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An IT approach to GP care in residential aged care facilities

9 June 2014
This story first appeared in the May 2014 issue of Pulse+IT Magazine. Paper-based systems are no longer enough when it comes to the collaborative care required when caring for patients in residential aged care. GPs working in these settings should take a strategic view of their IT requirements – whether using remote access, cloud services […]
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Patient portals high on the agenda at General Practice 2014

6 June 2014
A panel of experts will provide insight into the use of patient portals for general practice at the Conference for General Practice, being held in Christchurch in late July. Patient portals are high on the agenda in New Zealand, with the National Health IT Board (NHITB) currently working with district health boards and primary health […]
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NZ telehealth gears up as ultrafast fibre rolls out

6 June 2014
Waikato Telehealth, the NZ Health IT Cluster and Health Informatics New Zealand are holding an evening seminar in Hamilton later this month to provide an update on regional and national telehealth initiatives. Maxine Elliot, CEO of Ultrafast Fibre, which is rolling out a fibre network in Hamilton, Tauranga, Wanganui and New Plymouth as part of […]
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PICS roll-out starts to gather momentum in South Island

6 June 2014
A team from New Zealand’s South Island Alliance and vendor partner Orion Health will be touring South Island District Health Boards in the coming months to demonstrate the new Patient Information Care System (PICS) that is due to be implemented throughout the region. PICS is being built by Orion Health as a single system to […]
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PHRs, portals and apps: hearing the patient’s voice

6 June 2014
This story first appeared in the May 2014 issue of Pulse+IT Magazine. The current medico-legal record provides a snapshot into specific episodes of care for patients, but it does not provide a holistic view of the person’s full health history. Different records can be brought together into one album, but to truly hear the patient’s […]
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eMM ranks highly for patient safety but complex to implement

5 June 2014
An ad hoc survey carried out by acute care software specialist InterSystems of 30 Australian hospitals shows that most are currently deploying or are planning to implement electronic medication management (eMM) systems, but complexity and interoperability requirements are significant barriers. InterSystems, which markets a hospital information system with medication management capabilities, surveyed attendees from 26 […]
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Aged care and the hospital interface

5 June 2014
This story first appeared in the May 2014 issue of Pulse+IT Magazine. While much of the emphasis in the development of national eHealth initiatives such as the PCEHR has been on the primary care sector, it is in aged care – and aged care’s relationship with acute care – that the information sharing promised by […]
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Multi-site decision support tool for bugs and drugs

5 June 2014
An antimicrobial stewardship software program known as eASY that was designed by clinicians from the Northern Sydney Local Health District (NSLHD) has undergone an update recently, with new functionality added that provides decision support on drug dosing and multi-site levels of restriction. eASY has been in use at the Mona Vale and Manly hospitals in […]
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Medee aims to build digital health technology community

4 June 2014
The medical device commercialisation specialists behind digital health company uHealth have launched a new service to provide information on emerging medical technologies to consumers, and have also signed a distribution agreement with the makers of the AliveCor heart monitoring device. Will Knox and Jeff Reid set up uHealth last year to develop a portfolio of […]
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Momentum builds for increased uptake of aged care IT

3 June 2014
This story first appeared in the May 2014 issue of Pulse+IT Magazine. There is no doubt that increased uptake of ICT can help support the many challenges facing the aged care industry, particularly as the implementation of consumer-directed care (CDC) begins, but there are still multiple challenges facing individual providers and the sector as a […]
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GP2U partners with SkinByDerms for teledermatology

3 June 2014
Telehealth provider GP2U has partnered with teledermatology service SkinByDerms to allow patients and GPs to securely upload clinical photos to GP2U’s platform directly from a mobile phone to be reviewed by specialist dermatologists. While SkinByDerms also offers a bulk-billed specialist dermatology service on its platform, the new partnership allows GPs to write a referral to […]
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HISA sets out challenge for health app developers

3 June 2014
Aged care, medication management, the quantified self and clinician productivity are the four categories chosen for the 2014 Health Informatics Society of Australia’s (HISA) Health Apps Challenge, which will be showcased at the Innovation Expo at the Health Informatics Conference (HIC) in Melbourne in August. Last year’s winner was Sydney medical student Martin Seneviratne, who […]
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Update on facts and figures for the PCEHR

3 June 2014
More than 1.66 million consumers have now signed up to the PCEHR, representing about eight per cent of the total population, Department of Health representatives told a Senate Estimates hearing in Canberra last night. The department also revealed that funding for the ongoing operation of the National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA) was still being decided, […]
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NEHTA continues PCEHR development despite cloud over future

2 June 2014
The National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA) is continuing with plans to improve and add functionality to the PCEHR, despite a recommendation in the Royle review that the agency be dissolved and its role transferred to a new statutory authority. Internal communications seen by Pulse+IT show that NEHTA plans to create a new PCEHR landing page […]
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Telehealth for kids racks up major milestone

2 June 2014
The Queensland Telepaediatric Service (QTS) has reached a milestone of 20,000 remote consultations since it began operating in November 2000 and is now one of the largest paediatric telehealth services in the world. QTS connects medical specialists from its base at Brisbane’s Royal Children’s Hospital with over 100 regional and remote hospitals throughout Queensland. Established […]
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CDA use in the PCEHR: lessons learned

29 May 2014
This story first appeared in the April 2014 issue of Pulse+IT Magazine. One of the key foundations of the PCEHR is that the Clinical Document Architecture (CDA), an XML-based markup standard developed as part of HL7 v3, is used for all the clinical documents used in the PCEHR. This article does not purport to evaluate […]
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Online training for indigenous eye health

29 May 2014
The Remote Area Health Corps (RAHC) has partnered with the Indigenous Eye Health Unit at the University of Melbourne to launch what is said to be Australia’s first free online training resources on eye health and diabetes. The Alice Springs-based RAHC, which offers short-term paid placements for medical staff in remote indigenous communities, will host […]
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Field is open wide for rural teledentistry

28 May 2014
The University of Melbourne’s Institute for a Broadband-Enabled Society (IBES) has released a report on a field trial of paediatric teledentistry that showed it was popular with children and parents, saved them time and travel costs, and provided a platform for potential expansion into service provision to the elderly and those living in regional and […]
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Alert service for medicines shortages

28 May 2014
Pharmacists and prescribers can sign up to an alert service to receive email or RSS feed notifications of new and updated information on drug shortages through the new Medicine Shortages Information website. The website is being managed by the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) to provide information to consumers and health professionals on anticipated shortages of […]
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RACGP: support for PCEHR review, little for co-pay

28 May 2014
The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners has given certain aspects of the Royle review into the PCEHR its support, particularly its focus on improved usability, but remains resolute in its opposition to the proposed $7 co-pay for standard GP consultations. RACGP president Liz Marles said the college’s key concerns about the operation of the […]
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Waterproof version of SOS Mobile Watch set for launch

27 May 2014
The company behind the three-in-one personal alarm device SOS Mobile Watch are getting ready to launch a waterproof version, having also added new location-finding functionality and new and unexpected markets for the technology. Sydney-based mCareWatch launched its first generation SOS Mobile Watch last year, targeting older people living at home with a device that acts […]
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myGov has robust security systems in place: DHS

27 May 2014
The Department of Human Services (DHS) has rejected concerns over the security of the myGov website, saying it meets all of the government’s security requirements for the protection of personal information. myGov is a single sign-on site that is linked to a number of government services, including Medicare, Centrelink and the PCEHR, and will shortly […]
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“Sleepwalking into catastrophe” with myGov and the PCEHR

26 May 2014
eHealth security experts have reacted with dismay to revelations in the Sydney Morning Herald about a basic security flaw in the myGov website that potentially opened up sensitive personal information, including health information held on the PCEHR, to malicious attacks. myGov is a single sign-on gateway for consumers to access a number of online federal […]
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Inner-city Melbourne hooks up to health pathways

26 May 2014
Victorian Health Minister David Davis will next week officially launch HealthPathways Melbourne, a web-based system that provides GPs with clinical guidance on specific health conditions and referral options to local heath services from one portal. HealthPathways are an increasingly popular method being used in Australia and New Zealand to help GPs manage common conditions, to […]
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Secure clinical message delivery: lost in the mail?

