Thursday, 4 August 2016

The Macro View – Health And Political News Relevant To E-Health And Health In General.

The Macro View – Health And Political News Relevant To E-Health And Health In General.

August 4  Edition.
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A week where we have all sorts of macro-economic news dominating little Australia with the central banks in the US, UK and Japan all adjusting policy of leaving things as they are for now.
The news this week globally was a little grim.
COMMENT
  • July 29 2016 - 5:08AM

The world isn't ready for another banking crisis

·         Satyajit Das
As Europe braces for the release of its bank stress tests, the world could be on the verge of another banking crisis.
The signs are obvious to all. The World Bank estimates the ratio of non-performing loans to total gross loans in 2015 reached 4.3 per cent. Before the 2009 global financial crisis, they stood at 4.2 per cent.
If anything, the problem is starker now than then: there are more than $US3 trillion ($4 trillion) in stressed loan assets worldwide, compared to the roughly $US1 trillion of US subprime loans that triggered the 2009 crisis.
European banks are saddled with $US1.3 trillion in non-performing loans, nearly $US400 billion of them in Italy. The IMF estimates that risky loans in China also total $US1.3 trillion, although private forecasts are higher. India's stressed loans top $US150 billion.
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Elsewhere we have had some Australian news suggesting that lowering of interest rates is coming soon. As of the weekend Australian 10 year bond rate is sitting around 1.83% which is close to the lowest ever while the share market seems to be going higher and higher – which makes no sense in conventional economics. Something is going to have to give and it may not be pretty – but it may take a long time for things to play out.
Australia’s circumstances are not looking all that flash this week:
  • Jul 25 2016 at 11:45 PM

The time bombs in the Australian economy are just starting to explode

by Ross Garnaut
Australia's 45th Parliament faces the most challenging economic environment for a quarter of a century. Real incomes per person have been stagnant or falling since the China resources boom began its retreat in the September quarter of 2011. Multi-factor productivity is negligibly higher than a decade ago. While real output has been growing only moderately below what were once considered to be trend rates, recent growth depends overwhelmingly on increases in resource export volumes that are outweighed by falls in prices, or on unsustainable expansion of government and housing expenditure. The official budget forecasts are built on unlikely export prices, growth and inflation rates and count as savings measures that have been rejected repeatedly by the Parliament, yet still point to continuing deficits. Budget weakness continues at a time when the vulnerability of Australian commercial banks to a closure of global debt markets is greater than during the GFC – when only the strength of the Commonwealth balance sheet allowed the banks to continue normal operations.
After two decades in which rising incomes and wealth for most Australians eased discomfort with moderately increasing inequality, the end of the resources boom has brought sharper differentiation in economic conditions across regions and amongst citizens as well as declines in real living standards for many people.
Outside Australia there is low productivity growth and business investment in all the high-income economies. Private investment tending to fall well short of savings in the developed countries and China has led to the lowest real interest rates ever, and taken the world financial system into unknown territory. There is retreat from the open movement of goods, services, capital and people that have made the past three quarters of a century the most economically dynamic time in human history. China, the world's biggest trading economy, struggles to balance short-term growth against the necessity of structural change for long term development. A difficult external strategic environment raises the spectre of unexpected burdens, including in Papua New Guinea where the significance of the collapse of the rule of law has escaped the notice of most Australians.
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Oh dear – a very important read.
Here are a few other things I have noticed.

General Budget Issues.

Low inflation due to international factors beyond RBA’s control

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM July 25, 2016

David Uren

Weak price growth in the June quarter is expected to provide the Reserve Bank with the excuse it needs to cut its benchmark rate to a fresh record low of 1.5 per cent next month — however, new research shows the fall in inflation around the world is predominantly driven by global forces that domestic monetary policy is powerless to address.
The June quarter inflation report, to be released on Wednesday, is expected to show the underlying rate of inflation was around 0.4 per cent which would put the annual rate at 1.4 per cent.
This would be slightly below the Reserve Bank’s forecast in its May monetary policy statement of 1.5 per cent. The minutes of the bank’s last meeting flagged that inflation was expected to remain low for an extended period given the subdued growth in labour costs and low cost pressures around the world.
The March quarter’s underlying inflation growth of only 0.15 per cent was a shock to both the Reserve Bank and to market economists and a further surprise in the June quarter remains possible.
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Threat of recession still looms large

