Pharmacies with FRED Dispense ready for eHealth

Huge news for those Pharmacies who use Fred Dispense!

The Fred IT group has released a new PCEHR enabled version of their software. . This will hopefully encourage other pharmacies to sign up as the useful software will now be available for their use.

McDonald (2013) explains that this update provides Fred equipped Pharmacies with the ability to send information through the eRx and the National Prescription and Dispense Repository (NPDR), which is due to do live this week. Further, the NPDR and the PCEHR are estimated to be able to talk to each other before the end of the month which is great news for those Pharmacies who are currently registered for the PCEHR. What a huge step toward paperless prescriptions and something that most people do not think about, a huge step forward for the environmentally-friendliness of this Profession! 

We can hope that this will encourage Pharamcists to begin promoting ehealth to their customers and patients and advising them to sign themselves, or even receive help from the Pharmacist to be signed up for their own PCEHR. Pharmacists will be integral to the uptake and application of this program as they can identify and counsel those who would most benefit from having an ehealth record, such as parents of small children, the elderly and those with chronic illnesses about the benefits, also provide a helping hand in signing up for the program. It would be great to see a greater uptake of PCEHR when the NPDR and PCEHR are both live and able to communicate with one another. 

These are exciting times for ehealth in Australia and one can only hope that these new software updates provide a platform in which Pharmacists can lead the way in promoting eHealth in Australia to ensure a more cohesive 21st Century healthcare system.

 

REFERNCE

McDonald, K., (2013) Pharmacies ready for NPDR as PCEHR v3 nears. PusleITMagazine. accessed from http://www.pulseitmagazine.com.au/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1420:pharmacies-ready-for-npdr-as-pcehr-v3-nears&catid=16:australian-ehealth&Itemid=327 on 09/05/13

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Filed under Aged Care, E-Health for parents, E-Health opt-in, eRx script exchange

Worldwide e-Health awareness

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Would an E-Health awareness week work for Australia??

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Are financial incentives they key to get the E-Health ball rolling?

When I was checking out E-Health systems from around the world, one of the things I liked about what the United States has done, was the fact that they are providing financial incentives so that the healthcare sector will be more inclined to implement the system.

I have just found an article on Pulse+IT which suggests that this could be what is missing from our own system, particularly in relation to the aged care sector.

Financial support the missing link for aged care PCEHR uptake:

http://www.pulseitmagazine.com.au/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1416:financial-support-the-missing-link-for-aged-care-pcehr-uptake&catid=67:aged-care&Itemid=332

According to the article, the Aged Care Industry Information Technology Council (ACIITC) is urging the government to consider financial incentives so that they can be PCEHR-ready, claiming that lack of important software has forced a slow uptake in the aged care sector.

Aged care is one of the areas that I believe would gain the most from the E-Health system- so this is something that I believe should be considered. Patients in this sector are often on countless medications, see several healthcare practitioners and are in and out of nursing homes and hospitals. I know I would struggle to keep up with all this information if this were me. PCEHR would make things a lot easier but if the aged care industry does not have the key software- everyone cannot get involved and the system won’t work as effectively as it could. Funding for this could help with the uptake of the system.

ACIITC chair Suri Ramanathan claims that because pharmacists receive a PBS dispense fee for dispensing medications- they should be receiving incentives too. He says that they are one of the largest industries in the country and “facilities operate on a paper-thin margin, so for them to adopt the change, they need a little bit of a hand.”

Mr Ramanathan said that financial help is the “missing link” for E-Health to really get moving in the aged care industry. However, why stop at aged care? Surely many areas in the healthcare industry could use some financial help to get E-Health up and going.

From a pharmacist’s perspective, the more people healthcare industries that get involved in E-Health, the better. Like I have said previously, PCEHR is meant to provide a whole picture of a patient’s health and the key to this happening is getting all areas of the healthcare industry involved. If funding will inspire more to get on-board, then I believe it is something to really think about.

Do you think funding would encourage more healthcare professionals to implement E-Health?

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Filed under Aged Care, Global E-Health, Issues with E-Health

Electronic Prescriptions, Proxy Collection and Privacy Issues for Pharmacists

The Electronic transfer of prescription information is in the first stages of implementation, with most of us who work in community pharmacy having access to (most likely) the eRx system. In this program, electronically dispensed (not hand written) prescriptions can be scanned by the bar code on the bottom of  a new script, or at the top of a repeat form and the information  contained on this prescription is safely and accurately downloaded into our dispensing software. This is a handy tool as it ensures continuity between what has been prescribed, quantity and instructions when prescription information is entered, reducing human data entry errors.

The eventual product of this program will involve a paperless system where prescriptions are “written” and connected to a patients ehealth record, this script information will then be held in a secure database until the time that the patient would like it to be dispensed. This information would then be downloaded securely to the pharmacies dispensing software through access to the patients ehealth record. This will be of such great importance when/ if the system gets off the ground and will help it work as a well oiled machine.

But I had a thought when I was driving home from University today. This paperless system sounds fantastic and will relieve some of the paperwork headaches that we all face when working in pharmacies…however, in terms of patients and the collection/request for scripts to be dispensed, privacy issues for Pharmacists may come to light.

When a doctor sees a patient, access to that patients health record is all they will need..they would not under any circumstances need to access this persons husband,brother, mother’s record if that person was not present with the original patient. Essentially doctors are not to access someones health information on the request of another patient. Even more, a doctor would never prescribe a medication for someone on the request of someone else (family, friend etc.)

The situation presented in a pharmacy is really quite different, and it opens the pharmacist profession up to more risks than they already face. Say for example, Mrs Jones comes into your pharmacy now, she has a pile of prescriptions for her and also another list for her husband. You would not think twice about dispensing these items and allowing her to collect her husband’s items on his behalf. His consent to have her collect his prescriptions is implied to us by her bringing them in along with hers- and if they are elderly/on concession they would have the same benefit number so we understand they have family connection.

Scenario Two: Mrs and Mr Jones have signed themselves up for eHealth records and are now excited about not having remember where all of their prescriptions are, they can simply go to any pharmacy and have them filled no paperwork required. Mrs Jones comes in to your pharmacy and requests 3 scripts for herself and 2 for her husband. In order to have access to this information you need to access their ehealth records, but only Mrs Jones is present. So accessing her information is no problem as you have consent from her, however how is it justified to access her husbands ehealth record on her request when he is not present? They are family yes, and previously we would have assumed implied consent, but is that really in line with the privacy principles regarding healthcare providers access to eHealth records? A doctor would not do this..so why should pharmacists be put in the risky situation this involves?

If the patient is unknown to us this could be even more awkward and lead to anger on the patients side, if they feel as though pharmacists are keeping them from information they are entitled to.

I am unsure how much thought and planning has been put in to this dilemma, however I did notice that according to the PCEHR Act (2012), commanding access over ehealth records can be granted to an authorised or nominated representative of the consumer, such as a parent of a child under 18 years, or a carer for someone with disabilities or an elderly family member/patient. However, does this mean that when signing up for an ehealth record, in order to avoid these kinds of issues consumers need to name a proxy who can request access to health information and scripts on their behalf? If this is the case, family members would be the most easily serviced, but how about that new couple who haven’t really been dating very long and the last thing that they would think of would be ehealth records. Then one gets sick and needs a script filled..how would this person go about accessing this script on their partners behalf? Through a phone call sure, but this may not be the most effective answer…how can we be sure this person is who they say they are when we cannot see them in front of us?

Further, how can we be certain that our customers will even think to name family members as authorised individuals who can ask for such things as their scripts being filled? Pharmacists cannot allow themselves to be in a situation where liability due to unauthorised access to a patients ehealth record is suspected, even if this may not be the case, if consent cannot be determined than access cannot be granted. And thus could potentially lead to anger on the part of the customer which could negatively impact the business.

Customers need to be adequately  informed of what is expected of them in regards to this before this program were to get up and running on a large scale!

There are so many unanswered questions in this area of eHealth, in some ways it seems that by making life easier in some ways we will also be making life harder in other ways….a double edged sword one might say.  No matter which way it goes more problems arise, but there is a need to bring our healthcare system into the 21st Century.

I am interested to know your thought on this topic…how would Pharmacists maintain the integrity of patient privacy if this new system was implemented on a large scale?