23 May 2014
This story first appeared in the April 2014 issue of Pulse+IT Magazine. The PCEHR has consumed much of the government’s eHealth focus, and indeed its budget, in recent years. Despite claims it would deliver “the right information about the right patient at the right time”, in its current state the PCEHR has done little to […]
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Hits and misses with eHealth foundations: PCEHR review

23 May 2014
The PCEHR review panel has recommended that the government implement a standardised secure messaging platform for the health sector and expand the secure messaging strategy to include consumers as well. Secure message delivery (SMD) and the Healthcare Identifiers Service (HI Service) are highlighted in the panel’s report as essential foundations for the eHealth system that […]
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The good, the bad and the PCEHR review

22 May 2014
The belated release of the review into the PCEHR by the government this week has been lost somewhat in the more heated discussions over the federal budget, but the early signs are that many in the industry agree with the retention of the system for the foreseeable future and the overall thrust of the review […]
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PCEHR needs seamless medications curation: review panel

22 May 2014
More work needs to be done on linking clinical software systems and the PCEHR to enable a seamless method to curate medications lists and add real clinical value to the system, the PCEHR review recommends. While the opt-out model, a change of name and clinical usability are the headline recommendations of the review, the panel […]
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Hearing aids directly link to iPhone for pristine surround sound

22 May 2014
Independent audiology practice Hearing Studio has fitted the first hearing aids in Australia that are specifically designed to connect to iOS devices and allow users to adjust their hearing aid settings on their iPhone. Using Bluetooth connectivity directly between the hearing aids and the iPhone app, wearers can receive phone calls straight into their hearing […]
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Medicare Locals cut to 24, no plan B for co-pay

20 May 2014
The number of Medicare Locals is likely to be reduced from 61 to 24 following the change to Primary Health Networks, which will run on a more flexible model with the potential to lose territory if programs are not run successfully, Health Minister Peter Dutton said. While the number of PHNs is not set in […]
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Dutton looking for quick feedback on opt-out PCEHR

20 May 2014
The federal government will take the next few months to assess the recommendations of the review into the PCEHR and wants to gauge community support for a transfer to an opt-out model, Health Minister Peter Dutton said. The review recommended the system become opt-out from January 1 next year. Mr Dutton told the HIMSS conference […]
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PCEHR review recommends opt-out model, NEHTA dissolved

19 May 2014
The federal government has released the Royle review into the PCEHR, which recommends the name of the system be changed, that NEHTA be dissolved and the system move to an opt-out model, and that improvements be made to clinical usability. Health Minister Peter Dutton told the HIMSS conference in Sydney today that the government’s response […]
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Black Dog tracks mental health through the emohose

19 May 2014
Researchers from the Black Dog Institute and the CSIRO have developed a tool for measuring and monitoring emotional states using real-time data from Twitter, which they hope to use to better understand regional fluctuations in mental health. The We Feel tool allows researchers to create a visual representation of emotional content and compare it across […]
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Queensland holds inquiry into telehealth services

16 May 2014
A Queensland parliamentary committee is holding an inquiry into the telehealth services managed by Queensland Health with a view to ensuring telehealth services are, in the words of the inquiry’s chair, “on the right track”. The terms of reference of the inquiry include examining the implementation of the telehealth service by the Department of Health […]
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Budget 2014: the costs of GP co-pay

16 May 2014
As doctors’ groups ramp up criticism of the imposition of a GP co-pay in Tuesday’s budget, the implications for general practices in implementing the new arrangements is coming to light. It now seems clear that the government will face an uphill battle to have all aspects of its budget passed by the Senate, with Labor, […]
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Budget 2014: eHealth funding for Medicare Locals to end

15 May 2014
Funding to Medicare Locals for their eHealth programs will end on June 30 and will not be extended under current arrangements. The Medicare Local eHealth program was funded for two years under the Labor government to help general and allied health practices, community pharmacies and aged care facilities to get ‘eHealth ready’. This included registering […]
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Budget 2014: paperless claiming for PBS meds in hospitals

14 May 2014
The federal government has allocated $16.5 million over five years in the budget to allow the supply and claiming of PBS medicines from medication charts in all public and private hospitals. Similar to a scheme being rolled out in residential aged care facilities, the initiative will mean that the medication chart can serve as a […]
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Budget 2014: confusion still reigns on PCEHR

14 May 2014
Health Minister Peter Dutton has refused to commit to a timetable for a decision on the future of the PCEHR despite funding its operation for an extra year, leaving one software vendor to call a halt to its PCEHR compliance work. The government yesterday committed $140.6 million in the budget to support the operation of […]
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Budget 2014: $140.6m for PCEHR for one year