  • The Australian
  • 8:45AM July 28, 2016

Robert Gottliebsen

Using conventional criteria the set of economic numbers that were released yesterday should have produced an Australian recession.
But we have not gone into recession and indeed the share market is trading at around year-high levels and Australian dwelling prices, at least in Sydney and Melbourne, have risen.
Most economists concentrate on whether there is going to be a rate reduction next week. I am not going to get into that game because I want to look at the deeper forces — why there should have been a recession; why it didn’t happen and whether we can keep avoiding such dangers.
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Central banks encourage irrational hedonism

In 1648 a Dutch water authority issued a bearer bond inscribed on goatskin to Niclaes de Meijer that promised to pay him 5 per cent in perpetuity to finance improvements to a local dike. The bond is now owned by Yale and, 368 years later, is still paying interest, even though the rate halved to 2.5 per cent in the 17th century.
Yale professors Geert Rouwenhorst and Will Goetzmann write that the life of such perpetual loans has typically been "cut short by imprudent financing, government recall or the misfortunes of wars and revolutions".
Here in Australia we see perpetual notes in the form of the preferred equity issued by banks, called "hybrids", that have no legal maturity (only optional refinancing periods or mandatory equity conversion dates).
These hybrids lost 40 per cent of their value during the 2008-2009 crisis. But mark-to-market investors, which represent most of us, are told to ignore this volatility and focus on the claim that the major banks will never go bust.
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COMMENT
  • July 30 2016

China will keep doing its own thing

Ross Gittins
On the prospects for China's economy, it's easy to be wrong. We analyse unfamiliar things by comparing them with things we understand, but in its massive size and economic history, China is one of a kind.
That's one conclusion I've drawn from a visit to China as a guest of the Australia-China Relations Institute, at the University of Technology, Sydney, and the All-China Journalists Association.
In recent years people in the world's financial markets have gone from ignoring the Chinese economy to assuming it works the same way a developed economy does.
Hence the consternation in global share markets last year and again early this year when China's share market took a sharp dive. Surely this meant its economy was in big trouble.
Well, maybe, but not for that reason. China is still a developing, middle-income economy and its share market is a relatively recent creation of its government, lacking the strong links with the real economy we're used to in the West.
As Professor Peter Drysdale, of the East Asian Bureau of Economic Research at the Australian National University, has explained, the worth of China's share market is equivalent to about a third of its gross domestic product, compared with more than 100 per cent in developed economies.
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Health Budget Issues.

Health authorities failing regions: report

July 24, 20169:00pm
Belinda Merhab AAP
Frontline health services are failing to target regions with high rates of preventable hospital admissions, a new report shows.
The Grattan Institute report has found 38 areas in Queensland and 25 in Victoria where potentially preventable hospitalisations, for conditions like asthma or diabetes, have been at least 50 per cent higher than the state average every year for a decade.
It found Primary Health Networks - 31 organisations responsible for delivering local primary care services across the country - are receiving inadequate data that doesn't allow them to identify these hot spots in order to fix the problem.
"This is unacceptable really," report author Stephen Duckett told AAP.
"More has to be done."
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Malcolm Turnbull to meet key health bureaucrats

  • The Australian
  • 9:53AM July 25, 2016

Sean Parnell

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull will today meet with health department officials for the first time since the Coalition’s re-election bid for was almost derailed by Labor’s so-called ‘Mediscare’ campaign.
The Australian understands Mr Turnbull and his reappointed Health Minister, Sussan Ley, will meet with key bureaucrats to discuss the Coalition’s election promises and broader issues confronting the portfolio.
Neither would comment on the meeting yesterday but the Prime Minister appears keen to take a greater role in health policy and, in particular, communicating the Coalition’s plan to crossbench senators, stakeholders and the community.
Key to the Turnbull government plans this term is the trial of Health Care Homes, where patients with chronic illness enrol with a GP clinic or Aboriginal health service for regular treatment and monitoring through services funded through bundled payments.
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Time to take health seriously

