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Hacking Health in Hamilton Ontario - Let's hear that pitch!

What compelled me to register for a weekend Health Hackathon? Anyway, I could soon be up to my ears in it. A pubmed search on Health Hack...

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Open Medicine Journal

The Open Medicine Journal is one of the wonders of our times. And so is a recent article on drug policy by some of the leading Public Health officials in the country. Ideology vs. Medicine vs. Morality.

Monday, March 26, 2012

American Journal of Bioethics - blog or journal?

http://www.bioethics.net/ If had an extra life, I would no doubt be spending more time reading the amazing news feeds from the journal of bioethics. There are so many interesting topics under discussion, and so many new ideas. I subscribe to this by email and there is never enough time in the day to catch up.

The Panic Virus

Books! I am reading the Panic Virus by Seth Mnookin. Might even see him at a conference next month where he is the key speaker at the Canadian Association of Research Ethics Board. The first 70 pages or so about vaccines and those in the public who advocate AGAiNST them, reminded me of another book I read recently by Michael Bliss on the smallpox epidemic in Montreal in the last century. The role the media plays with science stories is huge, but so is the role parents play who advocate for their kids. This book is not about ehealth or technology. It is mostly about Autism and how bad science created the impression that vaccinations were responsible for causing it.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies

Just joined the website < Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies >. Was happy to see they have a Cyborg Buddhist. Very interesting. Bioethics should be looking at transhumanism more, from many different perspectives and realms of experience. This site reminded me of the work of Dr. Nick Bostrom, and I just found out he is mentioned on the site, which in fact is how I remembered him. More digging around, I find out Bostrom founded the IEET! His group at Oxford university is looking at the future of humanity. I don't think they are that optimistic. I would highly recommend reading some of his papers, even if you don't have a scholarly bent. Here is his website: http://www.nickbostrom.com/

Monday, March 19, 2012

Knowing is better ads on this site

http://www.knowingisbetter.ca/ Since I added google ads on this site, I have been following what kind of ads pop up. Most of them have been good, maybe even relevant to what this blog is about. I found the Infoway ad to Knowing is Better is popping up quite a lot. By mistake I clicked the link to it off my site, which you are not supposed to do according to the "contract" with Google. I am going to label this a consumer health informatics, and start a new label called "infoway". Not sure "Knowing is Better" would be an appropriate label. Who knows what that might mean, right?

Online physician question/answer

http://www.avvo.com/ I was reading the Kevin Pho MD e-newsletter and heard about this site. Sounds like trusted health on the internet to me. I am not talking about the rate your lawyer or find a lawyer section of the site, which I find a little paradoxical in fact. The Avvo blog had an article about a webinar that discusses how physicians can using blogging to get more referrals. Could be an American physician thing.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Drummond report on Information Technology in Healthcare

Just had a chance to scan through the Drummond report. This is the state of the Ontario economic. It is almost 500 pages, so I don't know when I will ever read it all. This section on information technology in healthcare resonated with me. I agree with it. Not only is it a way to save money, but it is also the right approach to the appropriate use of the technology. They say that the largest civilian software project failire in history was the national health service architecture in the UK for health records. My own research discovered that the best results will come when the patient and physician are working close together, and the electronic medical record is only stored locally. It doesn't mean the data is locked in a silo. The record can be programmed or make accessible through XML, HL7 or other interoperable standards. Standards neeed to start locally though, not from a national architecture. http://www.fin.gov.on.ca/en/reformcommission/chapters/report.pdf
Information technology (IT) is not used enough by physicians and other health care professionals across the system in a way that allows different disciplines and services to integrate their activities. Extensive use of IT is key to pushing the health care system to operate in a co-ordinated fashion. History has shown that huge IT projects are unwieldy. Most gains will come from local and regional records, so electronic record-keeping should begin with FHTs and hospitals; these could then be connected and expanded from this base. It is imperative, of course, that everyone use compatible systems that can communicate with each other.

