What’s happening in health?
 
 
 

What's happening in health?

As one of the biggest industries on the planet, there’s always something happening in healthcare. Here’s what has captured our attention recently.

Industry news

Private hospitals are facing tough times as costs of doing business keep rising while a major source of their revenue – private health insurers (PHI) – are seen to be holding tight to profits. The ill-will between PHI and private hospitals is best demonstrated by the battle between the St Vincent’s group and NIB, which is at breaking point.

Suggestions of a crisis in the private hospital sector are underlined by key players co-operating with a Federal Government review. Health Services Daily reports that, “79 facilities — including day surgeries, endoscopy centres, private hospitals, wound care centres, cosmetic surgery centres, dental centres, respiratory and sleep disorder clinics, dialysis clinics and mental health centres — have either closed or revoked their declaration as a private hospital since 2019”.

Internationally, post-pandemic use of telehealth has fallen and major retail chains who leapt into healthcare are back-pedalling. American companies Walmart and Walgreens winding back their health businesses (see What retail titans might do next on health care (axios.com)), makes us wonder how Healthylifeis going for Woolworths, locally.

The pressure to be profitable means most hospitals are searching for ways to reduce the costs of delivering care. Managing patients in their own beds may be cheaper than hospital beds and so the cash-strapped UK National Health Service has committed to scaling up virtual care.

If the NHS needs a success story to use as inspiration, the ever-innovative Cleveland Clinic is hailing its acute hospital care in the home program a success for patients and staff, while acknowledging further improvements are possible. For details, see Lessons from Cleveland Clinic’s 1st year of ‘hospital at home’ (beckershospitalreview.com).

Melbourne’s Austin Hospital has also committed to virtual wards as business as usual, particularly for cardiac and haematology patients.

And the Federal Government is funding virtual careto chip away at a barriers to accessing mental health inpatient care, (partly caused by a shortage of accessible psychiatrists).

Keeping it real on artificial intelligence

Investors seeking share-market alchemy remain bullish on Artificial Intelligence while potential end users want ethical, regulatory and security assurances to precede introduction of these potentially very useful new tools. The American Medical Association offers sensible tips on technology adoption here: In the push for AI in health care, avoid EHR rollout mistakes | American Medical Association (ama-assn.org)

As to the smorgasbord of AI news, here is an aperitif:

 
We're all healthcare consumers

We also keep a close watch on consumer health news, in the interest of all of us avoiding hospitalisation. Here are some insights aimed at keeping our engines running:

Evidence is mounting that good gut health boosts mental health and ability to handle stress. Stress: Could a healthy gut microbiome make you more resilient? (medicalnewstoday.com)

Multivitamins, however, might only contribute to expensive and colourful urine. Another Study Finds No Life-Extending Benefit From Multivitamins (healthday.com)

In other product news, the old advice (or excellent marketing) that taking aspirin reduces risk of heart attack appears to have been debunked – unless you have previously had a stroke or heart attack. American Adults Warned Over Aspirin Use Despite Risks – Newsweek

Stanford University research, published in the journal Nature Medicine, has identified six different types of depression, which has implications for better treatment and management of mental ill-health. 6 types of depression identified in Stanford study | CNN

And there are clear reasons to avoid COVID19 because the long form of the illness is particularly nasty. Report: More than 200 symptoms tied to long COVID | CIDRAP (umn.edu)

The last word

Police, prisons and hospital emergency departments are often the professionals most likely to be dealing with people experiencing acute mental ill health. Here’s a good news story of how technology and faster access to treatment can successfully divert people from EDs and custody – https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/outfitting-police-telehealth-ipads-mental-health-program-saves-government-62m?

MediRecords partners with Clinivid to provide secure communications between multidisciplinary care teams.

MediRecords partners with Clinivid to provide secure communications between multidisciplinary care teams.

Matthew Galetto MediRecords banner

Matthew Galetto

MediRecords, the market leading cloud based clinical & practice management solution, and Clinivid a cloud-based clinical communication platform, have joined forces to provide a secure alternative for multidisciplinary care teams to communicate, share advice and files for improved holistic patient care.
Matthew Galetto, CEO of MediRecords, says: “Our partnership with Clinivid allows health providers using MediRecords to easily share clinical information, including images, in a mobile environment and to include external members of a care team through easy and direct messaging. It supports our goal to give our users access to the best-in-market solutions, with the flexibility to choose the right tools to support their workflow. Most importantly, clinical information flows seamlessly back into MediRecords to complete the patient longitudinal record and clinical workflow. ”
Dr Katja Beitat, CEO of Clinivid, adds ”This partnership highlights the power of cloud-based clinical solutions that make multidisciplinary care instant and easy. Patient information is secure at all times. With automatic creation of a medical record, everyone saves a lot of time.”
MediRecords is expecting its users with high levels of mobility and multidisciplinary care to take up the joint solution. Clinivid secure messaging is applicable for care teams in hospitals, chronic disease management, mental health care and for virtual patient handovers.

About MediRecords

MediRecords is Australia’s leading cloud-based clinical and practice management solution used by Specialists, GP’s and Allied Health Professionals across Australia. MediRecords is transforming the delivery of healthcare servicing in Australia. Connecting health professionals and patients with a suite of integrated products, MediRecords improves patient care while reducing associated costs of outdated technology. Developed from the ground up to harness the power of the cloud, MediRecords is available as a SaaS solution for SMB’s or as a dedicated platform service for larger corporates and institutions.

About Clinivid

Clinivid is an Australian based company enabling safe and mobile clinical information sharing across the whole health care sector. Fitting seamlessly into existing workflows in practices and hospitals, we improve the way clinicians connect, communicate and collaborate to increase efficiency, minimise risks and help provide better patient care. Clinivid offers secure mobile messaging and clinical meetings.

To learn more or get involved email sales@medirecords.com or call 1300 103 903.

Media Contacts:

Michael Alldrick
Matthew Galetto MediRecords banner

Matthew Galetto

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