Saturday, 30 April 2016

Back to Paper After U.S. Coast Guard EHR Debacle:  Proof of Hegel's Adage "We Learn From History That We Do Not Learn From History"?

Back to Paper After U.S. Coast Guard EHR Debacle: Proof of Hegel's Adage "We Learn From History That We Do Not Learn From History"?

I have become blue in the face writing about healthcare information technology mismanagement over the years.  In fact, the original focus of my 1998 website on health IT (its descendant now at http://cci.drexel.edu/faculty/ssilverstein/cases) was on HIT project mismanagement.

If this industry actually had learned anything from history, I would not be reading nor writing about brutally mismanaged HIT endeavors in 2016.  Sadly, that is not the case.

The Coast Guard, founded by Alexander Hamilton, has this as its motto and mission:

http://www.gocoastguard.com/about-the-coast-guard
Semper Paratus - Always Ready.

The Coast Guard is one of our nation's five military services. We exist to defend and preserve the United States. We protect the personal safety and security of our people; the marine transportation system and infrastructure; our natural and economic resources; and the territorial integrity of our nation–from both internal and external threats, natural and man-made. We protect these interests in U.S. ports and inland waterways, along the coasts, on international waters.

We are a military, multi-mission, maritime force offering a unique blend of military, law enforcement, humanitarian, regulatory, and diplomatic capabilities. These capabilities underpin our three broad roles: maritime safety, maritime security, and maritime stewardship. There are 11 missions that are interwoven within these roles.

It seems the Coast Guard personnel need personal protection from the HIT industry, for the motto of that industry, sadly appears to be something like "Stupra Acetabulus" (Screw the Suckers).

From Politico, one of only a few publications that in recent years has taken a critical approach to this industry and pulls no punches:

http://www.politico.com/story/2016/04/ehr-debacle-leads-to-paper-based-care-for-coast-guard-servicemembers-222412
EHR debacle leads to paper-based care for Coast Guard servicemembers
By Darius Tahir
04/25/16

The botched implementation of an electronic health records system sent Coast Guard doctors scurrying to copy digital records onto paper last fall and has disrupted health care for 50,000 active troops and civilian members and their families.

Five years after signing a $14 million contract with industry leader Epic Systems, the Coast Guard ended its relationship with the Wisconsin vendor, while recovering just more than $2.2 million from the company. But it couldn’t revert back to its old system, leaving its doctors reliant on paper.

This state of affairs is simple inexcusable.  It represents gross negligence and severe multi-axial incompetence at best - but likely primarily not by the Coast Guard, whose core competency does not include HIT.

There’s no clear evidence the EHR disaster has harmed patients, and a Coast Guard spokesman said the use of paper records hasn’t affected “the quality of health care provided to our people.”

Proof by lack of evidence is not reassuring in a debacle of this kind.  However, the Coast Guard admits that paper records aren't the clear and present danger the IT pundits make them out to be.

Politico is skeptical of the claim:

That seems unlikely. Without digital records, if a patient goes outside a Coast Guard clinic, it can take weeks for the paper record to follow him or her back to the Coast Guard, says Michael Little of the Association of the United States Navy. And since the Coast Guard primarily provides outpatient, rather than hospital, services, many of its patients seek outside care.

“It’s one thing if you’re doing paper-based [care] in Ohio, but what about if you’re on paper records in [an] icebreaker or cutter in Alaska, and you need your gall bladder removed?” said Little, the organization’s director of legislative affairs.

In this case, I disagree that the lack of records is so dangerous.  There's the telephone, FAX machines, the patient himself or herself, and the hand-carried note.  Used with care, those serve care reasonably well. 

With the Department of Veterans Affairs weighing whether to buy a top-of-the-line commercial electronic health record and the Pentagon beginning a multibillion-dollar EHR implementation, the Coast Guard case displays how poorly the process can go for the government, even when the biggest names in health IT are involved.

Not just the government.  I'd also argue that this shows that the "biggest names" are, at best, overextended, and at worst, badly needing external investigation as to their software development, customization, implementation and support practices, as well as hiring practices (e.g., see my August 15, 2010 post "EPIC's outrageous recommendations on healthcare IT project staffing"
at http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2010/08/epics-outrageous-recommendations-on.html) and contracting.

Reversion to a purely paper-based system is a rare event in the recent annals of electronic records, said Thomas Payne, a health IT expert at the University of Washington. “I can think of examples where that has happened, but in the last decade that is much less common.”

