Mater Hospital CIO, Malcolm Thatcher has called on the Federal Government to show more leadership over e-Health on the back of comments by federal health minister Nicola Roxon touting new legislation. The Healthcare Identifiers Bill 2010 proposes that unique healthcare identifiers be available on a secure system, operated by Medicare. The system, which the government wants up and running within ten years, will be designed to hold patient records in one national database that can be accessed by different health professionals. “The first step in creating an e-health system will come into effect in the middle of the year when unique healthcare identifiers are assigned to all health consumers as well as to health professionals and the organisations that provide health care in Australia,” the minister said in a statement. Roxon is undergoing a nation-wide consultation process to discuss the National Health and Hospitals Reform Commission’s (NHHRC) proposed reforms with e-health stakeholders. However Thatcher, a member of the NEHTA Stakeholder Reference Forum and supporter of unique identifiers, is apprehensive about the extent to which the government has heeded concerns surrounding the misuse of a patient’s data. “Unique identifiers are a fundamental building block for the sharing of information,” he said. “A national system for patient and provider identifiers will not only assist healthcare organisations to improve the quality of their own data, but will also help facilitate the sharing of this data with other organisations. “I still have concerns however about the extent to which the Government and NEHTA have thought through the need for providing a user-held token for the storage of the individual (patient) health identifier to avoid incorrect retrieval of patient identifiers based on demographic data and the human error.” He added the government needs to recognise and implement enablers for e-health, including the management of health identifiers, secure messaging, common terminologies, patient privacy and industry incentives and recognise that e-health is a complex challenge. “I am not confident, yet still have hope that the Federal Government understands the commitment necessary to successfully implement e-health in this country – a commitment of time, large amounts of money and resources that go well beyond a single term of government,” he said. “In general, I endorse the current approach towards an e-health platform from National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA), although my view is that this work is still in its formative stage and requires ongoing engagement with stakeholders, particularly the private sector, to give it any chance of success.” Thatcher’s comments come on the back of an announcement by federal health minister Nicola Roxon, which touted new e-health legislation to improve the delivery of healthcare soon to be introduced into parliament. The government has encouraged interested people to contribute to the national health system debate on its website. Additional reporting by AAP Related content brandpost The steep cost of a poor data management strategy Without a data management strategy, organizations stall digital progress, often putting their business trajectory at risk. Here’s how to move forward. By Jay Limbasiya, Global AI, Analytics, & Data Management Business Development, Unstructured Data Solutions, Dell Technologies Jun 09, 2023 6 mins Data Management feature How Capital One delivers data governance at scale With hundreds of petabytes of data in operation, the bank has adopted a hybrid model and a ‘sloped governance’ framework to ensure its lines of business get the data they need in real-time. By Thor Olavsrud Jun 09, 2023 6 mins Data Governance Data Management feature Assessing the business risk of AI bias The lengths to which AI can be biased are still being understood. The potential damage is, therefore, a big priority as companies increasingly use various AI tools for decision-making. By Karin Lindstrom Jun 09, 2023 4 mins CIO Artificial Intelligence IT Leadership brandpost Rebalancing through Recalibration: CIOs Operationalizing Pandemic-era Innovation By Kamal Nath, CEO, Sify Technologies Jun 08, 2023 6 mins CIO Digital Transformation Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe