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Archive for January, 2009

Medical Records Going Mobile…

Friday, January 30th, 2009

This article is from the website appscout.com 

We at MediConnect, think this cutting edge technology, and others like it- are the wave of the future. 

Leave a comment and let us know what you think.

AllOne_Mobile.jpg

The day where you can access your own medical records—or transfer them to a health professional—right from your cell phone is fast approaching. Recently, the U.S military signed a deal with AllOne Mobile, a health information management application by AllOne Health, to link Wounded Warriors recuperating at home with their case managers and unit support staff, according to TMCNet.

The linkup provides secure, two-day communication, and lets injured service members reach case managers and other military personnel who will monitor soldiers through personalized encrypted messages provided by AllOne, according to the report. Over time, AllOne Health aims to give regular employees and employers more control of their health records, along with access to tools and services for navigating health insurance plans. Currently they’re working with Microsoft on the company’s HealthVault service, among other projects.

Latest Headlines…

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

Headlines for the Week of January 21-28, 2009:

Here are links to the current news in life, legal and healthcare.  If you find stories that you think should be included please email me at epeterson@mediconnect.net, or leave a comment on the blog. If you would like to receive this as an RSS Feed, click on the “subscribe link” at the top of this page.

Thanks.

01/28/09 USAToday.com: More Americans having out patient surgery
01/27/09 Newsinferno.com: FDA to Take Closer Look at Plavix
01/27/09 Newsinferno.com: KV Pharmaceutical to Recall Most of its Drugs
01/27/09 Newsinferno.com: Peanut Butter Pulled From Starbucks
01/27/09 Insurancenewsnet.com: Most Carriers and Brokers are Still Confident about Future of Voluntary Market According to Eastbridge’s Year-End 2008 Survey
01/27/09 CNN.com: Zimbabwe Cholera death toll nears 3000
01/26/09 USAToday.com: Pfizer to buy Wyeth for $68 B; cut 8,000 jobs
01/26/09 Newsinferno.com: Lawsuits Filed Over Shoulder Pain Pump Injuries
01/23/09 Newsinferno.com: Eli Lilly Admits Zyprexa Guilt
01/22/09 Newsinferno.com: Salmonella Recalls Top 100 Peanut Corp. of America Only Source of Outbreak
01/21/09 Newsinferno.com: Chemicals in Some Meds Risky for Preemies
01/21/09 Newsinferno.com: Stuffed Chicken Recalled for Foreign Objects

Leavitt Warns of Pandemic, Foresees Health Care Reform

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

By James Thalman

Deseret News

Published: Tuesday, Jan. 27, 2009 12:17 a.m. MST

Ready or not, one day soon there will be another pandemic. Like it or not, health-care system reform is really going to happen this time. Believe it or not, the one person who is gaining a new appreciation for President George W. Bush is President Barack Obama.

Those were among several assertions made to the Deseret News editorial board Monday by Michael O. Leavitt, former Utah governor, former head of the Environmental Protection Agency and, most recently, former U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services.

Asked to assess the legacy of Bush, Leavitt said being critical is not his place as a Cabinet member nor is it his desire as a friend. The only things that can be said for certain is that it’s too soon to say.

During a recent visit to the Oval Office, Leavitt recalled, Bush pointed to the portrait of George Washington and said if historians are still arguing the legacy of the first president, arguing over the legacy of the 43rd is a given.

Leavitt, who said he fully shares in the nationwide hope for the new president, said he believes Iraq and Afghanistan “have a very good chance of ending up with functioning democratic governments. Those are very important world-changing results.”

Seeing the presidency up close also gave Leavitt a new perspective on how the country views the position — “as both an object for the manifestation of our hopes and our fears.” The Bush administration didn’t do things perfectly, “but no administration does.” He said circumstances, such as Hurricane Katrina, never allowed the president an opportunity to rally around optimism.

“There was never a time when we all set aside our divisions and moved forward,” he said.

Leavitt also got an up-close perspective of the world outside Washington, from seven weeks overseeing emergency medical services for Katrina victims, to visits to China to establish FDA standards for food and products manufactured there, to the efforts of the administration to contain the AIDS epidemic in Africa. The latter, he said, is one of Bush’s mostly unsung and significant achievements in improving the public health.

The position also gave him a new vantage point on health care, particularly the need for reforming it.

He envisions a time when patients can look up the cost, outcome and quality of medications, procedures and doctors from a home computer.

He also has a clear idea of what health-care reform is and likes to describe it by what it is not: the 47 million Americans who don’t have medical insurance. He calls that “an administrative problem that gets all the attention but one we can fix.”