I believe that is because of the general invisibility of, and immunity from, the risks and harms that occur from "making do" with bad health IT due to financial pressures.  Hence one sees hair-raising examples like I wrote of at my Nov. 17, 2013 post "Another 'Survey' on EHRs - Affinity Medical Center (Ohio) Nurses Warn That Serious Patient Complications 'Only a Matter of Time' in Open Letter"at http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2013/11/another-survey-on-ehrs-affinity-medical.html where going back to paper to allow a complete rethinking of the EHR implementation would likely have been the safe response.

See also, for example, my July 2013 post "RNs Say Sutter’s New Electronic System Causing Serious Disruptions to Safe Patient Care at East Bay Hospitals" at http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2013/07/rns-say-sutters-new-electronic-system.html (there are links there to still more examples).

The Coast Guard is tight-lipped about the causes, timeline and responsibility for the debacle. “Various irregularities were uncovered, which are currently being reviewed,” a spokesman said.

The causes are all covered at http://cci.drexel.edu/faculty/ssilverstein/cases/, and have been since the late 1990s.  In the alternative, the book "Managing Technological Change: Organizational Aspects of Health Informatics" (http://www.amazon.com/Managing-Technological-Change-Organizational-Informatics/dp/0387985484) by Lorenzi & Riley does likewise for an even longer period, since the mid 1990s - for those willing or able to learn from history and from the pioneers

There’s no shortage of candidates: the service relied on five separate vendors to build the new system, and its own planning seems to have been at fault.

Lawmakers are looking into the matter, said a spokesman for the Senate Appropriations Committee, which is “monitoring the situation."

This is symptomatic, in my view, of the fact that there are a lot of "Beltway Bandit" IT consultant companies doing business, few of them very good.

Bungled implementation, followed by chaos

In September 2010, the Coast Guard bid out the contract to Epic Systems, then added an array of other contracts to software vendors and consultants to help implement it. Since 2010, the agency spent, on net, just more than $34 million on health IT.

In a January 2011 speech, Coast Guard Chief Medical Officer Mark Tedesco cited the success of Epic installations at Kaiser Permanente and Cleveland Clinic. He predicted that the Epic implementation would improve the health of its population and save money.

Overall it’s a cheaper system for us to run than to upgrade to [the next generation military EHR], because of what that would’ve meant to us infrastructure-wise and support-personnel wise,” he said.

It's stunning to think what this says about the next-generation military EHR.  The previous one was not very good, either (see my June 4, 2009 post "If The Military Can't Get Electronic Health Records Right, Why Would We Think Conflicted EHR Companies And IT-Backwater Hospitals Can?" at http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2009/06/if-military-cant-get-electronic-health.html). 

Trouble, apparently, struck quickly. The solicitation for the EHR contract envisioned rolling out the software within six months at two to three pilot sites, before deploying it to a total of 43 clinics and the sickbays aboard the Coast Guard’s fleet.

That didn’t occur; the system never deployed to any clinic or cutter, said Eric Helsher, an executive with Epic. The next missed deadline was March 2012, which Trent Janda — the Coast Guard doctor serving as project leader — announced in a summer 2011 newsletter of the Uniformed Services Academy of Family Physicians.

One can only wonder what penalties the contract called for if the goals and timelines were not met.  That software was not deployed even to any pilot sites is nearly unimaginable to me.

As Janda set the new goal, he acknowledged there had been “multiple hurdles and delays,” and explained that the service had expanded its ambitions.

“Immediately upon award of the contract, we began a comprehensive analysis of the clinical workflows and existing information systems,” Janda wrote. “Many of the weaknesses became apparent as we compared ourselves to industry standards and best practices. Frequently, a weakness would lead to others, ultimately leading to the need for an additional system. The work-flow analysis quickly grew into a system wide re-engineering project like a snowball rolling down the mountainside.”

This sounds like a groundbreaking level of project mayhem and chaos, even for HIT.

The comment reveals that the agency failed to do necessary advance planning, says Theresa Cullen, an informatics executive with the Regenstrief Institute who formerly worked with Veterans Health Affairs and the Indian Health Service.

“They should have done a full needs assessment,” she said. “One would have normally done the workflow evaluation prior to the release of the RFP.”

If true, I believe it was an obligation of EPIC and the multiple contractors to have pointed that out to their future customer, and adjusted their bids accordingly, taking into account the time and resources needed for this type of work - or not placed a bid at all.  Such deficiencies and what they mean towards project progress and failure are obvious - to anyone who's learned from history.

