Where the Business and IT Conversation Starts
IDC Circle Blogs

Feb12
20

Australian Healthcare: Integration of Business and Technology

Posted by: Sash Mukherjee in Health Bytes @ 3:05 PM

Tags: , ,

Author
Sash Mukherjee
Australian ehealth implementation is progressing at a dynamic rate, towards the implementation of the personally controlled electronic health records (PCEHR) (PCEHR) scheduled to go live in June 2012. The Australian government has identified and confirmed its commitment to ehealth as a key part of its strategy to transform the delivery of healthcare in Australia. 

The business needs of the Australian healthcare system are: 
Chronic disease management: Investments to the tune of A$872 million has been made for preventive health programs targeted at schools, workplaces, and local communities, and the National Preventive Health Agency has been created. Super GP Clinics also bring together GPs, nurses, specialists, and allied health professionals to provide integrated care for chronic diseases at a single point of care.
Healthcare funds maximization: To ensure future sustainability, the government has been tapping private insurance funds to supplement the expenditure on healthcare by the public system. Recent measures by the Federal Government to take majority funding responsibility of the public hospitals, GP clinics, and primary healthcare, as well as the introduction of activity-based funding at the local hospital network level, are both positive steps towards the maximisation of healthcare funds. 
National healthcare standards: The health infrastructure and availability of medical personnel in the rural and underserved regions is still vastly different from the urban counterparts. There have been initiatives to generate effective national standards, and transparent reporting system.   

These business trends require a technological strategy that will help Australia achieve better chronic disease management by focusing on the individual, improve financial outcomes by avoiding overlap of resources, and create a universal healthcare system across the country that can be evaluated and improved on constantly.  Health record digitization is the foundation on which these can be based. The Australian Government has identified and confirmed its commitment to ehealth as a key part of its strategy to transform the delivery of healthcare in Australia.

The Australian health industry and government agencies involved in its delivery, now need to focus on ensuring that the very significant investments that have been made so far to build the foundation, can start to deliver greater efficiencies, as well as productivity improvements that will ultimately reduce the cost of healthcare delivery in Australia. 

In the wake of citizen-centric focus, there is a need for governments to justify to its citizens the investments they make in all areas, including healthcare. There has been expressed scepticism about the benefits of the ehealth implementations from several angles in Australia. To be able to answer these sceptics, the government needs to use analytics to evaluate and justify the costs that they are incurring, and dynamically update its compliance regulations regarding security, privacy and access, as the PCEHR is implemented to its full potential.

Health Insights Country Report for Australia ( http://www.idc-hi.com/getdoc.jsp?containerId=AP9296301U ) speaks about the Australian healthcare in greater details.

Currently rated 2.5 by 208 people

  • Currently 2.47596/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Permalink | Trackback | RSS comment feedComments (0) | RSS comment feedComments RSS | 


Feb12
15

Security complications due to smartphones

Posted by: Matt Healey in Software @ Your Service @ 3:47 PM

Tags:

Author
Matt Healey

As I was riding the 75 bus into work this morning as I was checking my email and reading the twitter feeds from some of the people I follow. This is a common occurrence as many of my fellow travelers do the same thing. However this morning, I saw a Tweet from @cchristiansen. He is the WW VP is Security Products for IDC. I have a great amount of respect for him as he is tremendously knowledgeable when it comes to the world of IT security.  This morning he was linking to this article in the NYT about the insecurity of smartphones.  The article was basically about how the information on your smartphone may not be as secure as you think it is. In this article the author discusses how some applications will copy and email the contact information you have on your smartphone. For most of us this would be of little concern. Unless you are like me and have a significant number of client contacts on your smart phone. While I am sure that this is not the only type of threat vector that apps and hackers can exploit in smart phones it is not one that I would have immediately thought of.

This brings me to one of the IDC top 10 AP security predictions. Prediction #1: Smartphones will further complicate IT security. I understand that this may seem obvious to many, but I think that the full realization of just how many additional threat vectors will be generated by smartphones is not yet understood. Further I think that most IT organizations are focused on the immediate threats associated with employees using or losing smartphones. However, I was recently reminded in an IDC webcast (available soon) that this is only one of the effects of increased smartphone usage. The other is the ability of hackers to use the increased power of these devices in distributed attacks.

Over the coming year I suspect that the AP region, and the rest of the world for that matter, will see smartphones increasingly used in security breaches.

Currently rated 2.2 by 78 people

  • Currently 2.179487/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Permalink | Trackback | RSS comment feedComments (0) | RSS comment feedComments RSS | 

Recent Comments

Comment RSS

Calendar

<<  May 2013  >>
MoTuWeThFrSaSu
293012345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
272829303112
3456789