One thing that must change is spending 16.5 percent of the gross national product on health care, “which rewards based on procedures, successful or not, and for treating sickness rather than keeping people well.”

The system is a network of independent “silos” that is very specialized and very expensive, but not very good compared to countries that spend a fraction of their national product on medicine.

“The solution isn’t to continue to keep doing what we did in the past,” he said. “The role of government needs to be worked out. Is it to own the system or organize the system?”

Leavitt said he foresees three possible outcomes for making comprehensive changes: incremental steps with expansions of health-care insurance for children and by expanding Medicare for seniors, the Big Bang change with details to be worked out later, the Big Bang carefully done.

“Health care is a big part of the stimulus — $100 billion — and a lot of it is for improving health care information technology, which is wonderful,” he said. “The big question is if this will be a pay-as-you-go effort. If they stick to a pay/go principle, the changes are more likely to be incremental.”

Health care is absolutely going to be changed, he said, noting that issue is finally ripe in the public’s mind, a factor that destined previous efforts to little more than nice tries.

He is also sure that a pandemic is a certainty, noting the three in the 20th century and the 10 the past 300 years. He pointed to his efforts to make the public aware of the avian flu threat, which he said were bolstered substantially by being mentioned on “The Tonight Show With Jay Leno” three nights running in 2002. He said there have been improvements in public health and in scientific preparedness, and the U.S. vaccine industry has been retooled under his watch.

Obama’s Big Idea: Digitalize Healthcare Records

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

By David Goldman, CNNMoney.com staff writer
January 12, 2009: 4:05 AM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — President-elect Barack Obama, as part of the effort to revive the economy, has proposed a massive effort to modernize health care by making all health records standardized and electronic.

Here’s the audacious plan: Computerize all health records within five years. The quality of health care for all Americans gets a big boost, and costs decline.

Sounds good. But it won’t be easy.

In fact, many hurdles stand in the way. Only about 8% of the nation’s 5,000 hospitals and 17% of its 800,000 physicians currently use the kind of common computerized record-keeping systems that Obama envisions for the whole nation. And some experts say that serious concerns about patient privacy must be addressed first. Finally, the country suffers a dearth of skilled workers necessary to build and implement the necessary technology.

“The hard part of this is that we can’t just drop a computer on every doctor’s desk,” said Dr. David Brailer, former National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, who served as President Bush’s health information czar from 2004 to 2006. “Getting electronic records up and running is a very technical task.”

It also won’t come cheap. Independent studies from Harvard, RAND and the Commonwealth Fund have shown that such a plan could cost at least $75 billion to $100 billion over the ten years they think the hospitals would need to implement program.

That’s a huge amount of money — since the total cost of the stimulus plan is estimated to cost about $800 billion, the health care initiative would be one of the priciest parts to the plan.

The biggest cost will be paying and training the labor force needed to create the network. Luis Castillo, senior vice president of Siemens Healthcare, a company that designs health care technology, said the laborers will have the extremely difficult task of designing a a system that “thinks like a physician.”

“Doctors cannot spend hours and hours learning a new system,” said Castillo. “It needs to be a ubiquitous, ‘anytime, anywhere’ solution that has easily accessible data in a simple-to-use Web-based application.”

But highly skilled health information technology professionals are as rare as they come, and many IT workers will need to be trained as health technology experts.

Early government estimates showed about 212,000 jobs could be created from this program, but Brailer said there simply aren’t that many Americans who are qualified.

Furthermore, ensuring the privacy of patients’ records in a nationalized computer network will be tricky. There are obvious concerns about hackers and system failures. And new online health record systems, such as Google Health are not currently subject to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, the national health privacy law.

“HIPAA was never intended for the digital age, because the laws never anticipated the emergence of Web-based records,” said Brailer. “Congress can pass one of numerous policy proposals for change, it’s just a question if they have the will to do that.”

Jobs and savings for the future
The Obama transition operation declined a request to elaborate on Obama’s proposal. The president-elect said Thursday in a speech on the economy that the benefits of a modernized national health record system go beyond just cost savings.

“This will cut waste, eliminate red tape, and reduce the need to repeat expensive medical tests,” said Obama. “It just won’t save billions of dollars and thousands of jobs — it will save lives by reducing the deadly but preventable medical errors that pervade our health care system,” he added.

Still, compared to the $2 trillion a year that the industry spends, the $100 billion experts say it may cost to implement Obama’s plan is a drop in the bucket.

“We must reduce waste to become more efficient” said Brailer.

The savings of such a plan could be substantial. Brailer estimates that a fully computerized health record system could save the industry $200 billion to $300 billion a year.