... Cullen also found it odd that the Coast Guard didn’t hire consultants to implement the new system until September 2012. The service ended up hiring Leidos, which also maintained its old EHR.

The Coast Guard further complicated the process by deciding to team up with the State Department. Its original request was complicated enough, with installations spanning six time zones. The partnership with State meant implementing across 170 countries. (A spokeswoman for State said the agency was investigating its options, but refused additional comment).

The sheer number of sites led Cullen to question whether Coast Guard and State had devoted enough resources to the project. Between Epic and Leidos, the project was budgeted for roughly $31 million. That was “an inadequate amount of funding for what you’re asking to do,” she said. Consultants receive roughly $100 an hour, and Epic’s work with clinicians is time-consuming.

Again, those hired knew, should have known, or should have made it their business to know that under such conditions, if true, project failure was the predictable outcome.  They are supposed to be the HIT experts, after all, not the Coast Guard.

While a very efficient health care system could implement the EHR, she said, the Coast Guard lacks that reputation. She speculated that Epic intentionally underbid the contract. (Epic’s Helsher said that “the contract was viable and we were fully motivated to lead a successful install.”)

Someone is right, and someone is wrong.  I leave it to the reader to decide who was correct and who wasn't.

Anecdotes of further delays pepper various newsletters and reports from 2012 through 2015. Server failures scuttled a pilot rollout in 2014, then developed into deeper problems, and last July the systems started failing on a more regular basis.

Perhaps the "anecdotes" need to be turned into "teachable moments" through legal discovery by federal law enforcement.

The Coast Guard advised retirees and dependents that month that, due to incompatibility between its EHR and the Department of Defense’s new medication reconciliation system, they couldn’t get their prescriptions filled at Coast Guard clinics.

Around Labor Day, Coast Guard health care personnel were directed to copy information from electronic files onto paper, for fear of losing their data.

That is just about the most pathetic sentence I've ever had to read in my 24 years in Medical Informatics.

... doctors are frustrated. One complained in the Uniformed Services Academy of Family Physicians newsletter of “unique challenges which seemed to revolve around many electronic record keeping changes.” “The question we pose is, how is this affecting shipboard life?” Little said. “This is the most important thing that’s happening right now in the Coast Guard.”

My advice to the Coast Guard is to treat the IT invaders and consultants as it would a invading maritime fleet from a hostile nation.

The vendors who worked with the Coast Guard either don’t know what went wrong, or aren’t telling. Leidos — also the lead company implementing the Pentagon’s EHR project — declined comment, as did Lockheed Martin, which was contracted to implement access to the EHR through mobile devices, and Apprio, which was to provide credentialing services.

I believe they have a very good idea of "what went wrong", and aren't telling (per the Fifth Amendment)?  If they have "no idea" what went wrong, what, I ask, are they doing in the IT consulting business?

... The EHR giant [EPIC] says it’s not entirely clear why the Coast Guard pulled the plug. But the situation wasn’t Epic’s fault, company executive Eric Helsher said.

They pulled the plug out of fear for their members' well-being, hopefully.

It seems everyone seeks to escape culpability, with the blame placed on the customer.

The Coast Guard spokesman said the decision was “driven by concerns about the project's ability to deliver a viable product in a reasonable period of time and at a reasonable cost.”

It seems there's still some who don't continue down the sunk-cost fallacy road (https://www.logicallyfallacious.com/tools/lp/Bo/LogicalFallacies/173/Sunk_Cost_Fallacy) and are willing to walk away from bad HIT.

... In general, software contracts deserve more scrutiny, said Kingston, who served on the House Appropriations Committee. “These things don’t get the scrutiny a weapons system does.”

Considering the reputation of military costs, that's saying quite a lot.  The lesson that should have been learned from history is that HIT is both exploratory, and a relative free-for-all.

Caveat emptor.

One last piece of (free!) advice for the Coast Guard leadership.

Read this paper:

Pessimism, Computer Failure, and Information Systems Development in the Public Sector.  (Public Administration Review 67;5:917-929, Sept/Oct. 2007, Shaun Goldfinch, University of Otago, New Zealand).  Cautionary article on IT that should be read by every healthcare executive documenting the widespread nature of IT difficulties and failure, the lack of attention to the issues responsible, and recommending much more critical attitudes towards IT.  linkto pdf

That may be the most valuable learning experience of all for their next attempt to implement EHRs.