13 May 2014
The federal government has allocated $140.6 million for the 2014-2015 financial year to continue the operation of the PCEHR for one year while it considers its response to the Royle review into the system. The Department of Health itself will undergo a “capability review” from June “to ensure it has the processes, systems and expertise […]
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Wesley goes mobile with clinical systems in the cloud

13 May 2014
Wesley Mission Brisbane (WMB) has embarked on a mobility strategy for its 12 residential aged care communities, equipping care staff with mobile devices to provide real-time access to the organisation’s roll-out of Leecare’s cloud-based Platinum 5.0 clinical information system. WMB is currently rolling out Platinum 5.0 to all of its aged care communities, with its […]
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eHealth at the centre of NSW rural health plan

12 May 2014
NSW Health has released a draft of its rural health plan for the next five years, highlighting improvements in rural eHealth as one of its three main strategies. The plan has been informed by a number of other NSW Health plans, including the Blueprint for eHealth in NSW and the eHealth strategy for rural and […]
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Horvath review calls for massive realignment of Medicare Locals

12 May 2014
The government should reduce the number of Medicare Locals to a minimum of 13 and change their name and scope, according to a review of the primary healthcare organisations conducted by former chief medical officer John Horvath. Professor Horvath has also recommended that MLs cease providing direct healthcare services except where there is a “demonstrable […]
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Getting ready for GP co-payments

12 May 2014

If, as expected, the government introduces a $7 co-payment for bulk-billed patients in tomorrow's budget, how do you think this will affect general practice workflow and IT configuration?

There has been no detail provided by the government describing how the co-payment will be administered, with the Sydney Morning Herald's Peter Hartcher perhaps the only reporter who has received answers to these sorts of questions.

“Under Peter Dutton’s plan, the Medicare rebate paid to the GP would fall by some $5 to offset the new copayment,” Hartcher wrote on Saturday. “So that would be a saving to the federal budget of some $600-700 million a year. But the GP would get to keep the other $2.”

What that seems to suggest is that the $7 will not be sent to Medicare, but retained by the practice. Hartcher says GPs will be able to waive the $7 charge in cases of hardship, however this scenario would presumably leave the practice $5 worse off when compared with current bulk billing arrangements.

He also suggests that the new fee will apply from the first of July next year, allowing time for the change to be bedded down.

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Interoperable EHRs: it’s all about the data

8 May 2014
This story first appeared in the April 2014 issue of Pulse+IT Magazine. Interoperable EHRs are the holy grail of eHealth, but most remain a closed shop. The development of archetypes – discretely defined clinical concepts – and the sharing of them through a Clinical Knowledge Manager (CKM) such as that hosted by NEHTA and used […]
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Image app for the pathologically inclined

8 May 2014
The University of NSW’s Department of Pathology and Museum of Human Disease have come together to design an interactive educational app for medical students and practitioners that catalogues thousands of images of diseased tissue stored by the museum. The Images of Disease app is intended to promote learning about disease processes and their effects on […]
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Desktop version of eMIMS follows cloud release

7 May 2014
MIMS has released the desktop version of its eMIMS drug reference product, joining the cloud-based version it launched in September last year. MIMS has developed eMIMSDesktop for those users of MIMS who prefer the software to be locally installed. It can be downloaded onto the desktop from a DVD or via the internet. Like eMIMSCloud, […]
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Implementing SNOMED: issues and opportunities

7 May 2014
This story first appeared in the April 2014 issue of Pulse+IT Magazine. SNOMED Clinical Terms (SNOMED CT) is a clinical terminology that has been endorsed as the preferred national terminology for Australia. The Australian extension, SNOMED CT-AU, is slowly being implemented in Australian clinical IT systems, but it is a complex exercise that is still […]
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eHealth and ageing well at ACI 2014

6 May 2014
The contribution of eHealth to ageing well is the theme of this year’s Aged Care Informatics (ACI) conference, being held in association with HIC 2014 in Melbourne in August. Key speakers include Gavin Andrews, professor of psychiatry at the University of NSW and St Vincent’s Hospital, who will review the evidence of increased mortality and […]
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Development problems continue to dog NASH

6 May 2014
This story first appeared in the April 2014 issue of Pulse+IT Magazine. In March 2011, IBM Australia was awarded $23.6 million to build the National Authentication Service for Health (NASH), one of the foundations of the national eHealth system. In what has become a chequered journey, that first attempt at NASH failed, with Medicare Australia […]
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Medtech gears up for 9.2.0 release with patient portal push

