Rabu, 07 Desember 2016

Not A Great Deal Seems To Have Happened In the Last Few Years. Really Pretty Hopeless.

For some reason Google found this for me today � and note the article date.

Dr Mukesh Haikerwal Resigns from NEHTA

By Petrina Smith
Friday, 16 August, 2013
Dr Mukesh Haikerwal has resigned from the National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA).
Dr Haikerwal tendered his resignation from NEHTA on Tuesday 13, August, effective Thursday 22 August 2013. He had been National Clinical Lead since 2007.
�..
 �NEHTA�s focus has moved from designing eHealth systems to them now being tweaked to encompass utility, usability, usefulness and meaningful use in the products to be rolled out into the healthcare sector. There have been discussions with NEHTA and the Department of Health and Ageing about the best way for this to occur.
�I am assured that the rigour provided to the nationwide consultation leading to the PCEHR Concept of Operations with continued engagement with healthcare providers, peak bodies, consumers, vendors and other key stakeholders which is critical, will continue.
�..
 �I am enormously proud of what my teams at NEHTA and the Clinical Leads group and Clinical Unit have achieved. �These professionals were instrumental in making eHealth a topic of conversation in the community, in bringing together a significant agreement and vision for the use of technology in the Health sector. �They have made Clinical safety a part of the �eHealth build�.
�We, as a community, have a useful, usable vehicle which will make healthcare safer and more effective. �I have confidence that the vision I have long believed in is achievable and that with ongoing dialogue between clinicians, the broader community, NEHTA and the governments of Australia this vision will become a reality.�
The full article is here:
It seems that Dr Haikerwal, and the rest of us, are still waiting for a �useful, useable vehicle� .
If it hasn�t happened after 3.5 years I wonder when and if it ever will?
David.

*Common Room @ Montreal Link BLK 593A!AC & wifi!

4-room unit
Staying with vitnamese couple & daughter
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Well-maintained room
aircon
Wifi available
Light Cooking allowed
Fully furnished
Rent is $600 for 1 pax & $800 for 2 including utilites bill
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Visiting the Sanada Clan

My daughter and I have been enthusiastic and faithful viewers of this year�s NHK Taiga drama, �Sanada Maru.� We looked forward to visiting the Numata Castle ruins in Gunma Prefecture and, most of all, Ueda Castle in Nagano.

Numata Castle Ruins, Japan.


At the Numata Castle ruins we had to imagine how the castle was fiercely contested and fought over. We remembered seeing Toyotomi Hideyoshi, Sanada Masayuki, Hojo Ujimasa, and Tokugawa Ieyasu on the television drama. Otherwise there is not much to see, except for some reason there is a row of cages housing different birds. I felt sorry for all of them. The birds clearly wanted to escape their harsh cement prison cells. There was nothing we could do except to spend a few minutes talking to the lonely cockatiel.

Nobuyuki Komatsu, Numata.

The city of Numata did have a special presentation of �Sanada Maru,� and in most areas of the building visitors were permitted to take pictures.

Hence, I had my photo taken with a cardboard replica of Sanada Masayuki, my favorite.

Sanada Masayuki.


At Ueda Castle the celebration of all things Sanada was elaborate. There was a user-interactive �Sanada Maru� presentation sponsored by the NHK housed in a building adorned with the Sanada crest. This must have been the official site of the drama - because after we exited the display hall we stepped directly into a shop full of Sanada-related merchandise, ha.

Sanada Yukimura re-enactor.


We had our picture taken with a Sanada Yukimura re-enactor, just as we had done about five years ago on a previous visit. Then, we were just about the only visitors that day. It was a huge contrast compared to the crowds of people milling around the castle grounds next to us.

Ema, Ueda Castle


We walked through section of Ueda Castle and I thought about the Sanada defeating the Tokugawa twice with the much smaller Sanada army. It made me laugh to think that Ieyasu must have been so angry and humiliated. We also enjoyed eating festival food - dango, yakitori, and soft ice cream. Amanda purchased an ema and hung it with the others after carefully rendering a drawing of Genjiro and herself on the smooth wood surface.

Ice cream break, Ueda Castle.


Spending a few hours at Ueda Castle was a lot of fun for us and totally worth it. If you are interesting visiting, the exhibits will be up until March 31, 2017.

Sanada Yukimura.

Selasa, 06 Desember 2016

*MasterRoom @ Tampines St 11 BLK 104!5 min to MRT!

4-room unit
Staying with local chinese couple only
Friendly landlord
Well-maintained room
aircon($100/mth)
Wifi available
Light Cooking allowed
Fully furnished
Rent is $750 for 1 pax & $830 for 2 including utilites bill
Available now
Any tenants welcomed
Call/SMS 96179459 for viewing
Visit jeffreyrental.blogspot.sg for more rooms available

Accessing menus after HISCOD in DOP Finacle








As all other menus are not blocked during HISCOD , users are creating transactions by using other menus  while running  HISCOD or after running HISCOD which are blocking HSCOD( Date change)

Almost  everyday, We receive  requests for accessing menus  ( CTM/HTM/CXFER/HXFER) after completion of  HISCOD to post  and verify the transactions

As there is no alternative till blocking all transaction menus to arrest these irregularities, the menus CTM, HTM, CXFER, HXFER are made available even after completing HISCOD 



Once patch meant for blocking all menus after completion of  HISCOD is deployed,  menu access  validation will be placed  again

It Seems Major Government Health IT Projects Can Do Little But Disappoint.

