Posts tagged ‘Australia’

23 March 2009

E-health in a tangle

Excerpted from Australian Doctor, 20 March 2009:

With so much reform in the offing, does the Rudd Government have the political will to finally make e-health a reality? Ray Welling investigates.

Ordinary Australians can use their bank cards all over the world or seamlessly connect their laptop to a wireless net work from Broome to Berlin, yet their critical health data can’t be shared with their local hospital or even the pharma cist down the road.

This is despite extensive international and Australian research pointing to significant savings in lives as well as public health expense when health IT innovation is applied.

This year researchers in Texas reported in the Archives of Internal Medicine that increasing the automation of hospital notes and records led to a substantial decline in mor tality rates for all conditions studied. An author of the study said that by computeris ing health records, more than 100,000 lives a year could be saved in the US alone.

Closer to home, a 2002 Australian Institute of Health and Welfare study found that up to 18% of medical errors — many of them fatal — were due to inadequate availability of patient information.

According to the study, these adverse events account for as much as 3% of the gov ernment’s total cost of care — $3 billion a year in avoidable cost.

A business case for a national electronic health record program was published last year by the National E- Health Transition Authority (NEHTA), which suggested a net benefit to the Australian economy of between $7.5 billion and $8.7 billion over the first 10 years.

Australia is not the only late adopter of e-health. In the US, just 1.7% of hospitals sur veyed in 2008 had fully imple mented a comprehensive patient e-health records system across all units of their hospi tals and only 7.9% had imple mented a basic system.

However, the US is much closer to fully sharing health data. Electronic health initia tives were specifically men tioned in former US President Mr George W Bush’s last four State of the Union addresses, and USPresident Mr Barack Obama announced shortly before his inauguration that he was dedicated to making 100% of personal health records available electroni cally within five years. He backed that up by allocating $US20 billion in his initial economic stimulus bill to the task. Electronic health records were specifically mentioned in his maiden speech to the US Congress in February.

SO what’s happening in Australia? It’s not that we’ve been ignoring e- health. It is estimated that more than $5 billion has been spent by state and territory governments, GP divisions, and others on e-health devel opment activities in the past 10 years.

Those initiatives include a program by General Practice Network NT to have the entire NT population regis tered for shared electronic health records by 2010, bed side electronic records and clinical decision support tools being trialled in SA hospitals, a $250 million Enterprise Information Repository in Queensland, and a hospital- based electronic health record system deployed in the South Eastern Sydney and Illawarra Area Health Service in NSW, which is soon to be rolled out across the state.

But for e-health to make a real difference, national co- ordination is needed. On a national level, NEHTA was set up with Commonwealth funding in 2005 to develop core technical foundations for e-health in Australia, such as clinical terminologies, infor mation messaging standards and designing unique con sumer and care provider iden tifiers.

Other than this, however, none of the local or state groups developing e-health systems are talking to each other or working to create sys tems that can be integrated across borders. Some can’t even be integrated across hos pitals or surgeries in the same state. It’s a situation that brings to mind the 19th cen tury, when each colony built its railway systems using incompatible rail gauges.

Read the full story here (password required – let me know if you’d like a full copy).

13 March 2009

Electronic health records, brought to you by Wal-Mart

The Australian government doesn’t appear keen on consumer-led e-health solutions such as Google Health or Microsoft Health Vault. Well, it could be worse: here’s an excerpt from The New York Times this week:

Wal-Mart Stores is striding into the market for electronic health records, seeking to bring the technology into the mainstream for physicians in small offices, where most of America’s doctors practice medicine.

“Wal-Mart’s move comes as the Obama administration is trying to jump-start the adoption of digital medical records with $19 billion of incentives in the economic stimulus package.

“The company plans to team its Sam’s Club division with Dell for computers and eClinicalWorks, a fast-growing private company, for software. Wal-Mart says its package deal of hardware, software, installation, maintenance and training will make the technology more accessible and affordable, undercutting rival health information technology suppliers by as much as half.

“’We’re a high-volume, low-cost company,’ said Marcus Osborne, senior director for health care business development at Wal-Mart. ‘And I would argue that mentality is sorely lacking in the health care industry.’

“The Sam’s Club offering, to be made available this spring, will be under $25,000 for the first physician in a practice, and about $10,000 for each additional doctor. After the installation and training, continuing annual costs for maintenance and support will be $4,000 to $6,500 a year, the company estimates.”

Read the whole story here

3 March 2009

Big Pond content coup for West Australian portal

The Virtual Medical Centre has struck a deal with BigPond to provide health content for Australia’s biggest ISP.

The West Australian-based health site, which has been in operation for more than five years, operates websites for consumers and healthcare professionals across more than 20 therapy areas.

BigPond visitors can link through to the Virtual Medical Centre site, which provides information on diseases, pharmaceuticals and practical remedies, as well as healthy living and diet tips.

It also gives users access to a GP directory, educational videos and a medical dictionary, as well as interactive tools including a BMI calculator, a pregnancy calculator and a blood count evaluation tool.