Michael Gannon
Monday, 25 July, 2016
THERE has been much conjecture since election night about the significance of health policy, and the use of a “scare campaign” in changing votes.
The Coalition attacked Labor over its “Mediscare” campaign, which deliberately painted a picture of a fully privatised Medicare. The Prime Minister subsequently called it an “extreme act of dishonesty”.
The Australian Medical Association (AMA), too, was critical of the opposition’s Medicare privatisation claims. There is, and was, no move to privatise Medicare. All that was announced, and later withdrawn, was a plan to look at outsourcing some backroom administration arrangements in the antiquated payments system, something that the AMA would still welcome and support.
Nevertheless, the political reality is that health played a major part in this election, and it was the Coalition that created and nurtured the fertile ground that allowed the scare campaign to grow and thrive.
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Sussan Ley talks tough on defending changes to healthcare

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM July 26, 2016

Sean Parnell

Health Minister Sussan Ley last night defended the Medicare freeze and vowed to consult with medical practitioners on any changes to be made by the Turnbull government.
Promoting new models of paying for healthcare, Ms Ley reiterated that the freeze on indexation was appropriate — “If you can’t pay for something, you can’t deliver it” — and refused to say if or when it would be lifted.
Asked on ABC radio whether health policies had hurt the Coalition at the election, Ms Ley instead referred to Labor’s claims Medicare would be privatised, saying, “the Medicare lie, the outrageous lie, I’m sure it did”.
The privatisation claim arose largely from secretive government plans to upgrade the Medicare payments system and prompted an unexpected, mid-campaign pledge from Malcolm Turnbull that the system would not be outsourced.
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Facebook post claims cancer patients are being denied treatment thanks to government cuts

July 25, 20165:30pm

AMA chief wanted to hear more from Ley

THE Federal Health Minister has denied government health cuts have led to cancer patients being denied treatment after a viral Facebook status claimed pensioners were being refused scans.
“I was really concerned to read Sue’s post on the weekend, as there are no changes to Medicare-rebated diagnostic imaging services which would justify the experience she has outlined,” a spokesperson for Sussan Ley, Minister for Health and Aged Care, told news.com.au.
“Sue kindly got in touch with my office this afternoon and we are now working through her situation in a bid to address her concerns.
“Can I again make it very clear; Commonwealth bulk billing incentives for Diagnostic Imaging providers remain in place for all concession card holders and anyone under 16 now and into the future.”
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  • July 28 2016 - 12:00AM

Finding scapegoats won't make healthcare safer

·         Jeffrey Braithwaite
Some would be dissatisfied with the state government's explanation that it was a "systems failure" that tragically killed one newborn baby and seriously injured another when the wrong gas was connected to an outlet in the operating theatre of a Bankstown hospital.
But, NSW Secretary of Health Elizabeth Koff was right when she said "we failed as a system". It is systems, not individuals, that are responsible for devastating errors in complex organisations like hospitals. And it is also here that potential solutions lie.
It is difficult to imagine circumstances more devastating than the needless death or injury of a newborn child. For every serious error that occurs in our hospitals, particularly one that takes a life, a "no stone unturned" investigation or inquiry is, of course, essential, as is the support of all those affected.
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Couch potatoes ‘cost us $800 million a year’

  • The Australian
  • 8:30AM July 28, 2016

John Ross

Inactivity costs Australia more than $800 million a year and taxpayers foot most of the bill, a world-first study has found.
Researchers from four Australian universities have calculated that sedentary lifestyles gouged $805m from the national economy in 2013 in direct healthcare costs and lost productivity through illness, disability and shortened lives.
The findings, published in The Lancet, come from the first analysis of the worldwide economic effects of a “global pandemic” of inactivity. The team found five major diseases caused by sedentary lifestyles — coronary heart disease, stroke, type 2 diabetes and breast and colon cancer — cost the world about $90 billion a year.
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  • July 28 2016 - 6:00PM

Dumpling days numbered as aged-care profit motive creeps on

·         Michael Bachelard
Vereniki day is a favourite at Kalyna Care. 
The traditional eastern European dumpling, often served with cabbage, is part of the identity of many residents at the Delahey home formerly known as the Ukrainian Elderly People's Home.
But all this is under threat, as not-for-profit aged-care homes like Kalyna face the pinch of competition and reduced government funding. 
Without much fuss, big listed or private for-profit companies are taking over the residential aged-care industry.
"Eighty-five per cent of aged care, disability and mental health care will be privatised over the next five years," predicts Michael Goldsworthy from not-for-profit representative group, Better Boards Australia.
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Health Insurance Issues.

