Tuesday, 7 June 2016

NY Times/Steve Lohr asks "Why the Economic Payoff From Technology Is So Elusive."  The answer in medicine is obvious.

NY Times/Steve Lohr asks "Why the Economic Payoff From Technology Is So Elusive." The answer in medicine is obvious.

In a June 5, 2016 article, New York Times reporter Steve Lohr (http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/l/steve_lohr/index.html), who reports on technology, business and economics, asked the following question:

Why the Economic Payoff From Technology Is So Elusive
New York Times, Business Day
By STEVE LOHR
JUNE 5, 2016
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/06/business/why-the-economic-payoff-from-technology-is-so-elusive.html

Your smartphone allows you to get almost instantaneous answers to the most obscure questions. It also allows you to waste hours scrolling through Facebook or looking for the latest deals on Amazon.  More powerful computing systems can predict the weather better than any meteorologist or beat human champions in complex board games like chess.

But for several years, economists have asked why all that technical wizardry seems to be having so little impact on the economy. The issue surfaced again recently, when the government reported disappointingly slow growth and continuing stagnation in productivity. The rate of productivity growth from 2011 to 2015 was the slowest since the five-year period ending in 1982.

Healthcare becomes the gravamen of the article:

One place to look at this disconnect is in the doctor’s office. Dr. Peter Sutherland, a family physician in Tennessee, made the shift to computerized patient records from paper in the last few years. There are benefits to using electronic health records, Dr. Sutherland says, but grappling with the software and new reporting requirements has slowed him down. He sees fewer patients, and his income has slipped.

Unfortunately, the advisors who helped him with the article may have provided incomplete information:

... “The government funding has made a huge difference,” said Dr. Ashish Jha, a professor at the Harvard School of Public Health. “But we’re seeing little evidence so far that all this technology has had much effect on quality and costs.”

In the face of, among many others, a stunning letter from 40 medical societies to HHS in 2015 that the technology is unfit for purpose (http://mb.cision.com/Public/373/9710840/9053557230dbb768.pdf), known and hair-raising defects (http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2011/01/maude-and-hit-risk-mother-mary-what-in.html), and many other complaints from physicians and nurses (e.g., http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2013/11/another-survey-on-ehrs-affinity-medical.html, http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2013/07/rns-say-sutters-new-electronic-system.html, query link http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/search/label/glitch as just a few examples), such a statement is anserine.

Why would anyone expect (good) effects on "quality and costs" of healthcare when the technology is so unfit for purpose in design and implementation that it has alienated most of its users?  

I've written previously about Jha's views in a May 27,  2009 post "Harvard's EMR Justification: We Just Have To Do Something" (http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2009/05/harvards-emr-justification-we-just-have_27.html):

 ... "I'm not suggesting EHR is going to be a panacea, but the one thing that is absolutely true is there is nothing else out there now that has any more political appeal," Jha says. "Everybody agrees, whether you are a conservative, moderate, or liberal, that we have to do something about healthcare. So the one place where we can all come to agreement is we have to do something about electronic records."

I do not think "political appeal" is a good justification for a multi-billion dollar cybernetic experiment in medicine, where the risks of the technology are considerable and where basic healthcare needs are not being well met among the poor and underprivileged.

Former ONC Chair David Brailer is quoted:

“People confuse information automation with creating the kind of work environment where productivity and creativity can flourish,” said Dr. David J. Brailer, who was the national health technology coordinator in the George W. Bush administration. “And so little has gone into changing work so far.”

Brailer was little better than Jha, and moves the goalposts with a type of circular logic.  He appears to be saying that technology that will revolutionize medicine can't work until we change how things are done in medicine so the technology can revolutionize medicine. 

The article then quotes one Tennessee physician, a Dr. Sutherland, who is "happy" to accept bad health IT, a resultant pay cut, and increased work:

... Today, Dr. Sutherland’s personal income and the medical group’s revenue are about 8 percent below where they were four years ago. But in 2015, both his earnings and the revenue of Healthstar, which employs 350 people in 10 clinics, increased slightly, by nearly 3 percent from 2014.

