022

Division Overview

Digital strategy – responsible for national digital health design and strategy, underpinned by strong clinical governance and digital health standards.

Primary purpose of position

Supporting the Digital Strategy Division, the APS4 Program Support Officer will coordinate the Agency’s data request process which includes the monitoring and managing of the team mailbox, triaging data requests, prioritising requests for action and providing responses and outcomes according to service levels agreements. The Program Support Officer is accountable for:

  • Assisting, supporting and coordinating corporate activities within the team including but not limited to monitoring expenditure against budget, coordinating IT and infrastructure resource requirements.
  • Undertaking procedural, clerical, administrative support or operational tasks including some research and analysis activities.
  • Maintaining and applying a general understanding of the outcomes required by the Director and other senior managers; providing support for the preparation of meetings, including coordinating documentation, agendas, briefing notes, presentations etc.
  • Understanding of relevant legislation and policy frameworks.
  • Identifying operational, financial, and administrative issues impacting on the Team; ensuring relevant leaders are consulted and informed; providing advice to contribute to the resolution of issues and problems.
  • Building rapport and liaising with internal and external stakeholders on moderately complex operational and administrative matters.
  • Resolving moderately complex enquiries from stakeholders and providing information and advice as a representative of the work area.
  • Working closely with others within the Branch, Division, and the Agency, seeking cooperation, negotiating outcomes, resolving moderately complex issues; raising more complex issues with Manager for review and decision.

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https://www.zdnet.com/article/csiro-and-nvidia-sign-agreement-to-accelerate-australias-ai-capabilities/

CSIRO and Nvidia sign agreement to accelerate Australia's AI capabilities

The move is expected to expand the country's efforts around AI research and the national AI centre.

Written by Aimee Chanthadavong, Senior Journalist

on March 25, 2022 | Topic: AI & Robotics

Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) and Nvidia have signed a collaboration agreement to ramp up the country's AI capabilities and adoption of the technology across industry, academia, and the public sector. 

Some of the specific initiatives under the agreement include the development of AI and machine learning capabilities that are focused on a national AI upskilling approach aimed at students, researchers, and industry professionals, and applying quantum computing and digital twins for use cases across climate action and genomic medicine.

A working group made up of members from both organisations will also be established to identify further opportunities for co-innovation under the agreement.  

"This is an exciting step for Australia's expanding artificial intelligence capabilities. CSIRO has been using Nvidia's accelerated computing platform for over a decade, and I envisage that this new collaboration will expand our efforts around AI research, start-ups and industrial ventures, grow a more robust local AI ecosystem and support the launch of our new National AI Centre," CSIRO CIO Brendan Dalton said.

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/anz/new-zealands-covid-19-shared-care-record-creates-gp-outcry-cases-soar

New Zealand's COVID-19 shared care record creates GP outcry as cases soar

Changes have been made to NZ’s new information sharing platform in response to claims it "alienated GPs" during a surge in COVID-19.

By Lynne Minion

March 21, 2022 12:29 AM

After two years of astonishingly low COVID-19 levels, New Zealand is dealing with a wave of Omicron cases and a new government COVID-19 care platform has been adding to the burden for GPs.

As the controversy over the Covid Clinical Care Module (CCCM) grew in tandem with the surge in COVID-19 cases, in early March the Ministry of Health conceded there were "issues with the speed" of the shared care record system used by GPs and other health providers.

"Depending on demand, the links between other systems and the CCCM are not always providing a real-time view about people with COVID-19 that require support," a ministry statement said.

"During the past 10 days, the increasing number of cases and multiple concurrent changes to IT systems that support the care of COVID-19 cases has resulted in intermittent delays in notifying cases."

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https://www.hinz.org.nz/news/600038/Use-of-eMental-health-increases-as-industry-calls-for-national-hub.htm

Use of eMental health increases as industry calls for national hub

Wednesday, 23 March 2022  

NEWS - eHealthNews.nz editor Rebecca McBeth

Use of telehealth and digital tools to provide mental health support is increasing, however not all people can access these supports easily, a new report says.

In response to “
Te Huringa: Change and Transformation. Mental Health Service and Addiction Service Monitoring Report 2022" industry body NZHIT is calling for the development of a national digital mental health and addictions support hub to ease pressure on the mental health and addictions system.

The Mental Health and Wellbeing Commission has released the report which monitors the performance of mental health services and addictions services between 2016/2017 and 2020/2021.