This time we have a Canadian story.
There are many reports on this issue:
First we have:

After $8B spent, e-health records initiative still not complete

Auditor General annual report critical of program to switch to electronic health records
December 1, 2016 by: Sudbury.com Staff
Ontario�s health-care sector spent more than $8 billion between 2002/03 and 2015/16 on various electronic health records projects and related initiatives, but significant components are still not operational, Ontario Auditor General Bonnie Lysyk said in her 2016 Annual Report.
The government had committed in 2008 to providing an electronic health records for every Ontarian by 2015.
�The initiative has certainly advanced since our last audit in 2009,� Lysyk said Wednesday after tabling her report in the Legislature. �However, it is still not possible to say if it is on budget because the government never set an overall budget for it. In effect, we cannot say if $8 billion is a reasonable figure.�
Although an overall strategy or budget is lacking, the province did create a formal $1.06-billion budget in 2010 (which also covered prior periods) for completion of some electronic health records projects under the responsibility of eHealth Ontario. This budget excluded eHealth Ontario�s annual corporate administration expenses.
An electronic health record is a digital lifetime record of an individual�s health and health-care history, updated in real-time and securely available to authorized health-care professionals. 
More here:
There is also coverage here:

$8 billion and 14 years later, eHealth has yet to finish the job

By Shawn Jeffords, Political Bureau Chief
First posted: Wednesday, November 30, 2016 01:11 PM EST | Updated: Wednesday, November 30, 2016 01:17 PM EST
More than $8 billion and 14 years later and Ontario still doesn�t have a working electronic health records system.
That according to Ontario�s Auditor General who tabled her annual report Wednesday. In it, she notes that �significant components� of the system are still not working in 2016 after a government pledge seven years ago to have electronic health records for every Ontarian by 2015.
�The initiative has certainly advanced since our last audit in 2009,� Lysyk said in a news release. �However, it is still not possible to say if it is on budget because the government never set an overall budget for it. In effect, we cannot say if the $8 billion is a reasonable figure.�
More here:
Last we have broader coverage here:

Ontario auditor general exposes litany of government snafus in annual report

Examples include cracked highways, overspending on eHealth records, shoddy Metrolinx oversight of contractors, and a climate change plan that will do more in California than Ontario.
By
Wed., Nov. 30, 2016
Crumbling highways, shoddy transit contractors, $8 billion spent on still-incomplete eHealth electronic medical records, and a climate change plan that will do more in California than Ontario.
Those are some of a litany of government snafus exposed by auditor general Bonnie Lysyk in her annual two-volume, 1,063-page report to the legislature on Wednesday.
The independent watchdog said a common theme throughout her 13 value-for-money audits was government contractors and suppliers screwing up yet still being rewarded with additional business.
�They probably receive more chances than you and I would give them if they were renovating our house,� said Lysyk.
Her audit of eHealth Ontario found the controversial agency�s work remained unfinished some 14 years after the computerized health records program was formally launched.
�The initiative has certainly advanced since our last audit in 2009. However it is still not possible to say if it is on budget because the government never set an overall budget,� she said.
�In effect, we cannot say if $8 billion is a reasonable figure.�
That amount includes $3 billion spent by eHealth, $1 billion by the Ministry of Health and agencies like Cancer Care Ontario, and $4 billion by hospitals, community care access centres and other clinics across the province.
As first disclosed by the Star on Oct. 13, the government was so worried about Lysyk�s audit that it scrambled former TD Bank CEO Ed Clark, Premier Kathleen Wynne�s business guru, to recommend improvements.
In a 48-page report last week, Clark said while eHealth provides? $900 million in annual health-care benefits to Ontarians, its mandate should be sharpened so it has �an explicit focus on technology service delivery and to ensure the agency is held to account for delivery� of those services.
The agency has been dogged by problems, including an expense account scandal when private consultants earning $3,000 a day billed taxpayers for $3.99 Choco Bite cookies and $1.65 Tim Hortons tea.
Lysyk found the seven main eHealth projects that former premier Dalton McGuinty�s government deemed priorities in 2010 were only about 80 per cent done � despite a 2015 deadline for completion. Those are now expected to be finished by March.
Health Minister Eric Hoskins said he will soon unveil �the next steps of our digital health strategy that will continue modernizing our system, further improving patient access, connectivity and experience.�
Lots more here:
Here is the link to the relevant section of the report:
Reading the detailed report (which I have to say makes riveting reading) what struck me is that we all really need this Ontario Auditor General to spend three months or so to audit our national e-Health Program.
I think her views would be very useful!
David.

*Common Room @ Pasir Ris St 21 BLK 208!AC & wifi!

executive unit
Staying with indian 6 pax
Friendly landlord
Well-maintained room
aircon
Wifi available
Light Cooking allowed
Fully furnished
Rent is $600 for 1 pax & $700 for 2 including utilites bill
Available now
Any tenants welcomed
Call/SMS 96179459 for viewing
Visit jeffreyrental.blogspot.sg for more rooms available