Thursday, March 15, 2012

Embedding Privacy into the Design of EHRs to Enable Multiple Functionalities

I like to follow the Information & Privacy Commissioner for Ontario, because of the insights into leading edge healthcare technology, of course in the context of privacy and security. The topic of this paper, co-written with the Infoway President is quite good. What struck me in the article was the reference to "Big Data". Is this going to become a common way of calling research using regression analysis and evidence-based medicine? "Big Data" goes far beyond just healthcare: http://www.ipc.on.ca/images/Resources/pbd-ehr-e.pdf
"As we move into an era of “Big Data,” PbD offers a holistic, proactive approach to privacy protection that can help to anticipate and address the “big harms” to privacy that are a foreseeable danger of Big Data. At the same time, PbD recognizes and aims to facilitate the benefits of harnessing Big Data for socially useful applications. In the context of designing and implementing EHR systems, PbD seeks to protect the privacy of individuals whose personal health information is contained in EHRs while enabling multiple goals – privacy and security, individual and societal benefits, confidentiality and data quality. In this way, PbD facilitates access to health information for secondary purposes while at the same time protecting the privacy and confidentiality of health information held in the EHR. This is accomplished by embedding privacy and security directly into EHR systems, through the routine de-identification of personal health information for secondary purposes, end-to-end security, and other mechanisms discussed elsewhere in this paper. PbD offers a means of elevating privacy in the Big Data world to an effective countervailing force that we are calling “Big Privacy” – a method of ensuring that privacy is embedded as a first consideration in all Big Data transactions. Consistent with PbD, the Pan-Canadian Health Information Privacy Group proactively considered the privacy implications of secondary use in its paper outlining general principles for information governance in the EHR environment."
http://www.ipc.on.ca/english/Home-Page/

Monday, March 12, 2012

The Direct Project

Part of the talk I will give at the Advances in Health Informatics Conference at York University next month will refer to the work of the Direct Project. I heard about this from reading John Halamka's Geekdoctor blog post. I thought it was a very exciting prospect for pushing health information to the personal health record. Before I give my talk, I have to become more reacquainted with it, but it looks like most news on it is coming form a twitter stream. My talk will look at the system architecture of "tethered" personal health records, and so, here is an architectural picture of Direct Project. It is a proposed Health URL - once again - the idea seems to be to be a major advance to securely transport health information. I have as yet seen any sign of pilot projects underway in Canada, but I would be most interested in seeing one started.

Sunday, March 11, 2012

HL7 and NCI collaborate on clinical trial link to EHR

The HL7 group is trying to do UML models for almost anything that has health related data. This new initiative is a hat tip to Big Data and Public Health. The patient, the little guy in the whole operation, might even benefit. Hopefully, there will no longer be a disconnect between the evidence collected through participation in clinical trials, and electronic medical records. That goes as well for Personal Health Records. Both record systems are potentially rich sources of evidence based medical data, if only there were more efficient ways to capture it, without jeopardizing the autonomy and consent of patients. http://www.fiercehealthit.com/story/hl7-and-nci-collaborate-clinical-trial-link-ehrs/2012-02-28

Monday, March 5, 2012

Eiger: Wall of Death

This is one of the most unbelievable and amazing documentaries I have ever found on youtube - a BBC documentary. I was reading Heinrich Harrer's "Seven Years In Tibet" where I learned his team was the first to climb this notoriously dangerous and deadly Swiss mountain from the impossible north face. I strongly recommend following it to the end in order to learn about the teams and individuals who found their way to the top. Very inspirational.

Saturday, March 3, 2012

LIfe Extension for All: Global Future Congress Announces "Avatar"

I think life extension research is a major component of ehealth. I might even venture to say it is the purpose of ehealth, but I know that sounds like idle speculation. The Global Future Congress reminds me about something I read in one of the books by Ray Kuzweil, that if people really wanted to achieve an objective they could organize something like the historic "Manhattan Project" and make a super human effort. Read more: http://www.digitaljournal.com/pr/595157#ixzz1o3UsaZbE