Here are a few I have come across this week.
Note: Each link is followed by a title and a paragraph or two. 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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What with the holiday Monday and so on it has been quite a quiet week. We are now coming up to the end of the financial year and so quite quickly will find ourselves with less than a year to discover just how the PCEHR will play out and what will actually be delivered.
When you think about it, the combination of the e-Health and Telehealth initiatives is over $1.0 billion ($467M over 2 years and $620M over 4 years) and with spending of that scale clearly results are needed in some reasonable time-frame (my feeling is that we need to see some serious impacts in 3-4 years from now). Failure to deliver will set any chance of real e-health enabled health sector improvement back decades.
However, it is possible that time to deliver may not actually be available.
http://www.smh.com.au/national/sack-rudd-gillard-told-as-shocking-poll-rocks-alp-20110618-1g948.html
Sack Rudd, Gillard told as shocking poll rocks ALP
Jessica Wright and Cosima Marriner
June 19, 2011
FURIOUS Labor MPs and factional figures are calling on Julia Gillard to sack her Foreign Affairs Minister, Kevin Rudd, whom they have described as a self-indulgent ‘‘bully’’ who has contributed to a disastrous poll for the government.
A figure close to the coup that installed Ms Gillard as Prime Minister attacked Mr Rudd yesterday for giving a series of media interviews in the week leading to the anniversary of his dumping as Labor leader.
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A Nielsen poll published in The Sydney Morning Herald yesterday revealed support for Labor had collapsed to a historic low – a primary vote of 27 per cent. Mr Rudd was preferred as Labor leader by 60 per cent of voters to Ms Gillard's 31 per cent. The Prime Minister sought to reassure voters yesterday that she was aware they were "anxious".
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You would have to say that with polling at these levels, and the Opposition’s expressed view on these initiatives as seen in Senate Estimates, one has to say all this may be hanging on a rather tenuous thread. I remain of the view that the PCEHR is conceptually flawed and politically driven - making the risk of being canned - with babies not being saved as the bathwater goes out - increasing weekly.
I think NEHTA would be smart to reach out to the Opposition, if it has not, to get some clarity as to just where they are at and just what be salvaged and what they are not happy to continue with. I would hate to see the few good things they have done become victims of the ill-conceived PCEHR project.
For what it is worth my take is that the political risk to the PCEHR project is now very considerable indeed!
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http://www.zdnet.com.au/realising-the-benefits-of-e-health-339316887.htm
Realising the benefits of e-health
By Phil Dobbie, ZDNet.com.au on June 16th, 2011
Providing a high speed broadband network is perhaps the easiest part of delivering an efficient e-health system for Australia.
In this two-part investigation, Twisted Wire looks at what needs to change in order to derive the benefits of e-health. As you'll hear, some of the quick wins are already underway, and don't require investment in a high-speed broadband network. Dr Mukesh Haikerwal, national clinical lead at the National E-Health Transition Authority, talks about progress in the delivery of electronic health records. It seems that this will deliver many benefits in return for the $466 million that the government is investing in the project.
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http://www.ferret.com.au/c/GS1-Australia/GS1-Bar-Codes-Used-to-Fight-Obesity-n903866
GS1 Bar Codes Used to Fight Obesity
A report released by GS1 Australia and Victoria University explains how mobile phone technology is being combined with GS1 Barcodes to fight obesity successfully.
GS1 Australia Chief Information Officer Steven Pereira and Victoria University Senior Lecturer Dr Michael Mathai presented the outcome of their Nutritional Health Research Pilot Case Study at a GS1 Global MobileCom conference in Singapore recently.
The report is the culmination of an 8-week trial conducted by Victoria University honours student Carla Battaglia at the University’s School of Biomedical and Health Sciences.
The trial involved overweight participants using mobile phones to scan GS1 bar codes on breads, breakfast cereals and biscuits, and receiving a ‘traffic-light’ rating of the sodium and saturated fat content of each of the products, based on recommended serving values from the National Heart Foundation.
The ratings delivered by the mobile phone application were based on data extracted from GS1 Australia’s electronic product catalogue, the GS1net data pool and supplemented with data gathered from products at four major supermarkets in Melbourne’s west.