That could ultimately slow the rapid rise of health care premiums, which have cut into Americans’ paychecks. While wages are rising at a rate of around 3% a year, health care costs are growing at about three times that rate.

“Obama’s support for electronic medical records is one of the key efforts of health reform that actually will deliver lower costs for hard-working American families,” said Larry McNeely, a health care advocate at U.S. Public Interest Research Group. “Long-term savings can’t happen unless we have 21st century health information technology.”

Massachusetts has developed a plan to fully computerize records at its 14,000 physicians’ offices by 2012 and its 63 hospitals by 2014. After a pilot program, the state legislature estimates it will cost about $340 million to build the statewide computer system, with a cost of about $2 million per hospital.

“[Obama's] timeframe is very ambitious, but there is a need to be able to track data on patients and talk across providers and health care systems,” said Dr. JudyAnn Bigby, Secretary of Health and Human Services for Massachusetts. “The program will allow for greater patient safety.”

Some say some of the hard work has begun. The Bush administration laid much of the groundwork for the program, leading to several pilot programs in a handful of states, as well as a standardization of medical records.

“The whole structure has already been developed,” said Stephen Schoenbaum, executive director of The Commonwealth Fund’s commission on a high performance health system. “It’s feasible to at least make a lot of progress on this in the next five years.”

 

A formula for stimulus with staying power

The case for doing nothing

Obama: $300 billion in tax cuts

Latest Headlines…

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

Headlines for the Week of January 14-21, 2009:

Here are links to the current news in life, legal and healthcare.  If you find stories that you think should be included please email me at epeterson@mediconnect.net, or leave a comment on the blog. If you would like to receive this as an RSS Feed, click on the “subscribe link” at the top of this page.

Thanks.

01/21/09 Newsinferno.com: Chemicals in Some Meds Risky for Preemies
01/21/09 Newsinferno.com: Stuffed Chicken Recalled for Foreign Objects
01/20/09 Newsinferno.com: Peanut Butter Salmonella Lawsuit Filed in Vermont
01/20/09 Newsinferno.com: Rubber Chemical Linked to Cancer
01/19/09 Newsinferno.com: Lidocaine, Other Skin Numbing Drugs Linked to Life Threatening Side Effects
01/19/09 Newsinferno.com: Florida Drywall Class action Lawsuit in the Works
01/16/09 Cnn.com: Lawsuits Filed Over Bush Rule on Health Care Workers
01/16/09 Cnn.com: Downadup Virus Exposes Millions of PC’s to Hijack
01/16/09 Newsinferno.com: Coca Cola Faces Lawsuit Over Vitamin Water Claims
01/16/09 Newsinferno.com: United Health Settles Class Action Lawsuit with Doctor Group
01/15/09 USAToday.com: Studies:Surgeons could save lives, $20B by using a checklist
01/15/08 USAToday.com: Kellogg pulls crackers over salmonella concerns
01/15/09 USAToday.com: Kids’ Vaccine slashes Meningitis

Pfizer Project Looks at Side Effects…

Friday, January 16th, 2009

I found this article in the Wall Street Journal and I thought it was interesting.

Pfizer Project Looks at Side Effects

Latest Headlines…

Thursday, January 15th, 2009

Headlines For the Week of Jan 6-14, 2009:

Here are links to the current news in life, legal and healthcare.  If you find stories that you think should be included please email me at epeterson@mediconnect.net, or leave a comment on the blog. If you would like to receive this as an RSS Feed, click on the “subscribe link” at the top of this page.

Thanks.

 
01/14/09 Newsinferno.com: Internal Emails Confirm Glaxo Avandia Cover-Up

01/14/09 WSJ.com: Apple CEO Jobs to take a Medical Leave of Absence

01/14/09 Newsinferno.com: Salmonella Outbreak tied to 3 Deaths

01/14/09 Newsinferno.com: One Million Stork Craft Cribs Recalled 

01/14/09 Newsinferno.com: Brain Shrinkage Seen with Hormone Replacement Therapy.

01/13/09 Newsinferno.com: UnitedHealth Group to Pay $50 Million to Settle Claims it Over Charged Millions

01/12/09 Reuters.com: U.S. Advisers back 1st drug from DNA- Altered Animals

01/12/09Cnn.com: Obama’s Big Idea: Digital Health Records

01/09/09 Newsinferno.com: Quest Diagnostic Testing Errors Reported

01/08/09 Newsinferno.com: CDC: Poor Infection Control Put Patients at Risk for Hepatitis B,C

01/06/09 Newsinferno.com: Medtronic Infuse Bone Graft to be Named in Another Lawsuit

01/06/09 Abcnews.com: Third-Hand Smoke—the Dust Finally Settles

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