Remote Aboriginal people have more to gain from electronic-health than most.

120818 Glance

Picture: Richard Polden Source: The Australian

By: Stephen Pincock The Australian August 18, 2012

Glance and his colleagues developed the system, known as Medical Message Exchange, with the Kimberley Aboriginal Medical Services Council, an umbrella group for Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services in towns and remote communities in the region.

BY the time David Glance joined the University of WA’s Centre for Software Practice in 2001, life had already handed him a number of rewarding experiences.

After finishing a doctorate in physiology in the mid 1980s, Glance shifted his focus to the intersection of high finance and high technology and started designing the digital innards of trading room technology for London firms.

A few years later, with the dotcom bubble deflating, he found himself in the US headquarters of Microsoft in Redmond, Washington.

But he considers working with health workers in remote northwestern Australia for the past five years “the single most significant project I’ve worked on”.

Put simply, the project enables doctors, nurses and other health workers to co-ordinate the care of about 26,000 mostly indigenous patients across the vast distances of the Kimberley, by accessing medical records online.

Glance and his colleagues developed the system, known as Medical Message Exchange, with the Kimberley Aboriginal Medical Services Council, an umbrella group for Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services in towns and remote communities in the region.With a patient’s consent, GPs, hospitals, visiting specialists and allied and mental health professionals can share their record, which includes all care plans, medications and communications.

There may appear to be something incongruous about developing a digital solution to the health needs of people living the least urban, least technologically connected lives in the country.

But remote Aboriginal people have more to gain from electronic-health than most, says Tamati Shepherd,, chair of the National Indigenous Informatics Special Interest Group in the Health Informatics Society of Australia.

The very remoteness of many indigenous communities, and the nomadic lifestyles of many Aboriginal people in places such as the Kimberley, make it difficult for healthcare workers to keep the detailed medical records considered vital for good healthcare.

“Keeping track of their health can be really hard,” says Shepherd. An e-health record can serve as a kind of digital glue, he says, keeping the healthcare system together.

This is critical as indigenous people are at high risk for chronic conditions such as diabetes that require careful, long-term monitoring, and have an unconscionably low average life expectancy. These are problems that have defied many well-intentioned initiatives, but Shepherd believes IT can make a difference: “Technology can have a huge impact in the health of indigenous communities.”

Trevor Lord, a GP who has worked in the Kimberley for the past two years, can testify to the difference MMEx makes. “One of the really nice things about this record is if I’m on call in Broome and a nurse calls from Beagle Bay about a patient, I can look up their record and check the details.”

And when Lord prescribes a drug, the nurse on the other end of the line doesn’t need to scribble down the information on the back of her hand. Lord enters the details on to the e-record. “It doesn’t matter where you are or where the patient is. We can all keep in contact with each other and do the best for the patient.”

According to Lord, an antenatal record added to the MMEx system about a year ago is invaluable. Previously, hospitals often had to ring three or four clinics to piece together a woman’s pregnancy record. “Now it doesn’t matter where the lady has her antenatal care done, because its all in the record.”

The project garnered global attention in 2010 when the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development produced an e-health report and chose an early version of MMEx as a case study. Regionally, health organisations in other states and in New Zealand adopted it. “We have around 250,000 patients in MMEx and about 10,000 health providers,” Glance says.

One key to the project’s success was the input from clinicians from the start.

“That’s what’s exciting about this project. It’s not just us as a software supplier sitting in Melbourne or Sydney … dreaming up what a disconnected group of GPs want. I’ve held meetings with customers in the emergency department. It’s that level of engagement that really triumphs what we’re doing.”

At a health informatics conference in Sydney last month, University of Tasmania IT expert Terry Hannan described an international example of the difference e-health records can make.

The story begins with a group of academics, including Hannan, brought to Kenya by Indiana University in the US and sitting in the dirt outside a remote village clinic. It ends with a web-based e-health record system, now used to treat 140,000 HIV-positive people, that reaches more than half a million people through home-based counselling and testing and has reduced mother-to-child transmission rates of HIV to below 2 per cent.

Known as the Academic Model Providing Access to Healthcare, the philanthropically funded service expanded its scope to include delivery of essential primary care services, and control of communicable diseases and chronic illnesses. Clinicians can use a smartphone to instantly access patient-specific data and also receive alerts when a scheduled test is overdue, or when a needed medication has not been started.

They can respond to reminders by wirelessly printing requisitions for laboratory tests, with all patient information pre-filled.

It now extends to social and economic benefits, Hannan claims: “The social effects of information management just exploded through society.”

Out of the Kenyan experience grew a wider project called OpenMRS. This free, open-source medical record software supports the delivery of healthcare elsewhere in Africa, North and South America, Asia and Europe.

Back in WA, Glance says hearing stories of how access to information has helped save lives is enormously satisfying. But he acknowledges it’s the doctors, nurses and health workers who make the biggest difference.

“I pale into insignificance compared to the efforts they’re putting in.”

 

 

Telehealth initiative that will help remote communities in the NT get better access to healthcare.

Healthier future for remote Northern Territory communities

Minister for Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy, Senator Stephen Conroy, today launched a telehealth initiative that will help remote communities in the Northern Territory get better access to healthcare.