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http://www.medicalobserver.com.au/news/medicare-locals-rollout-comes-under-fire
Medicare Locals rollout comes under fire
14th Jun 2011
THE Medicare Locals rollout has already been branded “chaos”, with delays on the announcement of some Medicare Locals while boundaries are redrawn and indications the transition for divisions could take years.
The rollout comes as representatives of all 111 general practice divisions are preparing to decide the future of the AGPN. Divisions will vote on changes to the AGPN’s constitution that would extend its overseeing powers – currently restricted to divisions – to Medicare Locals.
An AGPN extraordinary general meeting was to be held in Brisbane tomorrow to vote on the issue, however this has been postponed due to the disruption in air services caused by the Chilean volcanic ash cloud.
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http://www.australiandoctor.com.au/articles/ab/0c070fab.asp
Switch on for a cool $6000 spot of screen time
16-Jun-2011
Paul Smith
A single, one-off video consultation could cost taxpayers more than $6000 under the Federal Government’s drive to bring more specialist services to the bush.
Last week, the government confirmed it would pay GPs, nurses, midwives and Aboriginal health workers who sit in on video consultations a 35% loading on their standard consultation MBS rates. Specialists at the other end of the video consultation will receive a 50% bonus on top of their standard consultation items.
But in the first 12 months of the $620 million initiative — expected to fund more than 490,000 patient services in the next four years — the government is offering GPs and specialists a $6000 one-off “on-board” payment triggered when they claim their first MBS telehealth service. The RDAA said from the Medicare documents released last week it appeared possible for a doctor claiming the incentive to provide a single telemedicine service and do no more.
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http://www.healthcarenz.co.nz/News%20Features/Telehealth
Telehealth
New Zealand’s first telehealth pilot improves patients’ quality of life
Telehealth monitoring for people with chronic conditions shows the technology can improve patients’ quality of life and may have a positive impact on life expectancy.
The results from the first New Zealand pilot of telehealth technology have just been released by health innovator Healthcare of New Zealand.
William Hall, who has chronic pulmonary disease and was one of the people who trialled the technology says, “Since I’ve been on telehealth my health has improved dramatically. I got the monitor 12 months ago and if I didn’t have it, I wouldn’t be here today.”
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http://www.medicalobserver.com.au/news/telehealth-delays-despite-gp-cash
Telehealth delays despite GP cash
14th Jun 2011
A LACK of technical and clinical standards for telehealth consultations could delay GP uptake of the technology despite lucrative Government incentives, experts say.
The Government last week unveiled a suite of new MBS rebates that will see GPs outside inner-metropolitan areas paid to sit with patients while they consult a specialist via webcam.
The new item numbers attract a 35% loading on top of the rebates for standard time-based consultations, as well as a $40 incentive payment and an additional $20 incentive if the consultation is bulk-billed.
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http://www.computerworld.com.au/article/390575/doha_unveils_final_four_medicare_locals_1_july/
DoHA unveils final four Medicare Locals for 1 July
Health minister, Nicola Roxon, announced the final four organisations, based in Victoria, and announced the Victorian Medicare Locals boundaries has been extended to 17
- Chloe Herrick (Computerworld)
- 17 June, 2011 16:15
The Department of Health and Ageing (DoHA) has announced the four Victorian organisations to join the initial 15 first announced as part of the $416.8 million Medicare Locals project from 1 July this year.
The final four were not announced with the first 15 due to a request from the state’s government to have more time to consider the Victorian Medicare Local boundaries.
The selected organisations will engage in the government’s e-health agenda and participate in early stages of initiatives, such as the $466.7 million Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record (PCEHR) as well as provide a local response to services and integration across healthcare.
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http://www.itnews.com.au/News/260508,queensland-health-wins-154m-of-ict-in-state-budget.aspx
Queensland Health wins $154m of ICT in state budget
State spends on e-health, infrastructure programs.
Queensland Health has won $154 million for new ICT infrastructure from the 2011-12 State Budget.
The state this week announced a record $11.7 billion budget for Queensland Health, including $1.82 billion for the agency’s capital acquisitions.
Those included $49.2 million of “IT infrastructure programs”, $12.0 million of “IT contingency and emergent needs”, and $13.5 million of “other health systems”.
Budget papers (pdf) also included $79.3 million for “e-health clinical systems”, supporting an e-health strategy (pdf) that won State Government support in 2007.