-- SS
Baca selengkapnya

Friday, 29 April 2016

This Can't Be Good News! Healthcare The Biggest Target Of Security Issues

This Can't Be Good News! Healthcare The Biggest Target Of Security Issues

This appeared last week

Healthcare Data Breaches Top Reported Data Security Incident

By Jacqueline Belliveau on April 12, 2016

A recent study revealed that healthcare data breaches accounted for 39 percent of data breaches in 2015.

Healthcare data breaches were the most common type of data security incident reported in 2015, according to a recent study by Symantec Corporation.

Researchers found that approximately 39 percent of breaches during the year occurred in the health services sub-sector.

 “This comes as no surprise, given the strict rules within the healthcare industry regarding reporting of data breaches,” explained the authors of the study. “However, the number of identities exposed is relatively small in this industry. Such a high number of breaches with low numbers of identities tends to show that the data itself is quite valuable to warrant so many small breaches.”

There were 120 healthcare data breaches reported in 2015, which was the largest number of data breaches across all industries studied. The next leading industries for data breaches (business and education) only reported 20 incidents each.
Despite the prevalence of healthcare data security events, the study reported only 1 percent of incidents led to exposure of identities. That still accounted for nearly four million individuals who had their identities exposed as a result of a healthcare data breach.

The study attributes the growing volume of data breaches across all industries to a shift in how cybercriminals operate.

Researchers found that more cybercriminals used more zero-day attacks, including phishing scams and ransomware, in 2015.

The number of zero-day vulnerabilities in 2015 increased by 125 percent from a year ago. Meanwhile, 430 million new malware variants were found in 2015.

“Advanced criminal attack groups now echo the skill sets of nation-state attackers. They have extensive resources and a highly-skilled technical staff that operate with such efficiency that they maintain normal business hours and even take the weekends and holidays off,” said Symantec Security Response Director Kevin Haley. “We are even seeing low-level criminal attackers create call center operations to increase the impact of their scams."

Even though cyberattacks are becoming more sophisticated and business-like, the healthcare sub-sector is not being targeted as frequently as other industries.
The study reveals that, in the healthcare field, about 54.1 percent of emails are spam. Cybercriminals typically use spam to execute more advanced cyberattacks.

However, the phishing ratio in the healthcare field was only 1 out of 2,711 emails, which was the second lowest ratio across all industries.

The healthcare industry was also one of the least likely sectors to be targeted for spear-phishing attacks, the study confirmed.

Additionally, the healthcare sector was the least likely to encounter an email containing a virus. The virus ratio was 1 out of every 396 emails.

Here is the link:

http://healthitsecurity.com/news/healthcare-data-breaches-top-reported-data-security-incident

There is really little to add. Clearly everyone handling health information needs to be careful given they have a great big target on their back!

David.


Baca selengkapnya

Thursday, 28 April 2016

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

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

April 28  Edition
The macroeconomic stresses seem to have eased a little more with markets rising or stable around the world.
With Budget Night now May 3 we won’t have long to wait to see what is happening. The Budget now seems to now be very minimalist with any major reform seemingly off the table. It seems there is going to be some exciting political times until we get there!
Given it is only 1-2 weeks away I guess we just wait and watch. Is seems sin-taxes are also back on the agenda!
Interestingly we are now seeing any changes to Negative Gearing being ruled out and a new Dental Funding Scheme being announced. We also saw a lot of news related to the Big Banks with things becoming rather more political than makes sense.
You can expect many more leaks over the next week or so - and it is probable we will know most of the details well before the actual Budget Speech!
The biggest thing last week was a speech from Glenn Stevens - where he made it clear we are not out of the woods - just yet,

Reserve Bank governor Glenn Stevens warns that low rates come at high cost to retirees

By AM business editor Peter Ryan
The Reserve Bank governor Glenn Stevens has warned that today's world of ultra-low interest rates is putting increasing pressure on returns for superannuation funds.
Mr Stevens said record low interest rates are "a big problem" for savers and that many stand to be "disappointed" about the direction of their retirement nest eggs.
Speaking in New York, Mr Stevens told a conference that low yields for investors pose a problem for both defined benefits and accumulation funds, with the "whole set of assumptions" for retirement income plans is being called into question.
"Increasingly we are hearing commentary about the difficulty or impossibility of defined benefit pension plans making good on their promises with long term rates of return being so low," Mr Stevens said.
-----
Here is a summary of interesting things up until the end of last week:
-----

General Budget Issues.