... Dr. Sutherland bemoans the countless data fields he must fill in to comply with government-mandated reporting rules, and he concedes that some of his colleagues hate using digital records. Yet Dr. Sutherland is no hater. Despite the extra work the new technology has created and even though it has not yet had the expected financial payoff, he thinks it has helped him provide better information to patients.

He values being able to tap the screen to look up potentially harmful drug interactions and to teach patients during visits. He can, for example, quickly create charts to show diabetes patients how they are progressing with treatment plans, managing blood glucose levels and weight loss.

He is working harder, Dr. Sutherland says, but he believes he is a better doctor. Blunt measures of productivity, he added, aren’t everything. “My patients are better served,” he said. “And I’m happier.”

While being able to provide fancy charts and check drug-drug interactions (for which a massive and expensive EHR is certainly not needed; a PDA will suffice) is fine.

However, anyone who gladly accepts a pay cut, and inconvenience, and harder work due to bad health IT, and is a happy camper with that state of affairs, either suffers from the Stockholm syndrome or has a lot of discretionary income and free time to spare that many clinicians do not.  

The article fails to mention the hundreds of thousands of other US docs and others in other lands (e.g., http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2016/05/hit-mayhem-canadian-style-nanaimo.html) who aren't happy at all with health IT as it is today.  

---------------------------------------

I sent this email to Mr. Lohr.

From: S Silverstein
To:Steve Lohr 
Date: Tue, Jun 7, 2016 at 10:02 AM
Subject: Re: Why the Economic Payoff From Technology Is So Elusive

Dear Mr. Lohr,

In medicine, the answer to this question is straightforward.  I don't know if Ashish Jha brought this to your attention, or if he himself is aware of it.

This letter from nearly 40 different medical societies to HHS about bad health IT is specific about how bad the current health IT is:



You should be aware of the letter's contents.  I've also attached it to this email.

In academic Medical Informatics, such matters are often ignored, as they run contrary to the narrative that IT will "revolutionize medicine"; I know, as I was Yale faculty in Medical Informatics myself. 

The assumption in academic circles and in the Administration (unfortunately) is that "all health IT is good health IT." 

Unfortunately, it is not.  From my own site "Contemporary Issues in Medical Informatics: Good Health IT, Bad Health IT, and Common Examples of Healthcare IT Difficulties" at http://cci.drexel.edu/faculty/ssilverstein/cases/ :

Definitions authored by myself and Australian informatics expert Dr. Jon Patrick:


Good Health IT ("GHIT") is defined as IT that provides a good user experience, enhances cognitive function, puts essential information as effortlessly as possible into the physician’s hands, can be easily, substantively and cost-effectively customized to the needs of medical specialists and subspecialists, keeps eHealth information secure, protects patient privacy and facilitates better practice of medicine and better outcomes. 

Bad Health IT ("BHIT") is defined as IT that is ill-suited to purpose, hard to use, unreliable, loses data or provides incorrect data, is difficult and/or prohibitively expensive to customize to the needs of different medical specialists and subspecialists, causes cognitive overload, slows rather than facilitates users, lacks appropriate alerts, creates the need for hypervigilance (i.e., towards avoiding IT-related mishaps) that increases stress, is lacking in security, is lacking in evidentiary soundness, compromises patient privacy or otherwise demonstrates suboptimal design and/or implementation. 

It comes as no surprise not to find productivity gains, but instead hundreds of thousands of angry physicians (and nurses), when health IT is mostly bad IT.

The health IT industry itself needs serious remediation before its products will be a boon to medicine.

Sincerely,
Scot Silverstein, MD
Drexel University, Philadelphia


p.s. I have not even broached the matter of health IT patient harms. 