5 May 2014
Medtech Global is gearing up for the release of the latest version of its Medtech32 clinical and practice management software with an increased focus on the capabilities of its ManageMyHealth patient portal. The company is currently in beta testing for version 9.2.0 with a view to a general release in mid-June. The new version will […]
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MedicineInsight spotting gaps in prescribing practice

5 May 2014
Two hundred general practices have signed up to take part in NPS MedicineWise’s MedicineInsight program, which is gathering de-identified data from general practice clinical software to evaluate and improve prescribing practices. Launched in March last year, MedicineInsight is a four-year program that ultimately aims to sign up 500 general practices to look at data from […]
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Commission of Audit calls for a ‘digital by default’ strategy

1 May 2014
The national Commission of Audit (CoA) has recommended that Australia follow the UK and implement a “digital by default” strategy for citizen access to government services, with the Department of Human Services’ myGov site as the “centrepiece of an aggressive new approach”. The Commission’s most controversial proposals, for a $15 upfront fee to see a […]
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Dutton fails to provide clarity on PCEHR future

1 May 2014
Health Minister Peter Dutton has committed to rolling out a “practical” eHealth record and to supporting primary care but has provided no detail on how this is to be achieved. In a speech to the George Institute for Global Health in Sydney today, Mr Dutton said the government was committed to “re-building general practice” and […]
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Penelope case management system links to PCEHR

30 April 2014
The Penelope client and case management system from Canada’s Athena Software that was implemented last year for the Department of Veterans’ Affairs (DVA) Veterans and Veterans Families Counselling Service (VVCS) has successfully linked to the PCEHR. Penelope, which is also used by a number of Medicare Locals to support community and mental health programs such […]
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Chris O’Brien Lifehouse chooses MetaVision for critical care

30 April 2014
ICU specialist iMDsoft has won a bid to install its MetaVision clinical information system in the critical care and perioperative units at the Chris O’Brien Lifehouse cancer centre in Sydney. MetaVision, which last year was selected by NSW Health to be installed in all ICUs in NSW public hospitals, is also used in six Queensland […]
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Lynden Aged Care goes paperless and wireless

29 April 2014
As a standalone, community-controlled aged care provider, Lynden Aged Care is as aware as any that investing in IT systems must have both a clinical and an organisational benefit. With a personally involved board and a CEO with a keen interest in IT, the organisation has made some targeted investments in IT that makes it […]
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Governance is the key to national eHealth infrastructure

29 April 2014
This story first appeared in the April 2014 issue of Pulse+IT Magazine. Repeating the same process over again while expecting a different outcome is one definition of madness, and it seems to have infected decision making in eHealth over the last few years. Poor governance arrangements and a reliance on large consulting firms have meant […]
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Medicare to act on duplicate and intertwined records

28 April 2014
The Department of Human Services (DHS) has established a program of work to identify and cleanse the Medicare Consumer Directory of duplicate or intertwined records, which an Auditor-General’s report says can pose a clinical safety risk. Last week, the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) released the results of an independent performance audit of the integrity […]
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Web app for consumers to assess chronic disease risk

28 April 2014
Metro North Brisbane Medicare Local (MNBML) has launched a free online tool that allows consumers to complete a simple health assessment to identify their risk for developing chronic diseases such as heart attack, stroke, kidney disease and diabetes. Funded by the National Preventative Health Agency, the Health Navigator website uses clinically validated information for its […]
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Barriers to PCEHR uptake on the frontline

28 April 2014
This story first appeared in the April 2014 issue of Pulse+IT Magazine. Misinformation and hype have dogged the PCEHR throughout its development, and many doctors are still confused about its purpose. It’s very early days yet, but in the meantime, general and specialist practices are drowning under the load of scanning clinical documents sent by […]
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Computerised CHAT to streamline pre-operative assessments

24 April 2014
A trial of over-the-phone consultations and a computerised questionnaire for pre-operative assessments has begun this week at Royal Adelaide Hospital with the aim of reducing unnecessary travel for patients and freeing up session times for surgeons and anaesthetists. Dubbed Computer Health Assessment by Telephone (CHAT), the trial involves a comprehensive questionnaire that is conducted over […]
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Progress report on the PCEHR