Medical specialists who join the site are given access to “professional members only” tools which allow them to evaluate a patients’ health, including tools to calculate how many migraines a patient may suffer a month, a durogesic dose calculator and a body surface access calculator.

There are also separate sections for women, men and children, which group together relevant medical topics such as pregnancy, immunisations and prostate health.

More than 1000 medical specialists have contributed to the site.

15 February 2009

E-consults begin trials in Queensland

From Medical Observer:

 A new Web portal allowing patients to consult their regular GP online could be a step forward in e-health for Queensland doctors.

GP Partners, one of the state’s biggest divisions, is currently trialling the Dr4U portal which, when fully operational, will provide an e-consultation service for routine matters such as repeat prescriptions or smoking cessation. Patients will also be able to submit results of self-monitoring for chronic conditions and can send a secure message to their regular doctor, who will respond within a few days.

A similar scheme, Ozdocsonline, was launched in NSW in 2002 by a group of Sydney GPs. Patients whose GPs are registered with this secure website can log on to discuss care plans, test results and management of chronic conditions.

Dr Dianne Chambers, a GP and one of the service founders, told MO last year that, since its launch, Ozdocsonline had generated the equivalent of $98,000 in MBS rebates. Dr4U is likely to bill upfront, however a payment system is still being devised.

AMA Queensland council member and GP Dr Richard Kidd said the system would free up face-to-face time for doctors. But he warned against patients expecting instant answers to queries. He said the Dr4U team was aware of the AMA’s position on e-consultations and was adamant any final product wouldn’t replace face-to-face consults.

10 February 2009

AMA gets behind eHealth

From the CeBIT website:

The Australian Medical Association has called on the Federal Government to boost spending on eHealth initiatives, as both a means of boosting the economy and delivering health care efficiencies.

In its annual budget submission, Australia’s peak health industry lobby says an eHealth investment should be viewed as part of a “nation building” exercise.

“The economic down turn, individual and family financial stress, and increasing unemployment all mean that the government’s commitment to supporting and funding health is even more important,” AMA president, Dr Rosanna Capolingua said.

“It is times like this that the government’s essential role is to ensure and under pin access to high quality, affordable health care for all Australians,” Dr Capolingua said.

“Healthcare is essential not only for individuals, families and communities but also for a productive workforce.

“Poor health costs the community $7 billion in absenteeism alone, while employees coming to work sick and unproductive costs a further $25.7 billion a year.

“The costs to business and the community are likely to increase as the economic downturn takes its’ toll on health,” she said.

The measures outlined in the submission were cost effective, sensible and achievable, Dr Capolingua said. They include improving access to health services for Indigenous and rural communities, retention of the Medicare safety net, and proper indexation of the medical benefits scheme.

“Investing now will pay major dividends for coming generations as well as immediately addressing the increase in health problems that impact on individuals and communities as a result of economic hardship,” she said.

The AMA’s budget submission outlines a range of measures to support and enhance Australia’s world-class health system, and ensure the broadest possible access to the system.

9 February 2009

EHRs and investment deficit disorder

Just read a comprehensive, well-researched, thought-provoking article in the New York Times about the global economic crisis and the tasks facing Barack Obama as he tries to turn the US around. Smack dab in the middle of it was, of all things, a reference to electronic health records:

“One good way to understand the current growth slowdown is to think of the debt-fueled consumer-spending spree of the past 20 years as a symbol of an even larger problem. As a country we have been spending too much on the present and not enough on the future. We have been consuming rather than investing. We’re suffering from investment-deficit disorder.

“You can find examples of this disorder in just about any realm of American life. Walk into a doctor’s office and you will be asked to fill out a long form with the most basic kinds of information that you have provided dozens of times before. Walk into a doctor’s office in many other rich countries and that information — as well as your medical history — will be stored in computers. These electronic records not only reduce hassle; they also reduce medical errors. Americans cannot avail themselves of this innovation despite the fact that the United States spends far more on health care, per person, than any other country. We are spending our money to consume medical treatments, many of which have only marginal health benefits, rather than to invest it in ways that would eventually have far broader benefits.”

Sadly, Australia is not one of those “rich countries” referred to in the article; our progess toward implementing electronic health initiatives is far behind even the US…

There is also a discussion on how the US spends too much on medical treatments that don’t work particularly well (trouble ahead for the pharma industry). The whole article is well worth reading: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/01/magazine/01Economy-t.html?_r=1&pagewanted=all

4 February 2009

Australia Card redux – now patients want it

Twenty years after a huge public outcry stopped the introduction of the Australia Card, it appears that Australians are now ready for smart cards – at least when it comes to their health - according to a study published in this months’ Australian Health Review.

The survey, conducted with 270 emergency department patients and 92 staff at three hospital emergency departments in Victoria, compared the perceptions of patients and staff regarding the use of health smart cards containing patient medical records.

The study recorded data on a range of health smart card issues including awareness, privacy, confidentiality, security, advantages and disadvantages, and willingness to use. While a significantly higher proportion of staff had heard of the card, more of the patients said they were willing to use it.