  • Jul 25 2016 at 4:35 PM

Private health funds accused of misusing patient data for commercial gain

Private health insurers that also own dental surgeries are misusing data obtained through the HICAPS claiming system for commercial benefit, the Australian Dental Association has warned a Productivity Commission inquiry into expanded data sharing.
The inquiry, for which submissions close on July 29, is examining the benefits and costs of data being shared more widely between public sector agencies, private sector organisations, the research sector, academics and the community. 
In a submission by Australian Dental Association (ADA) president Dr Rick Olive, the peak body said the way some private health insurers were already behaving should be a warning on the perils of data sharing.
Dr Olive said contracts between dentists and private health insurers had clauses relating to the use of confidential information in HICAPS, which were "too generous" to insurers. They are allowed to access data about the charging practises of individual dentists and practices which use the HICAPS system, and drill down to analyse the specific procedures performed and the identity of patients receiving them.
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Pharmacy Issues.

Pharmacists may have conflict over natural therapies: review

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM July 27, 2016

Sean Parnell

Pharmacists have a conflict of interest in selling unproven drugs and therapies to supplement their incomes from dispensing med­icines, an independent review has been told.
The Review of Pharmacy Remuneration and Regulation was a key commitment in the $18.9 billion pharmacy agreement negotiated by the federal Coalition government last term. The review panel — headed by Stephen King from the Productivity Commission — held back the release of its discussion paper until after the July 2 election.
Apart from perennial issues of fees, business models and location rules, the paper questions the very nature of what pharmacists do, and what they charge, and asks should they be put to better use. “It was put to the panel that community pharmacists face conflicts of interest between their role as retailers and as healthcare professionals,” says the paper, noting pharmacists can sell over-the-counter, complementary therapies and other retail ­products.
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Pharmacy location rules in question

The King Review discussion paper is scrutinising location and ownership rules, and supermarket restrictions

Currently there are 11 pharmacy location rules agreed to by the Department of Health and the Pharmacy Guild of Australia within the Sixth Community Pharmacy Agreement, which specify where pharmacies can be opened – with a focus on spacing them out across urban areas.
These regulations cover both the relocation of existing pharmacies and the establishment of new ones, and were introduced in 1991 after it was discovered most pharmacies in urban areas were clustered together while rural and remote areas had significantly poorer access.
While some have submitted to the recently released Pharmacy Remuneration and Regulation Review panel that the current location rules allow pharmacies to provide a range of high-quality services to the community, others have argued that they limit access to, and affordability of, prescription medicines.
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Pharmacist up-selling concerns aired

July 27, 20165:12pm
Belinda Merhab AAP
It's feared patients are being sold medicines they don't need when they walk into their local chemist by pharmacists seeking profits.
An independent panel, tasked by the federal government to review the regulation and pay of pharmacists, has raised concerns about the role of pharmacists as both retailers and healthcare professionals.
It's heard that some consumers worry their pharmacist may be unnecessarily up-selling them over-the-counter products or complementary medicines they don't need to make money.
It's also heard concerns about whether complementary medicines, such as vitamins, with no evidence-based health benefits should be sold in pharmacies at all, given it could "misinform consumers of their effectiveness".
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  • July 28 2016 - 3:46PM

Pharmacist conflicts of interest and 'up-selling' patients flagged in major federal government review

Kate Aubusson
Pharmacists could see their PBS funding cut if they don't limit the space they devote to retail products, and restrictions put on the types of products they sell under potential reform measures canvassed by a major federal government review.
A pharmacist's dual role as retailer and healthcare professional had blurred the line between treating people as customers or patients, the Pharmacy Remuneration and Regulation review panel has heard.
It meant community pharmacists face a conflict of interest by offering patients unnecessary over-the-counter and complementary medicines to boost their earnings, according to the review's discussion paper released this week.
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Review to probe pharmacy conflict of interest