 

 

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Filed under About E-Health, E-Health for parents, eRx script exchange, Issues with E-Health, Privacy, Security

E-Health in Kuwait

When i thought about eHealth in Kuwait, i couldn’t remember that i heard about it or someone had mentioned it before, and that the Government of Kuwait would think about having an eHealth system. But, when i searched about it and for a moment thought maybe there is an eHealth system in Kuwait and nobody knows about it, i realised that Kuwait is actually trying to put an eHealth system and has made several exhibitions and conferences with the other Arabian Gulf countries.

     Kuwait like many Gulf States faces a looming crisis in health-care around emerging chronic diseases such as diabetes, heart disease, kidney disease and vascular diseases. Kuwait has recognized this as an opportunity to upgrade the healthcare system from a primarily disease incident based system to a proactive integrated healthcare system. The backbone of integrated care is information sharing and aggregation for all the involved stakeholders. This will involve clinical, regulatory, patient engagement and IT changes. This talk will explore each of these areas, and where opportunities exist for improving the health of Kuwait’s citizens through use of electronic healthcare systems.

Kuwait has made a great step on improving the health system by introducing the eHealth idea. For sure it is going to take a long time to get started on the system and introducing it to Kuwaiti’s. I hope that Kuwait activates that system as soon as possible for the benefit of citizens and the Ministry Of Health to have records electronically instead of files and papers.

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Tips for Maintaining Privacy with Ehealth

New developments and programs bring the need for new privacy laws and regulations. This is the case with eHealth in Australia.

From the 12th March 2014 the privacy laws and guidelines in Australia will be receiving a sort of make over and upgrade. Bigger changes than have previously been made to the Privacy Act (1988) will be implemented. The changes include the creation of 13 Australian Privacy Principles which will replace the current National Privacy Principles (for the private sector) and Information Privacy Principles (for the public sector).

These new principals include new regulations to encompass eHealth, such as the PCEHR Act 2012.

Information that is important for the public about their privacy and eHealth records can be sourced from the new Office of the Australian information Commissioner (OAIC) Website under Pubications and Resources. Factsheets number 13,14 and 15 are explicitly related to ehealth privacy, two sheets for healthcare professionals and the public. http://www.oaic.gov.au/ is a good place to start!

Tips for maintaining privacy with your Personally Controlled Electronic Health Records include:

  • You are in charge of how much influence you have over the information that can be accessed by specific healthcare providers.
  • Decide upon what access settings you would like as soon as you sign up, and regularly check and update these. Keep up to date with who is on your ‘access list’.
  • You can organise an access code to further restrict access to your record by certain healthcare providers, or even restrict access to particular  documents if  you do not want them to be accessed. This access code would ensure that only healthcare professionals that you approve of can access your eHealth record.
  • It is recommended that those who sign up or are thinking of signing up read the eHealth record System Operators privacy notices and policies to further their understanding about how their information will be handled.
  • If you do not want certain information or a certain document uploaded to your eHealth record by a particular healthcare professional, you should let them know. If it has already been uploaded and they refuse to take it down you can organise for the documents removal through medicare.
  • Always be sure to think it through and decide upon the importance of a document before removing or requesting its removal, as once it is removed from you eHealth record, it will not be available during an emergency.
  • Remain vigilant about checking to make sure no unauthorised access to your eHealth record has occurred.
  • Check your record frequently to be sure that information held on the record is up to date, correct and complete.
  • One of the most important aspects of keeping your health information secure and private is by making sure you protect your record with a strong password.
  • The new system is protected by the PCEHR Act (2012) which limits how information may be collected, used and disclosed. If information is not collected within these regulations then this is an interference with privacy.
  • You may opt-out at any time.

Important privacy information tips for Healthcare providers include:

  • Heathcare providers need to know what is expected of them under the PCEHR Act as there are serious penalties for non-compliance, (information can be collected, used and disclosed to provide healthcare to the patient)
  • Develop robust practices for using the PCEHR system and be sure all staff are adequately trained
  • Inform patients of any information that you will be adding, do not add information that you have not previously discussed with them.
  • Do not collect more information from someone’s Ehealth record than is necessary
  • Be professional and practice responsibly when collecting, using and disclosing information from a patients eHealth record.
  • Understand how an eHealth record can be used in the case of an emergency

It is important that all parties involved know what their role is in maintaining privacy when it comes to eHealth records. It really is a situation where patients are just as crucial to the maintenance of their private health information as healthcare providers. One of the interesting aspects of the system where the patient seems to have the majority share of power.