24 April 2014
This story first appeared in the April 2014 issue of Pulse+IT Magazine. Since its launch in July 2012, a small amount of new functionality has been added to the PCEHR, although progress has been marred by unforeseen difficulties. The next update, PCEHR release 5, was set to include the long-awaited facility to upload pathology results […]
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Medicare Local program funding secured, except for eHealth

23 April 2014
Despite intense speculation that Medicare Locals will either be axed, consolidated or cut in next month’s federal budget, funding for their program schedules has been extended for a year, except for eHealth programs. In a newsletter to members yesterday, Hunter Medicare Local said that it had been advised last week “that all program schedules held […]
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Plumbing in place: the evolution of ePrescriptions

23 April 2014
This story first appeared in the April 2014 issue of Pulse+IT Magazine. The electronic transmission of prescriptions (ETP) market has been steadily evolving in Australia for over five years, with the last 12 months in particular seeing tremendous growth in usage. With the plumbing now in place, ETP can be used as a key platform […]
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eHealth strategy is still a paper route

22 April 2014
This story first appeared in the April 2014 issue of Pulse+IT Magazine. The failure of the national eHealth strategy to focus on the needs of the community sector means that paper-based communications are still the norm. To realise a point-to-share environment, in which healthcare information can be fully shared in real time through national databases, […]
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Aged care data opened up for researchers

22 April 2014
The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare has gone live with its aged care data clearinghouse, which will act as a centralised repository of national aged care data. Part of the 2012 Living Longer, Living Better package, the idea is to provide better support for aged care research and evaluation. The data clearinghouse will provide […]
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MEDrefer integrates with Genie for specialist referrals

21 April 2014
Online referral tool MEDrefer has integrated with Genie Solutions, allowing specialists using Genie to display their availability in their MEDrefer profile directly from their appointment book. MEDrefer is also fully integrated into Best Practice clinical software for GPs, and the company is currently in discussions with other GP, specialist and allied health software vendors to […]
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SMS direct from PMS for active adverse event surveillance

21 April 2014
A West Australian research team has developed a tool that can seamlessly extract patient data from practice management software and send an SMS query to patients to conduct active adverse events following immunisation (AEFI) surveillance. Designed by software developer Ian Peters of Datavation, who also developed the Canning clinical data extraction tool, SmartVax has been […]
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Patient demographics and survey app for DocAppointments

21 April 2014
Online appointments booking service DocAppointments has added a patient demographics and survey app to its product suite that integrates with Best Practice and PracSoft to create a new patient file. The app allows new patients to fill out their personal details on a tablet while waiting for their appointment and for existing patients to update […]
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Epic wins tender for Royal Children’s EMR

17 April 2014
US-based EMR giant Epic has won the much sought-after tender to provide an electronic medical record for Melbourne’s Royal Children’s Hospital. The $48 million contract was announced by Victorian Premier Denis Napthine today after a very competitive tender process that is understood to have included all of the major US and local EMR vendors. Epic […]
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Telehealth slowly builds as incentive comes to an end

17 April 2014
Almost 170,000 telehealth services have been provided to over 62,000 patients by more than 9700 providers under Medicare-funded arrangements first introduced in 2011, the latest figures from the Department of Health show. In a briefing last week to the Australian Telehealth Advisory Committee, chaired by the Australian College of Rural and Remote Medicine (ACRRM), DoH […]
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RDNS takes to the road with high-spec ultrabooks

16 April 2014
RDNS has recently undertaken a refresh of its mobile computing device deployment, rolling out a new range of lightweight devices with improved battery life and several layers of connectivity to ensure the absolute minimum in downtime for nurses. RDNS has used mobile devices for well over a decade and was one of the pioneers of […]
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Feeding the chooks: divining the future of the PCEHR

16 April 2014
This story first appeared in the April 2014 issue of Pulse+IT Magazine. The wave of giddy enthusiasm that greeted the election of the Rudd government in 2007 and the subsequent development of the PCEHR has not been mirrored by the advent of the Abbott government in 2013. A sterner, economically rationalist approach and a ‘feeding […]
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Barwon Health gets set to send discharge summaries to PCEHR

15 April 2014
Geelong’s Barwon Health is working on functionality to upload discharge summaries to the PCEHR, which it plans to do through its BOSSnet clinical information system. Contrary to NEHTA’s list of hospitals that are connected to the PCEHR for the sending of inpatient discharge summaries, Barwon Health’s CIO Ann Larkins said while it was connected through […]
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Online tool for advance care planning