Treasurer Scott Morrison reveals little 'integrity' as budget approaches

Date April 18, 2016 - 6:58AM

Jessica Irvine

Senior Writer

In a quiet courtyard of Parliament House, close to the Press Gallery, grows a magnificent maple tree that erupts annually in fiery autumnal splendour in the lead-up to the federal budget.
It's been nicknamed the "budget tree", and your scribe has been admiring it for more than a decade now on my annual pilgrimage to the federal budget lock-up.
But this year, my spies tell me, the budget tree is still green. Nary a tinge of colour, as this column went to print.
-----

Scott Morrison needs to lift taxes to pull the budget into shape

Date April 18, 2016 - 12:15AM
EDITORIAL
Scott Morrison has a regrettable tendency to resort to loud bluster and swollen rhetoric when he is questioned about the government's economic strategy. That makes it doubly difficult for those whose sorry task it is to disentangle the government's important intentions from Mr Morrison's near-incessant polemic.
Moody's Investors Service is one organisation that is trying to do just that, and it does not like what it is hearing. On Thursday, Moody's warned that unless the Turnbull government came up with measures to raise revenue in the budget, then government debt would continue to rise and that would put the nation's AAA credit rating at risk.
The ratings agency contends that unless the government lifts taxes, or other forms of revenue, it will miss its self-imposed deadline of 2020-21 for balancing the budget.
-----

Morrison (sort of) reveals the budget strategy: bracket creep

  • The Australian
  • April 18, 2016 7:49AM

Alan Kohler

Treasurer Scott Morrison laid out the government’s budget strategy the other day.
Morrison was a resounding success as immigration minister through the unusual, for a politician, tactic of saying nothing. As Treasurer, he feels the other extreme is the way to go.
In the midst of a frenzied, convoluted attempt to turn Moody’s criticism of Australia’s feeble budget efforts in recent years into an attack on Labor, Morrison explained his plan and gave a preview of the May budget.
“Revenue will rise to the long-run average of 24.1 per cent. On the current estimates, revenue is forecast to rise over the next three or four years. … our plan is to see revenue rises through growth and ensuring a better targeted tax system. So our revenue measures that we announce in the Budget and the redeployment of that revenue to easing the tax burden where you can foster investment is the way we believe that you can drive growth and jobs in this economy.”
-----

Australian Budget Talk: Experts Say Scott Morrison Should Lift Taxes For Good Budget

19 April, 2016 / By Kalyan Kumar / In Australia,Business,Financial
The upcoming Australian budget will risk Australia’s credit ratings if it fails to raise taxes and shore up revenue, warned rating agency Moody’s. The agency predicts that the credit rating will nosedive if the budget lacks substance. It called for concrete revenue-raising steps, including new taxation plans.
Moody’s said Malcolm Turnbull government is yet to show up tangible measures in revenue-yielding plans and warned that the government would be caught in a debt trap.  The current Triple A (AAA) credit rating of the country will be put at risk.
Prior to Moody’s caution, the Commonwealth Bank, NAB and J.P. Morgan also raised similar concerns, reports The Age.
-----
19 Apr 2016 - 8:44am

Labor criticises govt's post-budget ads

The federal opposition has criticised leaked advertising showing the government's budget will include changes to super and multinational tax.
Source:  AAP
19 Apr 2016 - 8:44 AM  UPDATED 25 MINS AGO
Labor has seized on leaked advertising highlighting changes to superannuation tax concessions and multinational tax arrangements due to be aired after the federal budget.
Sky News says it's seen the key statements of a script for the government's taxpayer-funded television and radio advertisements, which have already been filmed.
The statements include $16 billion in savings over the four years under changes to super and multinational tax.
Opposition finance spokesman Tony Burke says the post-budget ads are part of the coalition's re-election strategy because none of the measures will have been implemented before parliament is dissolved.
-----

Government refuses to comment on 'humiliating' leak of core budget details, ad campaign

By political reporter Tom Iggulden
The Government is refusing to comment on what Labor is calling a "humiliating" leak of core budget details.
Sky News last night revealed purported key points of a script for a radio and television ad campaign to be rolled out after the May 3 budget.
Presenter Paul Murray told viewers the ads would boast of $16 billion worth of budget savings over four years, including crackdowns on superannuation tax concessions and multinational tax avoidance.
"The Government doesn't respond to speculative reports," a spokesman for Treasurer Scott Morrison told the ABC.
-----