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http://www.computerworld.com.au/article/390233/health_police_win_qld_2011-12_budget_ict_spending/
Health, Police win out in QLD 2011-12 Budget ICT spending
$61.2 million for the Queensland Department of Health to “replace, upgrade and provide future capability”
- Tim Lohman (Computerworld)
- 15 June, 2011 10:38
Despite being hit by severe floods and cyclones in the past year, the Queensland Government’s 2011-12 budget still includes a sizeable ICT spending for the coming year.
The budget includes two core areas of ICT spending — Health and Police — and a number of smaller ICT expenditures, such as the state’s Bulk Water Transport Authority and Department of Environment and Resource Management.
According to the budget documents, ICT funding for Queensland Health's capital works program was an important input into the delivery of health services and goals in the government’s Toward Q2: Tomorrow's Queensland strategy.
“In 2011-12, Queensland Health will continue its capital investment across a broad range of health infrastructure including community health centres, hospitals, health technology, pathology, research and scientific services, mental health services, residential care, staff accommodation, and information and communication technologies,” the budget reads.
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Queensland Health payroll fix a mental challenge
- Natasha Bita
- From: The Australian
- June 15, 2011
A malfunctioning payroll system will cost Queensland Health $209 million to fix -- more than it will spend improving mental health.
A record $11.7 billion health budget will inject $1.82bn extra into the state's health and hospital capital works program in 2011-12, making it the nation's biggest health infrastructure scheme.
But $209m will have to be spent fixing the bungled payroll system, which has resulted in the 67,110-strong workforce routinely being underpaid, overpaid or not paid at all since its introduction last year.
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http://www.australiandoctor.com.au/articles/15/0c070f15.asp
Computer cure-all
14-Jun-2011
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY: The internet has made amateur doctors of everyone. So how can GPs help patients make best use of medical information on the net? VIVIENNE REINER reports.
Google the name of any medical condition and thousands of websites pop up with a range of diagnoses from a plethora of organisations and business.
So how does a concerned patient make sense of it all? Often not very well, as many doctors will attest. So prevalent is the issue of internet diagnosis, that GP and AMA president Dr Steve Hambleton recently saw four patients in one day who had either just looked something up online or were about to — of whom only one had stumbled upon the correct diagnosis.
One woman visiting Dr Hambleton’s Brisbane surgery was worried that one of her breasts continued to leak milk six months after she stopped breastfeeding.
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Paperless world works for Macquarie hospital
- Jennifer Foreshew
- From: The Australian
- June 14, 2011
WITH the ethos of being a digital site, Sydney's Macquarie University Hospital knew its manual time sheets were fish out of water.
Before Australia's first and only private hospital on a university campus opened its doors in June last year, it went in search of a workforce management system.
Chief operating officer Evan Rawstron says building a greenfield site was an opportunity to design the way the work and information flowed through the hospital.
"Given the substantial proportion of expenses that are related to salaries and wages and the importance of good business intelligence that is timely in making decisions about staff allocations and rostering and other things, we just felt it was a sound investment to be making," he says.
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Macquarie University Hospital reaps reward of attendance system
Increased productivity, manual timesheets reduced
- Lisa Banks (Computerworld)
- 15 June, 2011 12:32
Macquarie University Hospital (MUH) has halved its payroll processing time one year after rolling out a time and attendance system.
MUH human resources manager, Sharon Kuhn, said the system has improved productivity at the hospital, which opened last year, fitting in with its digital focus.
“Our time in terms of payroll processing has been more than halved,” Kuhn said.
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ASIC tack on iSoft leaves parties at sea
- Bryan Frith
- From: The Australian
- June 17, 2011
HEALTHCARE systems provider iSoft hopes shareholders of the debt-laden group won't let the supposed "benefits" that one shareholder, private equity group Oceania Capital Partners (OCP), will receive cloud their vision when they vote on a proposed takeover by US IT giant Computer Sciences.
On April 2, iSoft announced a recommended offer of 17c a share, which valued the equity at $180 million and represented a premium of 227 per cent to the pre-offer price of 5.2c a share and 270 per cent to the one-month VWAP of 4.6c a share. The acquisition would be by way of a scheme of arrangement.
OCP, formerly Allco Equity Partners, owns 24.5 per cent of the iSoft equity and announced it supported the acquisition, subject to a superior proposal.