28 July 2016
DO pharmacists have a conflict of interest as both retailers and healthcare professionals? Are they upselling unproven treatments to help line their pockets? Should they receive Medicare rebates for the advice they give to patients?
These are just some of the many questions that will be addressed as part of the first independent, comprehensive review of community pharmacy in close to 20 years.
A discussion paper from the Review of Pharmacy Remuneration and Regulation - also known as the King Review - was belatedly released on Wednesday, after having been held back until after the federal election.
The paper sets the agenda for a thorough examination of pharmacy - not just of the perpetual issues of business models and location rules, but of the very nature of what pharmacists do.
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Superannuation Issues.

Morrison spruiks super message to G20 finance ministers in China

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM July 25, 2016

Glenda Korporaal

Scott Morrison has promoted the fiscal benefits of the government’s proposed crackdown on superannuation tax concessions at the G20 finance ministers meeting in China at the weekend.
The Treasurer said he had told the meeting the government’s cutbacks in super tax concessions and the elig­ibility for the Age Pension were about “protecting the integrity of the tax base” and “having a sustainable treatment of retirement incomes”.
The G20 ministers had discussed the importance of having as many people as possible in the tax system. “The more people you have in the tax system, and which are part of the system, the more you are able to address the equity issues between those who receive and those who pay taxes,” he told the meeting in Chengdu, capital of Sichuan province in China’s southwest.
Mr Morrison said he had ­spoken about the need for a sustainable tax system.
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Morrison justifies super plan

- on July 25, 2016, 6:21 am
Treasurer Scott Morrison has used a meeting of the world’s top finance ministers and central bankers to back in his plans to curtail superannuation benefits to well-off Australians.
Mr Morrison, speaking on the sidelines of the meeting of G20 finance ministers in Chengdu, China, said his planned changes to super were part of a wider effort to make the tax system more sustainable and up-to-date.
The superannuation changes, including a move to cap concessional contributions at $500,000 starting from 2007, have caused troubles within the Federal Government since they were announced in the May Budget.
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  • Jul 27 2016 at 9:59 AM

Scott Morrison says 'taxes will inevitably rise' if super savings don't pass

Treasurer Scott Morrison who has vowed to stick with the government proposed changes to superannuation to make savings that are opposed by some Liberal MPs, has warned taxes could rise if the measures do not pass.
He also said the changes will help reassure ratings agencies of Australia's AAA status after Moody's, Standard & Poors, and Fitch Ratings warned the government and the Senate that Australia's AAA credit rating will be threatened if budget repair is derailed in the next parliament.
"The changes we've made to superannuation do a number of things they make the superannuation system more fair and more sustainable and they make a significant contribution to bringing the budget back towards balance.
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  • Jul 27 2016 at 11:45 PM
  • Updated Jul 28 2016 at 8:10 AM

Scott Morrison says super rebels are defending the rich

Treasurer Scott Morrison has urged those opposed to a $500,000 lifetime cap on non-concessional superannuation contributions to consider that scrapping the proposal would benefit only the very wealthy.
Stepping up his push against the backbench and those in the industry who want the proposal dumped or heavily amended, the Treasurer raised the prospect of tax increases as an alternative to spending cuts should changes cause a loss in revenue.
"We need to ensure we continue to get this under control otherwise the deficit will be higher, the debt will be higher, more taxes will inevitably rise. This is not something the government is interested in doing," he told Sky News.
The $500,000 lifetime cap, which would be backdated to 2007, is causing the most angst because it is deemed retrospective. Last week, Queensland Nationals MP George Christensen, who represents the working class seat of Dawson, said he would cross the floor if it were not changed.
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Save Our Super: Turnbull and O’Dwyer are breaking super promises