Federal budget 2016: Advertising 'leak' shows $16 billion in savings: report

Date April 19, 2016 - 8:56AM

Michael Koziol

National political reporter

Turnbull's winter election gamble

The ABCC legislation didn't pass the Senate so we're going to the polls on July 2 - that's a 75 day election campaign.
The Turnbull government will reportedly spruik $16 billion in savings over four years in the federal budget, as it prepares for an all-but-certain double dissolution election on July 2.
Sky News reported on Monday night that the government would pursue changes to superannuation concessions and multinational tax avoidance to reach the savings figure.
-----

Federal budget 2016: Coalition plans tougher crackdown on super to outflank Labor

Date April 20, 2016 - 5:04AM

Peter Martin

The Coalition is set to reveal on budget night, a superannuation tax plan that will rake in more money than Labor's will.
The Turnbull government is preparing to trump Labor in the budget by cracking down harder on high-income superannuation tax concessions to raise four times as much as the opposition's policy.
Labor has promised to cut the income threshold for more heavily taxing contributions from $300,000 to $250,000. The Coalition now plans to cut it to $180,000.
The change, to be unveiled on budget night, will tax more highly the super contributions of an extra 244,000 Australians and will net $2 billion a year, compared with Labor's $500 million a year.
-----

Federal budget 2016: Superannuation backlash might not stem savings

Date April 20, 2016 - 12:15AM

Sally Rose

Markets reporter

Government's big super plan

The Coalition is set to reveal on budget night, a superannuation tax plan that will rake in more money than Labor's will.
If the Turnbull government follows through with leaked plans to slash superannuation tax breaks for high income earners in the upcoming federal budget it will be a bold move that risks angering many of its supporters.
But it won't necessarily stop them pouring money into super, some analysts say.
-----

Federal budget 2016: Scott Morrison to give extra $120m to corporate regulator ASIC

Date April 19, 2016 - 11:04PM

James Massola

Chief political reporter

Turnbull confirms he wants July 2nd poll

There will be a double-dissolution election, says Malcolm Turnbull, and he intends holding it on July 2nd. Courtesy ABC News 24.
Treasurer Scott Morrison will announce at least $120 million in additional funding for corporate regulator ASIC as part of a suite of measures to be unveiled on Wednesday, after he and Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull were challenged by the Coalition backbench on the need to crack down on bank behaviour.
The announcement will come a day after Mr Turnbull confirmed Australians will go to the polls in a double dissolution election to be held on July 2 and is designed to blunt the political impact of Labor's push for a banks royal commission.
-----

Turnbull Government expected to crack down on superannuation

April 20, 2016 8:16am
Charis Chang and AAPnews.com.au

Turnbull superannuation overhaul plan exposed

THE Turnbull government is ready to outdo Labor and will reportedly crack down harder on high-income superannuation tax concessions.
Superannuation has been a hot topic of debate with experts suggesting that loopholes in the system cost the Federal Budget about $30 billion a year in lost revenue.
Richard Denniss, from progressive think tank the Australia Institute, told news.com.au last year that the key issue was that rich people got lucrative tax concessions that were not offered to low-income earners.
“There’s a very clear problem at the moment: tax concessions go disproportionately to rich the wealthy. We could fix that and save the Budget a lot of money,” Mr Denniss said.
-----

Banks still haven't got the message that bad behaviour is not on

Date April 19, 2016 - 10:58PM

Ross Gittins

The Sydney Morning Herald's Economics Editor

The Federal Opposition tries to turn up the heat on the Government to hold a banking royal commission.
Is there any justification for a royal commission into the conduct of the banks? Is it just a political stunt? All royal commissions are called for political reasons and many are stunts, in the sense that their primary objective is just to bring particular issues into the public spotlight.
To me, the best justification for an inquiry into the banks is that they still don't seem to have got the message. They've been caught treating their customers badly, but so far they've shown little sign of contrition - sorry about the few bad apples, but I didn't know - and little willingness to make amends.
-----

Budget 2016: Malcolm Turnbull’s $10bn spree since coup

  • The Australian
  • April 22, 2016 12:00AM

David Uren

The budget will have to find savings to cover more than $10 billion of fresh spending since Malcolm Turnbull gained power last September, before being able to fund any election promises or new budget commitments.
Although Scott Morrison has declared that his main goal in the lead-up to the May 3 budget is stopping new spending, the government has made as many new commitments in the seven months since the change of leadership as were contained in last year’s budget.
The Treasurer has made a target of reducing government spending from the 25.9 per cent of GDP reported in the mid-year budget update and has promised to cover the cost of new spending with fresh savings measures.
-----
  • Apr 22 2016 at 12:15 AM

Tricks and fudges to look out for in budget 2016

by Richard Holden
Policies in the federal budget, to be handed down on May 3, will affect the personal finances of households around the country. It will also set the scene for much of the upcoming election battle.
Amid a sea of statistics, slogans, and spin, what are the key takeaways for you? Here's what to look for on May 3.