Patients are being harmed and dying of bad health IT.  See for instance the CRICO insurance report at http://www.cci.drexel.edu/faculty/ssilverstein/PSQH_MalpractClaimsAnalyConfirRisksEHR.pdf
 
---------------------------------------  

I will add an addendum if I receive a reply.

-- SS
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It Is Interesting That It Seems To Have Taken So Long To Resolve These Privacy Breaches.

It Is Interesting That It Seems To Have Taken So Long To Resolve These Privacy Breaches.

These two reports appeared last week.
First we have:

SA Health workers sacked for breaching privacy

Department takes zero tolerance approach.

By Paris Cowan
Jun 1 2016 4:50PM
Three SA Health employees have lost their jobs for breaking privacy rules protecting patient records.
Department boss David Swan announced today that all three had their employment terminated for “inappropriately accessing” information in patient databases.
Swan had pledged in February to provide full transparency about any staff caught snooping in the state’s health information systems without a good reason, in the wake of revelations that 13 workers had been disciplined for accessing the records of Cy Walsh after he was charged with the murder of his AFL coach father Phil Walsh.
“I made it clear in February of this year that staff inappropriately and deliberately accessing confidential patient information would not be tolerated," Swan said in a statement today.
“Regrettably, since then we have terminated the employment of three staff for deliberate, inappropriate access of patient information."
Swan said in a press conference he would not provide any more details on who the patients were that have been caught up in the latest breaches.
He did, however, reveal the access took place in the latter half of 2015.
More here:
Second we have this:

More SA Health staff sacked for snooping

1 June, 2016 0 comments Read Later
Three more SA Health staff have been sacked over inappropriately accessing patient records.
The sackings were made over the past three months and come on top of two dismissals earlier this year for the same issue.
In February, SA Health revealed that clinicians, including doctors and nurses, were found to have inappropriately accessed medical records, with some snooping on the details of Cy Walsh after the stabbing death of his father last year, former Adelaide Crows coach Phil Walsh.
Thirteen staff were disciplined for accessing Walsh's records after he was taken to the Flinders Medical Centre in Adelaide for tests before he was charged with murder.
Six clinicians were also disciplined and two sacked for snooping on other patients.
At the time the government pledged to report on any further action taken against staff every three months.
More here:
Here is the press release:

Privacy Breach Update

1 June 2016
Over the past three months, three SA Health staff have had their employment terminated for inappropriately accessing patient records according to information published by SA Health today.
On 29 February 2016, SA Health Chief Executive David Swan warned that if it is proven staff have inappropriately accessed patient records it is highly likely their employment would be terminated.

Background

SA Health committed to report quarterly how many staff have been disciplined for inappropriately accessing patient medical records during the previous three months.

Quotes attributable to SA Health Chief Executive, David Swan

The trust between our patients and staff is the bedrock of our high quality health system and we take any breach of patient confidentiality or privacy extremely seriously.
As I have said many times, the vast majority of our staff do the right thing, acting professionally and with high ethical standards as they carry out their role.
I made it clear in February of this year that staff inappropriately and deliberately accessing confidential patient information would not be tolerated.
Regrettably, since then we have terminated the employment of three staff for deliberate, inappropriate access of patient information.
These actions and other important strategies we have put in place reinforce our commitment to the highest standards of patient privacy and confidentiality and ensure the South Australian community can continue to have the highest level of confidence in our health system.

Here is the link:
Three Comments:
First, what was the fate of the other 10 snoopers identified in February?
Second why don’t we have an proper enquiry to identify exactly what happened with this breach and to formulate a publicly disclosed plan (for the staff and public) as to how such issues will be prevented going further?
Third why disclose issues every three months rather than at the end of the week the breach was detected or staff dismissed. A delay like this is nonsense.
David.

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Monday, 6 June 2016

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 6th June, 2016.

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 6th June, 2016.

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

General Comment

A very quiet week as the election campaign rolls on. E-Health etc not apparently an issue - as expected.
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SA Health workers sacked for breaching privacy

Department takes zero tolerance approach.