Pharmacists need to be sure that they are completely up to date with current privacy laws surrounding eHealth, and understand the new changes coming in to force next year. Maintaining the integrity of our patients privacy is always paramount, and thus this new age of IT and Health collaboration means that Pharmacists need to ensure a complete understanding of their role when it comes to privacy and patient health. Pharmacists remain the middle man between doctors and patients (especially when it comes to medications), therefore they will have to learn to balance their information share between collection for healthcare reasons and collecting/ accessing more than is required.

These are interesting  times in which we do live!

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eHealth and the Elderly

I have previously blogged on my own experiences with signing up for an PCEHR, and as a young relatively healthy young person I can see how this record and overall program can be beneficial for me.

However, I believe that on a much larger scale, those who really need this program to get up and running are the elderly. Having worked on community pharmacy for quite a few years now, I have come to appreciate that along with all the other joys of ageing, one of the main things that older people have to deal with is taking in some cases more than 10 prescription items (and some probably more than that). In a time when we are living longer due to medical advancements, we are more likely to need more medications to maintain more medical conditions, both chronic and acute.

Thus, this demographic are much more likely to see multiple doctors and other healthcare professionals, have multiple hospital visits and take many medications. They may not be up to scratch with how this whole ‘internet’ thing works, but they are absolutely among those who are most likely to receive great benefit from the wide uptake and implementation of eHealth in Australia.

Greater collaboration between doctors, pharmacists and allied health professionals is invaluable to creating better health outcomes for our elderly and aging population.

This collaboration could lead to less adverse reactions and accidental over/underdosing of medications by the elderly and therefore less avoidable hospital admissions. More mutual understanding between medical professionals leads to much better health outcomes for patients.

Pharmacists play a central role in maintaining eHealth records, especially for the elderly, as they are the medication experts. Pharmacists would be able to counsel patients about their health in general and specific medications with a more rounded view of the patient history than what is provided in the dispensing databases.

More than this, pharmacists can play an active role in encouraging and even helping older people sign up for a PCEHR.

Further, clinical services provided by Pharmacists to these patients could be easily recorded and uploaded on to their eHealth record, for this information to be shared with other health professionals. Transferring of information about services provided can also be easily transferred to Guildcare for reimbursement from the government.

Our elderly population is growing and eHealth, along with pharmacy clinical services are just some of the benefits that this group in the population can enjoy if eHealth gets off the ground.

Here’s hoping.

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Filed under About E-Health, Aged Care

Create your own Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record (PCEHR)

sign up

Sign up here

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The world of E-Health

The world of E-Health

Because we’ve been exploring E-Health Australia, I thought it would be interesting to take a look at the systems in place around the world. Many countries have either implemented or are in the process of implementing their own versions of E-Health. I found a document called “The e health revolution—easier said than done” which gives a brief run down on what some other countries have been up to in the world of E-Health.  http://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/Parliamentary_Departments/Parliamentary_Library/pubs/rp/rp1112/12rp03#_Toc309206390

Czech Republic

The electronic health record in the Czech Republic, known as IZIP, commenced in 2005 and is widely used by the healthcare community and patients. As of 2009, more than a third of healthcare organizations and 10% of the population had signed up. Their records include patient contact with medical practitioners, consultation history, dental history, test results, vaccination history and hospital reports. In their system, practitioners and patients have access to a patient’s record, but it is only able to be altered by a practitioner. The patient can authorize for a practitioner to have access to their record and can choose which information a medical professional can see. In 2008, the Czech Republic also incorporated Health Insurance so that patients are able to log on a view what payments they have received from their insurance provider. While other European countries are not as far along as the Czech Republic, most have made a start or are looking at doing so.