Forecasts

Both government revenue and expenditure going forward depend on macroeconomic factors. Expenditures depend importantly on inflation, since many welfare and other benefits, as well as payments to government employees, are inflation indexed. On the revenue side, tax receipts depend on nominal gross domestic product growth, and the composition of it, which determines who is in which tax bracket.
-----

Federal budget 2016: We need more tax

Date April 20, 2016 - 1:56PM

Peter Martin

Economics Editor, The Age

Another leak for team Turnbull?

If the leak is genuine, the post-budget advertisement says the government will save the budget $16 billion over four years. Vision Sky News & ABC 24.
Never before has a budget advertisement been prepared ahead of the budget itself. In fact, rarely before has a budget needed an advertisement.
The leaked script read on Sky News is a bit like something for Seinfeld in that it is a script about nothing. All previous budget advertising campaigns have been about something specific, such as small-business tax breaks.
-----

Federal Budget set to deliver relief to middle-income wage earners

April 22, 2016 9:24pm
ELLEN WHINNETT Herald Sun
PERSONAL income tax cuts will be included in the Federal Budget, with middle-income wage earners winning tax relief.
The Herald Sun can reveal those earning slightly more than $80,000 will get a tax cut, as the Turnbull Government tries to relieve the burden of bracket creep on middle-income earners.
The beneficiaries will be those paying 37c in the dollar tax because they are earning more than $80,000 a year, or who are due to go up into that tax bracket.
-----

Federal election 2016: Home ownership an election issue as Government takes reform off table

April 24, 2016 4:30am
Samantha Maiden EXCLUSIVE Herald Sun
THE Turnbull government has officially placed negative gearing reforms off-limits in the Budget, which will make home ownership the key election battleground.
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull will announce the Budget policy today in response to Labor proposals to remove negative gearing on existing properties from 2017.
Warning a Labor election victory would drive up rents and reduce home values, Mr Turnbull said families face a clear choice at the election.
-----

Health Budget Issues.

Bulk billing incentives for pathologists to be scrapped on day before election, Sussan Ley says

By political reporter Caitlyn Gribbin
Federal Health Minister Sussan Ley says she will not give into a "scare campaign" against a policy to scrap bulk billing incentives for pathologists — even if the plan is due to come into effect the day before the July 2 election.
The Opposition and pathologists are fighting against the Federal Government's policy to cut bonus payments it offers for pathology services to bulk bill.
But Ms Ley looks set to push on with the changes, despite them being flagged to kick in on July 1.
"The Government's made announcements and we'll stick with those announcements," Ms Ley said.
-----

Malcolm Turnbull to announce revamp of dental policy in first budget

April 23, 2016 12:00am
Sue Dunlevy National Health Reporter News Corp Australia Network
EXCLUSIVE
Every Australian child will get government-subsidised dental care including braces under a major revamp of dental policy to be announced in Malcolm Turnbull’s first budget.
The current means tested Child Dental Scheme (CDBS) which provided care to three million kids will be axed and replaced by a scheme providing dental cover for every child — 5.3 million kids.
The current $1,000 cap on government funded dental care will be scrapped under the new Child and Adult Public Dental Scheme (caPDS) scheme that will even pay for braces, crowns and implants if they are clinically necessary rather than cosmetic.
-----

Budget 2016: healthcare waste costs $20bn a year

  • The Australian
  • April 23, 2016 12:00AM

Adam Creighton

Sarah-Jane Tasker

Australians are forking out at least $20 billion a year in higher taxes and insurance premiums to cover entrenched waste and anti-competitive practices in the healthcare sector — equivalent to extending the GST to fresh food, health and education.
As the government and Labor debate proposals to increase tax to plug the $38bn budget deficit, health insurance chiefs and the head of the government’s Health Safety and Quality Commission, Debora Picone, have told The Australian improving health ­efficiency could knock 15 per cent off the $150bn national health bill.
“Falling-off-a-log type reforms could save that amount every year with no reduction in actual outcomes,” said Australian Unity chief executive Rohan Mead, pointing to overservicing and lack of competition among hospitals and doctors.
Health insurer NIB chief Mark Fitzgibbon said attacking the “low hanging fruit” of waste in the system — ensuring prices for devices on the prostheses list is the same for private and public hospitals — would mean up to a 4.5 per cent drop in insurance premiums.
-----