By Paris Cowan
Jun 1 2016 4:50PM
Three SA Health employees have lost their jobs for breaking privacy rules protecting patient records.
Department boss David Swan announced today that all three had their employment terminated for “inappropriately accessing” information in patient databases.
Swan had pledged in February to provide full transparency about any staff caught snooping in the state’s health information systems without a good reason, in the wake of revelations that 13 workers had been disciplined for accessing the records of Cy Walsh after he was charged with the murder of his AFL coach father Phil Walsh.
“I made it clear in February of this year that staff inappropriately and deliberately accessing confidential patient information would not be tolerated," Swan said in a statement today.
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More SA Health staff sacked for snooping

1 June, 2016
Three more SA Health staff have been sacked over inappropriately accessing patient records.
The sackings were made over the past three months and come on top of two dismissals earlier this year for the same issue.
In February, SA Health revealed that clinicians, including doctors and nurses, were found to have inappropriately accessed medical records, with some snooping on the details of Cy Walsh after the stabbing death of his father last year, former Adelaide Crows coach Phil Walsh.
Thirteen staff were disciplined for accessing Walsh's records after he was taken to the Flinders Medical Centre in Adelaide for tests before he was charged with murder.
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Aussies on the verge of bionics ‘Holy Grail’ ahead of human trials of brain machine interface technology

June 2, 20167:54am
Australian researchers are leading the way with brain machine interface technology.
Nick Whigham news.com.au
IMAGINE being able to communicate with a machine using nothing but your thoughts.
That is the goal currently being pursued by a team of researchers and engineers at Melbourne University who are leading the way in the hugely significant field of developing brain machine interfaces.
In an effort to accomplish what has been likened to machine telepathy, they have developed a tiny biocompatible implant called a stentrode which gets implanted into a blood vessel next to the brain. The tiny implant records electric activity from a specific part of the brain and the information is then fed into a decoding algorithm which interprets the electric activity, or thoughts.
Dr Tom Oxley is leading the research and perhaps the only thing more impressive than the science involved is the story behind how he secured funding to embark on the project.
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Doctors warn of budget blowout due to dodgy software program at Cairns Hospital

May 29, 2016 5:00am
Daniel Bateman The Cairns Post
SENIOR doctors have warned of a budget crisis developing at Cairns Hospital, with health bosses asking them to no longer use pens, and to switch off lights in unused rooms.
The Cairns and Hinterland Hospital and Health Service has confirmed it is facing a “modest” deficit by the end of the financial year, forecasting a shortfall of about $6 million.
However the Far North Queensland Senior Medical Staff Association has warned unless the health service’s new electronic medical records system is fixed – claiming it is a major contributor to the hospital’s financial woes – then a much larger budget blackhole could emerge.
Cairns has been one of two pilot sites in Queensland for the rollout of the software program, Digital Hospital, an Integrated Electronic Medical Record (iEMR) system.
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Integrated accounting for Medical practices to become a reality with MedicalDirector and Surgical Partners

Australia’s leading clinical software provider, MedicalDirector and Surgical Partners, the leading provider of financial management systems for medical practices, have finalised an agreement to deliver integrated accounting automation for their customers. MedicalDirector PracSoft and Blue Chip customers will soon be able to integrate their financial transactions with popular accounting packages Xero, MYOB AccountRight Live, and Quickbooks Online, via the Surgical Partners Integration platform. Surgical Partners was the first to offer cloud integration solutions dedicated to the financial management problems faced by Medical practices. The solution set includes partnerships with the accounting packages as well as with market-leading solutions in the management of staff, accounts payable, and quality/accreditation processes – all of which will now be available to MedicalDirector clients.
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27 May, 2016