The Health eTowns TelehealthNT Network project is jointly funded by the Commonwealth and Northern Territory Governments and is part of a $20 million Digital Regions Initiative that will:

  • improve the delivery of health and education services to people in 47 remote towns in the Northern Territory;
  • provide telehealth services to emergency rooms and resuscitation areas in Northern Territory regional hospitals and 17 Territory Growth Towns; and
  • allow doctors based in Darwin to examine, talk to, and diagnose patients in remote areas through the use of high-definition Medicarts and room-based units.

“Telehealth has the potential to save lives. Through high-speed broadband, people in remote areas can get speedy healthcare and clinical attention when they need it. It also removes the burden of travel, helping patients stay in their communities and potentially recover faster”, Senator Conroy said

“Interactive online education and training programs have also been implemented to give students and trainees access to mainstream health education programs that are currently only available to students in larger cities.

“The Health eTowns initiative will help close the healthcare and education gap experienced by remote communities in the Northern Territory”, Senator Conroy said.

Minister for Indigenous Health and Member for Lingiari, Warren Snowdon, said the investment in high-speed broadband will improve access to necessary health care for many remote and Aboriginal communities across the Territory.

“Thousands of people live in remote communities and through telehealth services, like Health eTowns, they will be able to access better care, specialists and more health information closer to home.

“This technology will be a great weight off the mind of many people across the Territory, who know that at times seeing the right doctor at the right time can be difficult. Telehealth means that a consultation, a check-up or out-patient follow up is only a video call away”, Mr Snowdon said.

Minister Vatskalis said the implementation of the Health eTowns project is boosting innovation in healthcare by enabling specialist services.

“I am pleased that since the project started  in 2010, the Australian Government and the Northern Territory Government have boosted their contributions so services can be expanded beyond the initial target of 17 Territory Growth Towns into a further 30 remote communities in the Northern Territory”, Minister Vatskalis said. 

This additional funding is also being used to develop a telehealth connection service. This will make it easier for the states and territories to work together on telehealth, helping them share relevant health information and improve health services.

The Australian Government is co-funding a further 13 projects and three NBN-enabled trials across Australia through the $60 million Digital Regions Initiative. Details can be found at: www.dbcde.gov.au/digitalregions

Joint media release

Senator the Hon Stephen Conroy
Minister for Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy
Deputy Leader of the Government in the Senate
Minister Assisting the Prime Minister on Digital Productivity

The Hon Warren Snowdon MP
Minister for Indigenous Health
Federal Member for Lingiari

The Hon Kon Vatskalis MLA
Minister for Health
Northern Territory Government

Date: 31 July 2012

Contact:

Adam Sims (Senator Conroy)

0408 258 457

Marcus Butler (Minister Snowdon)

0417 917 796

Maria Billias (Minister Vatskalis)

0411 119 746

Amplilatwatja health records go online:News coverage-Warren Snowdon PR:

ABC News

The health centre at the remote central Australian community of Amplilatwatja has become the first in Australia to adopt a new e-health system.

The system will place patient health records online so that health professionals are able to access information remotely.

It will be rolled out across the Northern Territory and the nation over the next 18 months.

The Minister for Indigenous Health, Warren Snowdon, says he has no doubt that patients’ private information will be secure.

“There will always be someone who tries to trick it, no question about that, we’ve got to be diligent … not only diligent but vigilant in ensuring we keep up to as strong as possible security standards that we implement,” he said.

Central Australian Health Centre Leading the Way on eHealth

The remote Central Australian Amplilatwatja Health Centre has become the first site in Australia to use national specifications to securely send and receive eHealth records between health facilities.

The Minister for Indigenous Health and Member for Lingiari, Warren Snowdon, was on hand for this national first, which puts the Northern Territory at the forefront in the effort to develop a national electronic health records system.

Mr Snowdon said across the entire country ensuring our medical professionals have the latest information on their patients is a positive step to improving hospital and health care.

“eHealth records are a fantastic innovation, securely providing current medical histories to a GP or health provider, and the fact it has happened first in the Northern Territory shows we are really embracing the digital future.

“The Northern Territory has a very transient population and working to ensure important information such as referrals, test results and medication information is able to follow people wherever they go is vital,” Mr Snowdon said.

The Amplilatwatja Health Centre, which is working with the Continuity of Care Project, is the first health centre to adopt national secure messaging specifications allowing it to send electronic health records, or eHealth records, to other clinics and hospitals in the Northern Territory and across state and territory borders.

Minister for Central Australia, Karl Hampton said today is a celebration of the completion of the Continuity of Care Project, which has delivered Australia’s first deployment of a full end to end secure messaging solution.  This is part of developing best practice that can be used in the national eHealth records system as it rolls out and evolves.

“It’s exciting that this small remote clinic is showing national leadership with this program.
“The national eHealth records system will start to roll out from July.  As it evolves patients’ health information will follow them between health centres and hospitals across the country, providing for better and more consistent care.”

The new software was integrated into existing clinical systems at the Health Centre by Communicare Systems Pty Ltd and Database Consultants Australia Pty Ltd.

Northern Territory clinics, health centres, hospitals and GPs have been using secure messaging since its first implementation in 2006, with 400 sites now operating with the technology.

Around 80,000 referrals, discharge summaries, specialist letters, pathology results and radiology reports are sent and received between NT health clinics, hospitals and GPs each week.

Over the next 18 months, the NT Department of Health will begin transitioning its other health centres and hospitals to adopt the same national specifications already being used at Ampilalatwatja.

The Continuity of Care Project was provided through $200,000 in Northern Territory Budget funds over two years as well as $300,000 of COAG funded human resources from the National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA) which is 50% funded by the Commonwealth Government.