Budget 2016: super tax reform pitched at battlers

  • The Australian
  • April 23, 2016 12:00AM

David Crowe

The Turnbull government is preparing to blunt Labor’s pitch to ordinary workers by preparing superannuation reforms in the May 3 budget that help those on low incomes at the expense of those earning more than $180,000 a year.
Malcolm Turnbull and Scott Morrison are turning their sights on the barriers facing the “battlers”, as part of a package that will ensure there are winners as well as losers from the super tax overhaul.
The move comes as a new report from Industry Super Australia highlights the impact on average workers from the existing super rules, which give wealthier Australians more than six times the tax breaks on their retirement savings.
-----

Universal health care must not penalise the sick

22nd Apr 2016 4:52 PM
Caroline Hutchinson
IS IT just me or is everyone looking for a good excuse to avoid a pap smear?
I was a kid when Medicare was introduced so it is the only system I have ever known.
Being the robust country girl I am, I haven’t been a great burden on the health system but I’ve been the grateful recipient of three healthy babies and the very relieved young wife of a cancer survivor.
The times I have needed the system most were the times I could afford it least.
-----

Health Insurance Issues.

Doctors’ fees ‘real villain’ for health insurance funds

  • The Australian
  • April 18, 2016 12:00AM

Sean Parnell

Health funds would have more say over the specialists members are referred to as well as the ­hospitals to which they are ­admitted under a proposal from a former insurance industry regulator concerned at unrestrained doctors’ bills.
Shaun Gath, who was chief executive of the Private Health Insurance Administration Council for seven years, believes competition has failed to keep costs down and that the Constitution prevents governments dealing with the “real villain” of doctors’ fees and charges.
“In the 1946 referendum, we gave the parliament power to make a range of social security payments, including hospital and medical benefits,” Mr Gath writes in The Australian today.
“But the section also stops the parliament from controlling what doctors charge. So one step in that direction and it’s off to the High Court.”
-----

Private health insurance may be broken, but it can be fixed

  • Shaun Gath
  • The Australian
  • April 18, 2016 12:00AM
The three day moral panic that passes for serious debate around our private health insurance system has come and gone again. Premium increases can do that to you. And obviously getting hit up for an extra 5, 6, or 7 per cent is ­nobody’s idea of fun.
Most of the media advice, by design, has a short shelf life. The issue will be back next year and the same games will play all over again.
So, here’s a crazy idea … what if we actually did something to try and fix the problem?
But before rushing off, let’s at least give private health insurance its due. It’s been a pillar of our health system for over 150 years. Over that time lot of people in real need have been helped. That remains true today.
-----
  • Apr 21 2016 at 12:15 AM
  • Updated Apr 21 2016 at 12:15 AM

Can Medibank's health deliver free-kick for Drummond?

If Medibank's loyalists and share price are to be believed, one of Craig Drummond's first acts as chief executive at Medibank Private will be an earnings upgrade.
In January the private health insurer upgraded its 2015-16 health insurance profit by $100 million to more than $470 million due to weak claims growth, tougher hospital contracting, and an ongoing crackdown on improper claims.
Medibank said at the time that its targets "anticipate that the second operating half profit will be lower than the first half due to increased marketing and brand investment, and some moderation of the recent slowdown in the growth of hospital utilisation rates".
-----

Surgeon cracks down on NIB’s low payments

April 24, 20167:29am
Sue Dunlevy News Corp Australia Network
EXCLUSIVE.
Australia’s fourth largest health fund NIB pays doctors so little a surgeon is urging his patients to switch their cover because he can no longer afford to take part in its gap cover scheme.
NIB pays just $2,014 for knee replacement surgery, 40 per cent less than the AMA fee of $3,600.
Dr Hardeep Salaria has written to his patients warning them NIB is “paying significantly less to doctors under the Gap Cover arrangements than almost all other funds”.
And he is urging them to choose another health fund which is not for profit such as HCF or one of the AHSA funds.
-----
Health is also clearly still under review as far as its budget is concerned with still a few reviews underway and some changes in key strategic directions. Lots to keep up with here with all the various pre-budget kites are still being flown - although narrowing it seems to be largely focussed on Super! Enjoy. Less than two weeks to the Budget!
David.
Baca selengkapnya