Telstra ‘screening contract’ critics might want to join the flat earth society

Posted by Jeremy Knibbs
When it comes to digital transformation in healthcare, Australia is all creep and no leap, lots of show and no go.
The amount of hoo-haa generated last week after Telstra Health won a $180 million contract to manage a national cancer screening register over the next few years demonstrates how unwilling and unprepared many of us are to embrace the sort of massive efficiencies that transformative digital technologies and the private sector can bring.
Telstra Health hasn’t covered itself in glory since its inception a couple of years back and conceivably the Telstra brand isn’t the country’s most trusted. But how do we expect to seriously create the sort of efficiencies we are going to need in the next few years to continue providing a decent standard of care and not go broke if we don’t take the odd jump? And get someone other than the government to share the risk? Currently it’s all creep and no leap.
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Telstra Health will hold Australians' cancer details, so we need to ensure their privacy is protected

May 30, 2016 8.00pm AEST
Telstra Health has won the contract to manage the National Bowel Cancer and Cervical Screening Program registries. from shutterstock.com

Author

Stephen Duckett
Director, Health Program, Grattan Institute
Telstra Health – the company’s health arm – will aggregate and manage data currently held by various state registries into one national database. There is potential that other cancer screening registries, such as breast screening, might also be contracted to Telstra Health in the future.
The registries not only contain personally identifying information, such as names and addresses, but also the results of pap smears that allow inferences about a person’s sexual status.
When Telstra Health’s venture into the market place was first foreshadowed in late October 2014, commentators highlighted potential issues around the privacy of Australians' personal information. So it was no surprise that this first Australian outsourcing provoked consumer advocates to highlight similar concerns.
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Health data a national asset: Can Telstra Health deliver on cancer registries?

Editor: Jennifer Doggett Author: Alison Verhoeven on: June 01, 2016
The proposal to consolidate Australia’s existing cancer registries and link them with electronic health records was one of the few Budget 2016-17 announcements that received widespread support from the health sector.
However, the decision by the Commonwealth Government to allow Telstra Health to develop and operate the new national cancer screening register from 2017 has raised questions which need satisfactory answers if the Australian public and health sector are to trust and support it according to Alison Verhoeven, Australian Healthcare and Hospitals Association Chief Executive.

Alison Verhoeven writes:

We welcomed the announcement in the 2016–17 Budget that the government would invest in modernising and integrating cancer screening registries, including proposed connections with the My Health Record. Integrating the smaller registries into a single entity has the potential to greatly reduce inefficiencies and support one of the key objectives of Primary Health Networks, which is to increase cancer screening in their communities.
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Question: where did the v2 messages and events go in FHIR?

Posted on May 30, 2016 by Grahame Grieve
Question:
I’m relatively new to the HL7 scene having implemented a few V2 messaging solutions (A08 , A19, ORU) and the V3/CDA work on PCEHR.  I am trying to get my head around FHIR.  So far I am stumped in how I would go about for example implementing the various trigger/messages I have done in V2.  Is there any guidance?  I cant find much.  Is that because the objective of FHIR is implementers are free to do it anyway they like?  If you could send me some links that would be a good starting point that would be great
Answer:
Most implementers of FHIR use the RESTful interface. In this approach, there’s no messaging events: you just post the Patient, Encounter etc resources directly to the server. The resources contain the new state of the Patient/Encounter etc, and the server (or any system subscribed to the server) infers the events as needed.
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My health record - Anyone use it?

Questionable 30/05/2016
I was just in the my.gov.au account and remembered I had signed up for the My Health Record.
While looking through, I noticed that nothing comes up - no pathology results, no health outcome results, absolutely nothing. I'm pretty healthy but currently pregnant with my second bub and I'd assume if Dr's were on board with this tool then they would be utilising it. My permissions are open to anyone who is involved in my medical care.
It got me thinking:
Do you ever sign in to the My Health Record?
Do you have any medical specialists who use it?
Do you think it’s a good idea to have, or another development that will fizzle??
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8 go-to sources of drug information