“Our measures show use of telehealth and digital supports is increasing as they become more available, and access to primary mental health services has increased, particularly for young people,” it says.

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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/anz/roundup-new-zealand-lifts-vaccine-pass-qr-code-mandate-nelson-marlborough-moves-cloud-and

Roundup: New Zealand lifts vaccine pass, QR code mandate, Nelson Marlborough moves to cloud, and more briefs

Also, latest insights have shown that Australian health information managers have seen gradual increases in their average salary.

By Adam Ang

March 25, 2022 01:24 AM

New Zealand waives vaccine pass, QR code requirements

From 4 April, the use of vaccine passes and QR codes will no longer be required in New Zealand.

In a statement on Wednesday, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced that vaccine passes "will no longer be mandated" after COVID-19 cases came down from their peak. 

Yet, the government will still maintain systems in place and update the passes over time to include boosters. 

"Should there be a variant that demands it, or a change in circumstances, we may yet need them again," Ardern said.

-----

Friday, 25 March 2022 10:19

A Deloitte Access Economics report reveals lack of business readiness for 5G adoption

By Chris Coughlan

A report from Deloitte Access Economics has warned part of the potential $94 billion boost to Australia’s GDP over the next nine years from 5G technology is at risk from delayed business readiness and slow industry adoption.

The report, titled 5G Unleashed: Realising the potential of the next generation of mobile technology, was commissioned by the Australian Mobile Telecommunications Association (AMTA) to examine the economic impact of adoption levels of 5G-enabled technologies and innovations, and the policy and regulatory principles required to support accelerated adoption.

The report found that, while Australia has been a world leader in mobile telecommunications for decades and is currently ranked 3rd globally, it is at risk of falling to 9th by 2025 due to lack of business readiness for change and a policy regime that needs to be recharged.

Australian businesses were found to be slow when it comes to readiness for adoption of 5G despite 62% of businesses leaders across four sectors agreeing 5G will accelerate the growth of their business, with 59% saying they have no strategy to realise 5G and nearly 1 in 3 (30%) having no plans to implement 5G, the report shows.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/telstra-mullumbimby-tower-fire-sparks-fury-577546

Telstra Mullumbimby tower fire sparks fury

By Natalie Apostolou on Mar 18, 2022 12:58PM

Town back offline.

Pummelled by rain, decimated by floods and enraged by ineffective government support during a time of social and environmental crisis, the bucolic town of Mullumbimby, part of the Byron Bay Shire, has now suffered another total mobile communications outage following a 3am fire at its Telstra tower.

A truck driver passing the tower alerted authorities and dialled triple zero.

Telstra Regional general manager Mike Marom, this morning confirmed that the fire appeared to have been deliberately lit and described the act as ‘reprehensible’.

NSW Police and Telstra are investigating the blaze at the tower on River Terrace, Mullumbimby, which has caused extensive damage to the top of the tower and destroyed antennas, transmitters and receivers. 

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/telstra-tpg-deal-could-create-regional-5g-monopoly-optus-577857

Telstra, TPG deal could create regional 5G monopoly: Optus

By Richard Chirgwin on Mar 25, 2022 11:05AM

Telco voices opposition to tie-up.

Optus has gone public with its opposition to the proposed infrastructure deal between Telstra and TPG.

Under the arrangement first announced in late February, TPG will decommission more than 700 of its mobile sites and gain access to 3700 Telstra towers.

Telstra will get access to some TPG towers, and the two will get access to some of each other’s 4G and 5G spectrum.

All of which is too much for Optus, which has decided to oppose the deal. 

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/rural-broadband-lobby-hails-nbn-750m-spend-577696

Rural broadband lobby hails NBN $750m spend

By Richard Chirgwin on Mar 23, 2022 12:34PM

Hard work pays off.

The Better Internet for Rural, Regional & Remote Australia (BIRRR) rural broadband lobby has welcomed a $750 million injection into upgrades to NBN wireless infrastructure.

With $480 million from the federal government as well as $270 million of its own funds, NBN Co will be upgrading fixed wireless links to 5G, extending the fixed wireless footprint deeper into the Sky Muster satellite footprint, and rejigging plan allowances for Sky Muster users.

The Better Internet for Rural, Regional & Remote Australia (BIRRR) has praised the investment as “transformative” for regional users.