Denmark

Denmark has a high level of public satisfaction with their healthcare system and has had great success with their E-Health system. Denmark’s national E-Health system was launched in 2005 and provides patients and healthcare professionals with a single access point to healthcare services. Patients can log on to their personal profile to book doctors’ appointments, renew prescriptions, review their medical history or diagnostic tests and even communicate with medical practitioners via email (practitioners receive incentives in the form of a small fee for emails with patients). In Denmark 98% of primary care practices have access to electronic medical records where they are able to enter patient history, manage a patient’s medications, make problem lists, generate eScripts and send them straight to a pharmacy, view hospital records and issue automatic preventative reminders. It is believed that Denmark’s E-Health success is likely due to their small population and abundance of IT-savvy citizens. The Danish government have placed a high importance on E-Health and even funded primary care practitioners to access technical support to encourage further adoption of the E-Health system.

Read more about E-Health in Denmark at http://www.sum.dk/~/media/Filer%20-%20Publikationer_i_pdf/2012/Sunheds-IT/Sunheds_IT_juni_web.ashx

 The United Kingdom

HealthSpace, just one facet of the UK’s E-Health system, is an online personal organizer which has been described as pointless and irrelevant. HealthSpace allows patients to enter health information (e.g. blood pressure readings) and to arrange appointments with medical practitioners. Uptake of HealthSpace has been disappointing with over 2.4 million people invited to join between 2007 and 2010, and only 173,000 people actually doing so. E-Health systems in the US as well as the UK have copped similar criticism and have been accused of trying to accomplish too much, too soon as opposed to the Danish E-Health system which steadily progressed over several years.

The United States

Advances to E-Health in the United States have lagged behind other countries, with no E-Health system in place until 2009. A survey in 2006 revealed widespread concerns regarding the setup costs for practitioners if they were to implement E-Health which was seen as a major barrier. In 2009 an economic stimulus was passed which meant that medical practitioners were eligible for $44,000 – $63,750 US for showing that they are using health information technology in a meaningful way. Hospitals were eligible for several million dollars. The incentives, which began in 2011, will be phased out over time and by 2015 practitioners will fined if they haven’t converted to electronic health records. Another major concern which may be stalling E-Health in America is privacy. America does not have extensive privacy laws in place like other countries do and there are worries that any information presented in electronic format is easily accessed, shared and downloaded. These fears are not shared by all and some practitioners are enthusiastic about E-Health and are trying to get patients onboard.

How do you think the Australian E-Health System compares?

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New Software leading the way for Ehealth to really get going.

A report in the last week states that ‘Best Practice Software’- A GP desktop software vendor has released their latest piece of software that allows GP’s to finally upload documents onto the PCEHR’s of their patients (McDonald, 2013). This is a huge step forward for the eHealth initiative, and a much needed boost for things to really get rolling. All of the other software vendors involved in the National e-Health Transition Authority’s (NEHTA) have also released their versions of this software which spells a win for the possibility of a viable e-Health system.

Further McDonald (2013) states that the government will now finally begin its advertising campaign around PCEHRs and the eHealth initiative in Australia, including television commercials. Some (including this blogger) might say this is a long overdue step in the right direction given that the level of those signed up for a PCEHR is still disparagingly low, at about 160,000 (Wong, 2013). Given that we are now a country of 23 Million, this is not comforting. The beginning of an effective advertising campaign and the implementation of this software in doctor’s officies, hospitals, allied healthcare offices and of course pharmacies can only be a good combination for furthering this cause. The sooner we get to see the real landscape of eHealth in Australia and all of its possibilities, the more effective it can become as a truly integrating and game changing practice. Something that we as training health professionals will be able to look forward to being a part of in the future.

References

McDonald, K. (2013) PCEHR- enabled Best Practive now available. Pulse+It Magazine. Retrieved from http://www.pulseitmagazine.com.au/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1400:pcehr-enabled-best-practice-now-available&catid=16:australian-ehealth&Itemid=327 on 27/04/13

Wong, M. (2013) Potential for big data through PCEHR. Pulse+It Magazine. Retrieved from http://www.pulseitmagazine.com.au/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=1393:potential-for-big-data-through-the-pcehr&catid=16:australian-ehealth&Itemid=327 on 27/04/13

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