CSC proposes to repay iSoft's debt -- senior banking facilities and convertible notes -- in full, which would take the total cost to $460m.
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/healthcare-network/2011/jun/17/department-health-pays-csc-200m-npfit
Department of Health pays CSC £200m for NPfIT
A US technology firm's annual report shows that the government has made an advance payment for the National Programme for IT
- Sade Laja
- Guardian Professional, Friday 17 June 2011 14.54 BST
The Department of Health has paid £200m to National Programme for IT (NPfIT) supplier CSC, dated 1 April, as part of an advance payment arrangement.
According to CSC's annual report, published on 15 June, one of the advance payment conditions would require the firm, which is responsible for the implementation of iSoft's Lorenzo software in the the north, midlands and east of England, to repay the sum upon NHS demand on in September "if the parties are not progressing satisfactorily toward completion of the expected contract amendment".
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Relax, your mobile phone won't kill you, experts say
Asher Moses
June 15, 2011
There is no evidence that mobile phones are any more carcinogenic than coffee or pickled vegetables and Australians should be cautious of any mobile phone "gimmicks" promising to reduce radiation exposure, Australian health and bioengineering experts say.
One professor even rounded on top Sydney neurosurgeon Charles Teo for linking mobile phone use with cancer, arguing his view is out of step with mainstream science.
Earlier this month the World Health Organisation (WHO) sparked global alarm after declaring that it was "possible" mobile phones could cause cancer.
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http://www.medicalobserver.com.au/news/onetouch-blood-glucose-monitor-recalled-by-tga
OneTouch blood glucose monitor recalled by TGA
17th Jun 2011
A FAULTY blood glucose measuring device has been urgently recalled by the TGA.
The TGA website has posted a warning for the LifeScan OneTouch Verio blood glucose monitoring system, which reportedly gives repeated ‘error 2’ warning messages when used in high temperatures or humidity due to contamination of a component.
The device recall is classified as a Class II defect, meaning it could cause illness or mistreatment, but is not potentially life-threatening.
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http://www.computerworld.com.au/article/390409/us_computer_pioneer_ibm_turns_100/
US computer pioneer IBM turns 100
The world's 14th most valuable tech company has a market capitalisation of $US197 billion
- AAP (AAP)
- 16 June, 2011 14:49
US technology pioneer IBM turns 100 years old this week.
While "Big Blue" is no longer the dominant player in the computer industry, it remains a force to be reckoned with.
With a market capitalization of $US197 billion ($A187.32 billion), IBM is the world's 14th most valuable technology company.
It is well behind California gadget-maker Apple's $US304 billion ($A289.06 billion) but close to software giant Microsoft's $US201 billion ($A191 billion).
Thomas Misa, a history of science and technology professor at the University of Minnesota, credits IBM's longevity to its "mastery of getting information processing power into users' hands in a form that they need and want."
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http://www.cio.com.au/article/390104/get_off_my_cloud/
Get Off Of My Cloud
Where is your data and how secure is it?
- CSO staff (CSO Online (Australia))
- 14 June, 2011 21:17
To use Cloud computing securely requires companies to know where their data is stored and who has access to it. Ironically, the reason Cloud is so popular is because organisations don't want to worry about these details.
So can the issue be solved by adhering to standards? Increasing legislation? Maybe we need a global technical disaster to ‘sober up’ an industry drunk on the power of Moore's Law.
“The Cloud” carries with it the stigma of being a marketing concept which some argue merely poses the same risks as standard data hosting.
It is also an emerging field of computing with a lot of momentum behind it, however it lacks a broadly accepted standard for secure data handling and is often pursued without adequate concern for security arrangements.
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http://www.zdnet.com.au/best-nas-339316969.htm
Best NAS
By Craig Simms, ZDNet.com.au on June 17th, 2011
So, you're not ready for rack-mount storage yet, but you need more than just an external hard drive to serve a few clients. It's time to look at Network Attached Storage (NAS).
There's a disk configuration to suit almost every situation, from two to 12 disks. Firmware tends to be shared between models of the same age, so feature-set tends to remain common within the one brand. Performance and capacity will of course change depending on how many disks it supports, what processor is inside and how much RAM it has.
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Enjoy!
David.
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