The organisation singled out the removal of Sky Muster metering except between 4pm and midnight, expanded Sky Muster data allowances to 90GB per month, and extended range from selected fixed wireless towers from 14km to 29km.

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https://itwire.com/it-industry-news/telecoms-and-nbn/government-and-nbn-invest-in-fixed-wireless-network.html

Wednesday, 23 March 2022 08:33

Government and NBN invest in fixed wireless network

By Chris Coughlan

The Australian Government and NBN announced funding of $750 million to improve NBN's fixed wireless network. The Government funding $480 million and NBN supporting this with an additional $270 million.

The funding will go into a program to deliver faster wholesale speeds for regional Australia benefiting thousands of homes and businesses.

NBN Co says it will use the funding to 5G-enable its network of more than 2,200 Fixed Wireless infrastructure sites and more than 22,000 cells in semi-rural areas and across regional and remote Australia. NBN will use the very latest 5G technology to vastly extend the range, speed and capacity of its existing Fixed Wireless network, while reducing latency to deliver the best possible customer experience.

Importantly, as a result of recent advances in 5G technology, and in particular NBN's extensive testing and future implementation of 5G millimetre wave technology, the enhancements will be primarily delivered using the existing network of NBN Fixed Wireless towers, the company stated.

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https://itwire.com/it-industry-news/telecoms-and-nbn/throwing-money-at-nbn-in-regions-will-not-lead-to-automatic-fix-budde.html

Tuesday, 22 March 2022 16:03

Throwing money at NBN in regions will not lead to automatic fix: Budde

By Sam Varghese

The Federal Government's announcement of an additional $480 million investment in regional broadband cannot be taken to indicate that the services will automatically improve as the money could just be an election handout, independent telecommunications consultant Paul Budde says.

The announcement, made on Tuesday, indicates the total spend will be $750 million, with the balance, $270 million, coming from the NBN Co, the company rolling out the network.

Budde said in a statement both the fixed wireless and satellite offerings from the NBN Co had been under-performing because of a lack of capacity.

"The extra money will most certainly address that issue and, thus improve the services. The upgrades aim to lift the quality of the network - measured at the busiest time of the day, 8pm - from 6Mbs to 50Mbs, at no extra cost to the user," he pointed out.

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https://thenewdaily.com.au/finance/2022/03/22/nbn-internet-government-upgrade/

10:00pm, Mar 22, 2022 Updated: 6:38pm, Mar 22

Government shrugs off decade of ‘mistakes’ with $750 million NBN upgrade

Sezen Bakan Finance Reporter

Regional and rural internet services are set to receive a boost worth $750 million as the government rushes to make up for past “mistakes” before the election.

Next week’s federal budget will commit $480 million to improve internet speeds in regional, rural and remote areas, and the taxpayer-owned NBN Co will be kicking in an additional $270 million of its funds.

About $60 billion has already been poured into the NBN over the past nine years by federal taxpayers.

“This means more people can be served by NBN fixed wireless; it means higher speed services on the NBN fixed wireless network; and it means higher amounts of data can be used by households and business customers,” Minister for Communications Paul Fletcher said.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/nbn-co-coaxed-half-a-million-users-off-12mbps-and-25mbps-services-577709

NBN Co coaxed half a million users off 12Mbps and 25Mbps services

By Ry Crozier on Mar 23, 2022 7:00AM

Using its 'Focus on Fast' marketing campaign.

NBN Co had a near 90 percent success rate encouraging 12Mbps and 25Mbps users to upgrade to either 50Mbps or 100Mbps and above services under a recent marketing campaign.

The migration of users out of lower speed tiers under last year’s ‘Focus on Fast’ campaign went largely under the radar until it was made public during NBN Co’s financial results briefing last month.

Focus on Fast was a ‘try-before-you-buy’ scheme that enabled users to be moved up to much faster speed services for free for six months, before being given a choice to pay more, or roll back to their previous speed tier.

Most of the attention around Focus on Fast was initially around upgrades of 100Mbps users to 250Mbps.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/nbn-co-reveals-the-two-ways-to-get-invited-to-upgrade-fttn-to-full-fibre-577682

NBN Co reveals the two ways to get invited to upgrade FTTN to full fibre

By Ry Crozier on Mar 22, 2022 12:13PM

And the participating RSPs, with some noticeable absentees.

NBN Co is starting to send invitations to “more than 50,000” fibre-to-the-node (FTTN) customers to initiate an upgrade to full fibre from today.