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM July 30, 2016

Grace Collier

In Melbourne’s Malvern Town Hall on June 20, about 250 people gathered for a Save Our Super meeting. On the stage sat three empty chairs representing Malcolm Turnbull, Bill Shorten and assistant treasurer Kelly O’Dwyer. The Prime Minister and the Opposition Leader had promptly declined the invitation to attend. O’Dwyer, the local member of parliament and the person with carriage of the superannuation issue, declined to attend at the last minute.
“Not only did she not attend, until mid-afternoon on the day of the meeting she had not even responded,” says Jack Hammond QC, founder of the community-based group Save Our Super. “Worse, the response only came after I phoned a senior member of the Liberal Party, advised that Kelly had not responded to earlier messages, and said it was a very bad look.”
O’Dwyer was contacted for comment but did not respond.
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I look forward to comments on all this!
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David.
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Some Are Actually Making An Effort To Make Practical Improvements In The Technology Supporting Healthcare!

Some Are Actually Making An Effort To Make Practical Improvements In The Technology Supporting Healthcare!

This appeared a little while ago.

Taking Bids on the Hospital of the Future

In Silicon Valley, Kaiser is testing new hardware and software.

July 22, 2016 — 9:00 PM AEST
Leo, a 68-year-old retiree, is out shopping when his heart rate becomes irregular. He doesn’t notice, but his wrist monitor does, and it notifies a distant team of doctors. They dispatch a driverless car packed with sensors and medical gear to get a closer look at him and, if necessary, bring him to the pharmacy or emergency room.
This is the future as imagined by Kaiser Permanente, which has built a mock-up of Leo’s home in a test facility not far from its Oakland, Calif., headquarters, and is looking for equipment makers who can help fill the rooms’ empty spaces. As Silicon Valley’s principal hospital system and insurer, Kaiser has a history of focusing on advances rooted in technology, but in the past few years, instead of forcing its 10.6 million patients to use the systems on offer, it’s begun pushing hardware and software makers to respond to patient demands, and supply what it thinks they’ll want in 10 years. “It frees us up so we don’t get so stuck on the realities of today,” says Chief Executive Officer Bernard J. Tyson.
The auditions take place in a spartan 37,000-square-foot warehouse in the Oakland suburb of San Leandro. There, the model apartment for Leo—with spots marked out for motion detectors, sleep trackers, and a smart fridge—abuts mock hospital rooms, an operating room, and a neonatal intensive care unit, where doctors and nurses test equipment and practice new procedures.
Other staffers and patients try out some of the less exotic equipment, too, including telehealth software and a TV entertainment system that lets patients lying in hospital beds review their treatment plans, order food, call a janitor, or adjust the blinds on their windows using a remote, a keyboard, or their smartphone. Kaiser physicians now handle more patients via telehealth (59 million a year) than they do in person (50 million). Jennifer Liebermann, who runs the test facility, says patient feedback guided development of the TV remote system rolling out to a handful of hospitals and helped fine-tune it over the course of two years to make sure it was easy to use. Kaiser rejected at least one system interface, she says, after elderly patients deemed it too confusing.
Lots more (with pictures) here:
Compare and contrast how those who actually deliver care and politicians envision the future. I think I much prefer the former!
David.
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Wednesday, 3 August 2016

I Never Thought Pokémon GO Would Feature On This Blog – Well Now It Does!

I Never Thought Pokémon GO Would Feature On This Blog – Well Now It Does!

This appeared last week:

Pokémon GO as a health tool

Christopher Timms
Monday, 25 July, 2016
THOUSANDS of Australians have been walking the streets, parks and beaches of their cities with eyes glued to their smartphones following the recent release of a game called Pokémon GO.
Pokémon GO is a new, free, smartphone game that augments reality and requires users to walk around in the physical world to progress through the game. The smartphone’s camera captures the surrounding environment and integrates Pokémon characters into the scene.
Players are rewarded for exploring their environment and walking between certain landmarks, or “PokéStops”, which tend to be places of cultural significance, museums, scenic lookouts or even government buildings.
Walking is an integral part of the game – allowing players to capture more Pokémon, hatch eggs or obtain useful tools, such as health potions.
It’s the walking part of the game that may just make Pokémon GO an exciting tool that health care professionals should be aware of, and one that highlights the need for further discussion about the use of video gaming in health care.
An in-game feature, called a “lure”, can be used to create a location abundant in Pokémon. Now, imagine how the ability to attract people to locations could be used for health. If particular demographics could be targeted, potential uses might be a rare Pokémon appearing near a health careers booth in a rural area, near a dietitian’s stall or appearing at a mental health awareness event.
These are things health care providers should be thinking about, talking about and be familiar with for our patients. 
Gaming is prevalent in the patients we see, simply because so many people play. The Bond University Digital Australia Survey 2016 showed that 98% of homes with children have video games, the average age of video game players is now 33 years old, 47% of video game players are female, and approximately 68% of the population plays. This is a huge percentage of patient demographics from school age through to our oldest citizens.
While many doctors are familiar with using a game to distract a crying child in the emergency department, there is a much broader potential in paediatrics.
Twenty years ago, the use of video games at school was limited to crunching numbers on Math Blaster. Health care professionals might now be required to discuss Pokémon GO as a weight-loss tool or know to ask if a teenager is experiencing cyber bullying via a game.
In America, in 2010, the state of West Virginia committed to installing the active video game DanceDance Revolution in all 765 of its public schools to encourage students to exercise.
In the same way we learn about Peppa Pig so we can interact with our younger patients, we should understand gaming in order to better connect with our patients who are gamers.
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Dr Christopher Timms is a GP registrar based in Port Macquarie, NSW.
Lots more here:
Congratulations to Dr Timms for making the game understandable for non-players and then for explaining how the game might have some health benefits!
Normal service will now be resumed!
David.
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Tuesday, 2 August 2016

Just Stop This Blame Rubbish! It Is Totally Clear Who Is To Blame!

Just Stop This Blame Rubbish! It Is Totally Clear Who Is To Blame!

I am a specialist anaesthetist.

On this nonsense of who is responsible for the gas mess up disaster at a Sydney Hospital it is utterly clear.

Some utterly incompetent and utterly guilty person did not check what gas was coming out of each pipe in the Hospital.

He/She needs serious jail time. You need (as a clinician) to be utterly sure what comes out when you open a gas flow - and you can hardly check every time in every place.

The engineers need to make this utterly certain and safe or go to jail.

Simple!

David
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Yet Again We Find The Department Of Health Really Struggles With Technology.

Yet Again We Find The Department Of Health Really Struggles With Technology.


Medicare’s new PBS authority service went live on 1 July promising an “online solution” for doctors to get approval for most authority PBS medications, as well as increased quantities and repeats.
But the lack of an interface with medical desktop software makes for a slow and clunky experience, leading early users to say they’ll stick to the phone.
“We’ve been asking for 15 years for an authority system that links with clinical software, but that is apparently not what they are delivering,” Dr Nathan Pinskier, chair of the RACGP’s eHealth and Practice Systems committee, told The Medical Republic.
It appears the Department of Human Services expects medical software vendors to sort out the many problems with the online service.
“The system allows prescribers to get a PBS authority approval online using either the Health Professionals Online Services (HPOS) or an upgraded version of their existing prescribing software that integrates web services,” DHS General Manager Hank Jongen said in a statement to TMR last week.
“A small number of prescribers have started using HPOS to request PBS authority approvals, and we expect the rollout of upgraded prescribing software in coming months to prompt a significant shift to the online channel.”
For now, the lack of an interface with clinical software means doctors need to pick their way through 20 steps online for each application for authority approval.
“There are a number of steps which are really quite annoying,” Sydney GP Dr Brian Morton, one of the few GPs to take part in the trial, said.
Dr Morton said he did not mind having to register for a Provider Digital Access Account (PRODA), but there were many instances of red tape and legalistic language that were not doctor or patient friendly.
More here:
Yet again we see the left and right hands failing to talk and co-operate to deliver a sensible outcome for the GPs.
Rather than inventing nonsense strategies for compulsory enrolment in the myHR program maybe the ADHA could be trying to sort out stupid, time wasting issues like the one above.
It would be hard to say credibly that the DoH is from the Government and here to help! They are clearly just wanting things to remain as annoying as ever!
David.
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