15 April 2014
Alzheimer’s Australia has launched an interactive website to provide comprehensive information and a six-step plan for people wishing to prepare for their future healthcare, lifestyle and financial decisions. Called Start2Talk, the site includes a number of worksheets along with access to information on advance care planning tailored to each state and territory. Users can complete […]
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QUM report identifies appropriate level of antipsychotics

15 April 2014
NPS MedicineWise is urging residential aged care facilities to use tools such as its drug use evaluation tool or the Quality Use of Medicine (QUM) report it developed with Webstercare to help better manage the use of antipsychotic medicines in people with dementia. The Senate Community Affairs Committee recently handed down a report on the […]
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Dutton “committed” to electronic health record

14 April 2014
Health Minister Peter Dutton has told the Standing Council on Health (SCoH) meeting of state and territory health ministers that the federal government is “committed” to an electronic health record and “will be working with the states and territories to implement it properly”. The statement – issued as part of an official communique from the […]
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Update to privacy info for PCEHR assisted registration

14 April 2014
The Department of Health has issued an update of the eHealth privacy document given to patients when they are signed up to the PCEHR through assisted registration. The document, Essential information about assisted registration and your privacy in the eHealth record system, has been updated in line with the new privacy principles that came into […]
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PCEHR release five planned for May

10 April 2014
Despite the current uncertainty over the future of the PCEHR, plans to include new functionality including pathology and diagnostic imaging reports and advance care directives are still going ahead, with a big release expected in May. Originally planned for this month, release 5 of the PCEHR is apparently still on track, with confidential documents seen […]
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PwC to conduct safety audit on PCEHR discharge summaries

10 April 2014
PricewaterhouseCoopers has been selected to conduct a clinical safety audit looking at the accuracy and quality of data included in electronic discharge summaries uploaded to the PCEHR. A PwC audit team will inspect de-identified records and make site visits to selected hospitals in the jurisdictions sending discharge summaries to the system. The audit team will […]
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Renewed calls for real-time prescription drug monitoring system

9 April 2014
The Victorian branch of the Australian Medical Association (AMA) has renewed its recent calls for the expedited roll-out of the proposed national real-time prescription drug monitoring system at the Victorian Pharmaceutical Misuse Summit, held in Melbourne today. Convened by the Victorian Department of Health, the summit brought together 90 representatives from the health sector, including […]
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Exploit vulnerabilities in CDA do not affect PCEHR core

9 April 2014
The discovery of a set of vulnerabilities that could potentially lead to malicious content being added to clinical documents created using the clinical document architecture (CDA) standard is not a likely threat to the security of the PCEHR, a CDA expert says. Last weekend, US physician and programmer Joshua Mandel revealed that he had discovered […]
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Silver surfers seeking digital options for healthcare information

8 April 2014
Accenture has released the results of a global survey of older people and their attitudes towards digital healthcare technology, finding that while older Australians would like to use technology such as electronic reminders and online prescription refill requests, they rate the importance of such online services lower than consumers in other surveyed countries. The survey […]
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Interactive medicines list part of Parkinson’s Passport

8 April 2014
Parkinson’s Australia and NPS MedicineWise have developed a pack of materials including interactive medicines lists and checklists for people with Parkinson’s disease to help avoid medicine problems. The interactive Parkinson’s Passport has been available since last year but is being promoted by the two organisations in advance of World Parkinson’s Day this Friday. The Parkinson’s […]
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eHealth the focus for next Medical Director release

7 April 2014
Health Communication Network (HCN) is planning a mid-year launch for the next release of its clinical and practice management software products Medical Director and PracSoft, with added eHealth functionality the primary upgrades. Assisted registration functionality for the PCEHR, which will allow practices to register patients in person through the software, will be available to users […]
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Mobile devices create ‘hospitals without walls’ for rural areas

7 April 2014
The early adoption of mobile devices and other technologies in rural general practice has boosted the uptake of telehealth, but the sector needs to turn from a focus on doctors to a focus on patients and communities, a leading telehealth expert says. Richard Murray, president of the Australian College of Rural and Remote Medicine (ACRRM), […]
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Resources for GPs in managing patients with chronic pain