1 June, 2016 0 comments Read Later
Not all information sources are reliable, so it’s useful to ask yourself some simple questions to help you appraise them.
Is it evidence-based, is it current and is it relevant to your patient?
Sources of medicines information: a quick guide:
  • Australian Medicines Handbook, Therapeutic Guidelines and NPS MedicineWise cover most commonly prescribed medicines and conditions and should be among the first resources consulted. This information is evidence-based, current and reflects Australian best practice. The layout of AMH and Therapeutic Guidelines also allows rapid access to the information needed to prescribe safely.
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Medical apps prove tricky to regulate

Carmel Sparke | 31 May, 2016 |
Most of us have smartphones jammed with apps that promise to improve our lives by tracking our sleep, finding the best coffee spots or, more annoyingly, reminding us it’s time to go for a run. 
Many are fun and entertaining, but some are for more serious medical purposes.
An estimated 165,000 medical apps are on offer that range from measuring blood pressure to helping manage conditions such as diabetes, asthma and mental health. 
While some are helpful, for the most part, this field of mobile personalised healthcare is untested, unregulated, possibly ungovernable and occasionally dangerous. 
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How to pick the good from the bad smartphone health apps

May 31, 2016 6.21am AEST

Author

Carol Maher
National Heart Foundation Senior Research Fellow in Physical Activity, Sedentary Behaviour and Sleep, University of South Australia
With an estimated 100,000 health and fitness apps available on the two leading smartphone platforms, iOS and Android, it seems there is an app for everything – from tracking your bowel movements, to practising your pimple-popping technique.
However, a number of apps are starting to raise the ire of government regulators. Brain-training juggernaut Lumosity was recently fined US$2 million (A$2.7 million) for making unfounded claims that its app could improve work performance and delay the onset of Alzheimer’s.
“Ultimeyes”, a vision-training app touted to “turn back the clock on your vision” and reduce the need for glasses and contact lenses, was fined US$150,000 for misrepresenting scientific research and ordered to stop making deceptive marketing claims.
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Ambos' union disputes completion of NSW Health payroll

Department touting completion of rollout.

By Paris Cowan
Jun 1 2016 6:30AM
The NSW health system’s IT arm claims to have successfully reached the finish line in the statewide rollout of its Stafflink payroll system, onboarding all 140,000 health workers, Health staff and ambos.
But the union representing paramedics claims ambos were bolted on to the system as an afterthought, and are suffering from late and bungled payments as a result.
eHealth NSW last week announced that the successful migration of 4500 NSW Ambulance workers marked the final phase of the project, which it described as “one of the largest ever Oracle payroll implementations”.
The department has managed to keep the upgrade more or less out of the headlines, keen not to repeat the horror-story implementation of the equivelent system in Queensland.
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Is it goodbye to fingerpricks for diabetes patients?

Jo Hartley | 1 June, 2016 | 
Do you have an insulin-dependent diabetes patient who hates needles? 
A new, TGA-approved blood glucose monitoring device, which doesn’t require finger-prick tests, is being touted as something that could help in their management. 
The catchily named FreeStyle Libre Flash Glucose Monitoring System is made by Abbott and from Wednesday will be available in Australia. 
It reads blood glucose levels through a sensor inserted just under the skin, usually on the back of the upper arm, that remains in place for up to 14 days.  
A handheld scanner is used to read the sensor, which produces real-time results, historical trend data and the direction the glucose is heading.  
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Inside the tech supporting the bleeding edge of neuroscience

Queenslanders map living brains in real time.