It has also finally published a list of retail service providers participating in the upgrade program, with Telstra and Aussie Broadband the two largest names.

The list, however, also has some notable absentees, including majors like TPG Telecom, Optus and Vocus.

There are two ways to get invited to upgrade. 

First, FTTN users can register their interest directly with NBN Co here and then if they are part of a released area or zone, NBN Co will notify them via email, along with instructions on how to take up the offer.

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https://www.afr.com/politics/federal/the-nbn-is-getting-a-480m-boost-in-rural-areas-20220321-p5a6io

The NBN is getting a $480m boost in rural areas

Lucas Baird Reporter

Mar 22, 2022 – 5.00am

The Morrison government will pledge $480 million to significantly upgrade NBN fixed wireless services in the bush as part of its pre-election budget to shore up its regional support and deliver on advice from a landmark review.

Confirming reports earlier this month in The Australian Financial Review, Communications Minister Paul Fletcher announced the new spending on Tuesday. The government’s contribution will partner another $270 million from NBN Co, with the joint-aim to improve network speed and capacity.

“By using the latest 4G and 5G wireless technology, this upgrade will extend the coverage range from a tower, and allow higher speed services to everyone served by the tower,” Mr Fletcher said.

NBN Co chief development officer, regional and remote, Gavin Williams said the upgrade would take about two and a half years to fully roll out. 

“The upgrade will expand the fixed wireless footprint coverage by up to 50 per cent, enabling 120,000 additional premises to access fixed wireless services instead of Sky Muster satellite services.“

 

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/nbn-co-takes-5g-leap-with-750m-fixed-wireless-network-upgrade-577653

NBN Co takes 5G leap with $750m fixed wireless network upgrade

By Ry Crozier on Mar 22, 2022 6:28AM

Extends range, boosts speeds to 100Mbps-plus.

NBN Co will spend $750 million on upgrades to and expansion of its fixed wireless network, making it capable of 100Mbps-plus speeds.

The upgrade is backed by a government injection of $480 million, with the remaining $270 million to come from NBN Co’s “own funds”.

The aim is to both boost the speeds but also extend the reach of the fixed wireless network in a bid to “overbuild” part of the Sky Muster satellite footprint.

The company will then encourage Sky Muster users to move to fixed wireless connections instead, in the hope that “frees up capacity on the satellite network”, which can be used to boost data allowances for the remaining customers.

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https://www.itnews.com.au/news/nbn-co-quantifies-how-many-hfc-dropouts-in-a-day-is-too-many-577508

NBN Co quantifies how many HFC dropouts in a day is too many

By Ry Crozier on Mar 21, 2022 12:22PM

And would result in a service ticket being raised and/or a truck roll.

NBN Co has quietly brought HFC under the same performance standard as fibre-to-the-node (FTTN), such that four or more “unexpected dropouts” in a 24-hour period would qualify a service to be investigated.

The company made the change to its operations manual [pdf] on February 22 to a section called PI - performance incident - thresholds.

Performance incidents (PIs) are a relatively recent addition to NBN Co’s operations; although iTnews was unable to determine exactly when they first came into force, the section is not in an operations manual that was effective as of July 2018.

A November 2021 version of the operations manual showed that PIs were for FTTN only; HFC - and indeed all other access technologies - were specifically excluded from the standard at this point.

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https://itwire.com/it-industry-news/telecoms-and-nbn/accc-says-nbn-fixed-wireless-consumers-enjoy-download-speeds-boost.html

Friday, 18 March 2022 11:12

ACCC says NBN fixed wireless consumers enjoy download speeds boost

By Chris Coughlan

NBN fixed wireless download speeds have improved significantly over the past year, the ACCC’s latest Measuring Broadband Australia (MBA) quarterly report shows. Speeds in December 2021 were 93.4% of plan speed during all hours and 79.8% of plan speed during the busy hours of 7-11pm.

In December 2020, when the MBA program first started measuring NBN fixed wireless, the corresponding results were 78.5% and 68.4% respectively.

The improvement in download speeds is due to a change NBN Co made in July 2021, which allowed a 15% over-provisioning allowance on the download component of NBN fixed wireless plans. Some retail providers have passed-on this change to their customers.

Upload speeds on the other hand remained quite low, declining slightly from 52.2% of plan speed in busy hours in December 2020 to 48.9% of plan speed in December 2021.

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Enjoy!

David.