7 April 2014
NSW’s Agency for Clinical Innovation (ACI) has developed a new website devoted to providing information to patients and practitioners on how to manage chronic pain. Produced by the ACI’s Pain Management Network, the website is part of NSW Health’s Pain Management Plan, released in July 2012. The NSW government has allocated $26 million over four […]
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Capturing biomarker metadata for mental health research

3 April 2014
Melbourne-based data management systems specialist Arcitecta is working with the Cooperative Research Centre (CRC) for Mental Health to build a web-based repository for clinical observation studies that will open up huge amounts of research data to the 19 different organisations involved in the CRC. The repository will be used to capture, access and query clinical […]
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“Intelligent paper on glass” mimics clinical workflows

3 April 2014
Despite more widespread use of electronic medical records, paper forms still proliferate in the acute care sector, often because they have been designed over several years to fit in with clinical workflows and can prove easier to use than electronic systems. Software is now available that can mimic current patient care processes and paperwork, enabling […]
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HealthEngine to integrate with Yahoo!7 health site

2 April 2014
Online health directory and appointment booking service HealthEngine will be integrated into the Yahoo!7 Lifestyle website, a joint venture between Yahoo! and Seven West Media that provides health-related articles and content for consumers. While details of exactly how the integration will look are still being worked out, HealthEngine CEO Marcus Tan said it will probably […]
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Hybrid cloud extracts data from dentists

2 April 2014
Local cloud integration firm Breeze has worked with dental clinic group Dental Corporation to implement several Microsoft technologies that can extract financial and patient data from different dental practice management software programs and send it back to headquarters in near real time. Dental Corporation, which is owned by Bupa and is active here and in […]
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Queensland disability groups build a social eHealth record

1 April 2014
Eight Queensland-based disability service providers have formed a partnership to roll out a shared electronic health and personal record to streamline care management for their clients and to keep all of their information in one place. The organisations have formed a limited company called G8EHR to set up the system, which is based on Extensia’s […]
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UTAS dementia MOOC continues to break records

1 April 2014
The University of Tasmania’s Understanding Dementia massive open online course (MOOC) went live for the second time yesterday, with more than 10,000 people registered to take part, including 3000 from overseas. The MOOC has been developed by the Wicking Dementia Research and Education Centre at UTAS and is open to anyone with an interest in […]
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PCEHR registrations hit 1.5 million mark

31 March 2014
The latest figures from the Department of Health show that consumer registrations for the PCEHR have reached 1,514,805, exceeding the department’s target for the system by a number of months. After a slow start in which the forecast of 500,000 registrations for the first year of operation was missed by several weeks, patient sign-ups for […]
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My Film Bag goes live with patient films online

31 March 2014
Melbourne-based radiology specialist Zed Technologies has gone live in its first practice with its new My Film Bag app, which allows patients to view their radiology images online. Rolled out a fortnight ago by Melbourne’s Imaging @ Olympic Park, the app is also due to go live at Port Macquarie X-ray in NSW next week […]
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instadok to launch mobile consultation platform

31 March 2014
Melbourne-based company instadok is preparing to launch an early prototype of its new telehealth platform, collaborating with appointment booking service HealthEngine and prescription exchange service MediSecure to provide a completely mobile video consultation service. instadok is targeting the nascent paid remote GP consultation market, planning to recruit 20 general practices in Melbourne to test its […]
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From little data, big data quality grows

28 March 2014
A special presentation on how approaches to getting little data ‘right’ supports better quality when it comes to big data will feature at the Big Data 2014 conference, being held in Melbourne next week. Presented by leading informaticians Heather Leslie and Hugh Leslie from Ocean Informatics, the ‘little data’ workshop will provide an introduction to […]
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The digitally enabled health system of the future

27 March 2014
CSIRO has released a report on how digital technologies can help solve some of the pressing issues facing the healthcare system from an ageing population, rising rates of chronic illness and workforce shortages in rural areas, forecasting that technologies that are in their infancy today will become the norm in the next decade or so. […]
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Telehealth helps home dialysis rates

26 March 2014
This story first appeared in the February 2014 issue of Pulse+IT Magazine. Melbourne’s Western Health is running a trial of remote monitoring and video conferencing technology to improve the rates of home dialysis for patients with chronic kidney disease. Better known as the HUG trial, it aims to increase the amount of people dialysing at […]
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