The perceived disadvantages reported by patients and staff were, overall, significantly different, with the staff reporting more disadvantages. A significantly higher proportion of patients believed that they should choose what information is on the card and who should have access to the information.

Patients were more conservative regarding what information should be included, but staff were more conservative regarding who should have access to the information. Significantly fewer staff believed that patients could reliably handle the cards.

Overall, however, the cards were considered acceptable and useful, and their introduction would be supported.

Study author Dr David Taylor, director of emergency medicine at Melbourne’s Austin Health, said a major benefit of smart cards would be to save time. He told 6 minutes, “It’s quicker for a doctor to put a card into a machine and push a few buttons on a computer than it is to request a medical chart to come from medical records … or call up the patient’s GP or their pharmacist … it would save an enormous amount of work.”

Dr Taylor said that situations such as a patient  forgetting to bring along their card or the accuracy of information could pose problems for the system, but said it had worked “reasonably well” in a Tasmanian trial.

11 December 2008

E-health waste a billion-dollar Australian industry

Released this week was a Booz and Co consultancy report commissioned by the Government’s health reform adviser, the National Health and Hospital Reform Commission, that has warned Australia was wasting money and falling behind in the digital health revolution.

The Australian called it “a new study [that] slammed scattergun spending of almost $1.3 billion on state-based e-health schemes.” It also reported on the same day that State health ministers have finally agreed on a national plan to share patients’ electronic records.

It reported, “they gave the tick to the strategy commissioned in April amid controversy over delays, cost blowouts and resignations in e-health projects and bodies across the country.

“Electronic records for patients are currently held separately, if at all, across GP surgeries, hospitals, government agencies and other health centres, allowing only patchy sharing of information.

“The gaps have resulted in duplicate consultations, tests and treatments and prescribing mistakes, with past studies calculating the net benefits of better electronic record-keeping at up to $8.7 billion over the first 10 years.

“The lack of common IT systems and fast broadband has also stalled moves towards more sophisticated innovations, such as remote robotic surgery and electronic monitoring of patients.”

4 December 2008

Australian GP’s digital path

In the latest edition of Australian Doctor, Sydney GP Raymond Seidler writes about his quest for a paperless practice, saying it “has been tireless and ongoing since 1996 when I began using medical software.

 

 

He writes that “Now the pressure is on to make my tiny practice seamless. I need access to my data outside my office and with a large number of nursing home patients in aged care facilities nearby, I need a virtual private network from a computer in these facilities to print prescriptions and add clinical information and generally keep up to date with patients at three off-site locations. This is not hard to do. For a relatively small amount this can be achieved easily.

“How to achieve this? I bought software to allow any doctor to access their patients’ information from any computer in the world securely and in encrypted form. I added a new version of voice recognition software because my typing is so bad and bought a large inexpensive LCD screen. Voice recognition software translates a patient’s history into my computer with a wireless headset and microphone. Many patients comment as they see their history appearing as if by magic on my large LCD screen that they can see. Inevitably, become more involved in the process. I ask them if there is anything I have left out….

“Perhaps the most effective communication with my patient base is via SMS to patients through a bulk purchase online using my billing program, which allows me to message patients with recall information at the press of a button. There is nothing like an SMS from their GP to increase a patient’s heart rate and get them to return a call immediately. This is particularly so for members of the X and Y generations, who spend their lives glued to their mobile phone screens.

“Do patients respond to SMS on their mobiles from their GPs? You bet they do. Rapid return phone calls come thick and fast. It is gratifying to find a sure-fire method of having patients contact you when you need them. Letters are laborious and slow. SMS is immediate and relatively inexpensive at 18c per message when purchased in bulk.”

Read the whole story here: http://www.australiandoctor.com.au/articles/D0/0C05C1D0.asp

2 December 2008

E-health funding ‘boost’ unwrapped

David More offers informed comment on last week’s e-health budget announcement in his Australian Health IT blog. While the media headlines trumpeted a big win for e-health spending (ie, funding for the National E-Health Transition Authority) out of the money allocated at the Council of Australian Governments meeting, David points out that the growth in funding is largely due to the states matching federal funding.

Importantly, he points out that “What this funding of NEHTA for the next few years has done has ensured that its leaders feel vindicated in the way they have behaved – they have essentially been ‘patted on the head’ – and any real stimulus for ‘root and branch’ change has been lost.

“There is also a bit of a problem in that without a co-ordinated national direction it is a little murky as to who will be able to get the full value out of the planned NEHTA spend.

“More importantly what has been lost is the opportunity to put in place the sort of national strategy and national governance of e-Health. This will lead, almost inevitably, to waste and inefficiency in how the new money is spent. Of course that waste and inefficiency will be dwarfed by what will flow from failing to properly automate the health sector.”

He concludes that “What has also been lost is an opportunity to commence planned co-ordinated investment in Health IT in a way that is designed to maximise benefit to all the actors within the health system.”

Read the entire post here.

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