By Andrew Sadauskas
May 30 2016 9:48AM
Each time researchers at the Queensland Brain Institute build a 3D map of a living organism they create another 30 gigabytes or so of data.
As real-time brain imagery gets better, faster, and bigger, the QBI is being forced to invest in some pretty serious IT kit to keep up.
QBI’s microscopy facility manager Luke Hammond took iTnews inside the fast moving research enterprise.
He said recent advancements in both the speed and sensitivity of imaging equipment meant that researchers can see far more of the brain than ever before, and at far greater speed. They can now visualise the brains of animals, observing their neural activity at a cellular resolution while they are still alive.
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Universal cancer vaccine ‘on track’, say researchers

  • The Australian
  • 3:00AM June 2, 2016

John Ross

Scientists say they are on track to produce a universal cancer ­vaccine, capable of eliminating any type of the disease, after they found a new way to convince “killer” immune cells to attack ­tumours.
In a revolutionary approach, charged nanoparticles simulate invading viruses and coax the immune system’s support cells to investigate. The nanoparticles then manipulate the support cells to produce “antigens”, or markers of cancer, triggering a full-blown response from the ­immune system.
The technique, described this morning in the journal Nature, has drawn encouraging results in mice and a handful of advanced melanoma patients. The team plans wider human trials in 12 months, when the full results of the melanoma trial are known.
Lead researcher Ugur Sahin said he anticipated approval of the treatment in about five years. It would be a “therapeutic ­vaccine” used to cure people who have already contracted cancer, unlike preventive vaccines such as the Australian-developed ­cervical cancer vaccine, which stop the disease taking root in the first place.
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Prescription pain pills swapped for heroin causing addiction epidemic in the United States

June 2, 20163:49pm
Nick Whigham news.com.au
THE United States is experiencing a heroin epidemic of unprecedented proportions and much of the blame falls at the feet of a once renegade pharmaceutical industry.
Opiate based pain killers became widely available in the US, particularly in the state of Florida in the late ‘90s after the drug OxyContin, known as “hillbilly heroin”, hit the market.
At roughly the same time, medical authorities urged doctors to pay greater attention to pain alleviation. As a result increasingly lax regulations around the drug meant it became readily and widely accessible, resulting in widespread abuse.
The award-winning 2009 documentary OxyContin Express showed the depths of the misuse and provided the impetus for a government crackdown on the trade and sale of the prescription drug. But the crackdown has resulted in what was apparently an unforeseen catastrophe by US policy makers.
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Enjoy!
David.
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Sunday, 5 June 2016

The Election Campaign Is Going Into The Final Phase - Time To See What The E-Health Policies Are.

The Election Campaign Is Going Into The Final Phase - Time To See What The E-Health Policies Are.

First I had a look at the Liberal web site.
Here is the link:
Sadly there was not a word on Health IT to be spotted.
Also checked the 2013 Liberal  policy document - again just not mentioned.
Of course we know the Liberals have funded the myHR for a couple of years in the recent budget - but they don’t seem to think that is worth mentioning.
Next to the Labor web-site:
The main web-site is found here:
Here is the policy document:
Again can’t find any references - but given the myHR as a Labor idea we can assume they support it.
Next to the Greens.
Their main national website is found here:
Interestingly the Victorian Greens do mention e-Health.
Health Services
“Hospitals with fully electronic medical records, that can be edited in real time and improved co-ordination and integration between all state, federal and private  health services, using shared health records such as the Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record.”
Here is the link:
The Queensland Greens also have a policy point:
7. Fund e-health records and improving information management and client access to personal medical information.
See here:
From these references I think we can assume that Health IT is something that the Greens are keen on!
So - overall I suspect the pollies could not care less about what is going on in the e-Health space.
If you have any additional in information please let us all know.
Pity that!
David
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AusHealthIT Poll Number 323  – Results – 5th June, 2016.

AusHealthIT Poll Number 323 – Results – 5th June, 2016.

Here are the results of the poll.

Are There Valid Reasons For Concern With The Involvement Of For-Profit Entities (e.g. Telstra, Cerner, Accenture etc.) In Government E-Health Projects?

Yes 33% (41)

No 63% (79)

I Have No Idea 5% (6)

Total votes: 126

A clear majority seem to think the worries regarding private sector involvement are overdone.

Good turnout of votes as well!

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

David.
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