Tag Archives: Interesting Developments

Health IT News Wheel of Misfortune

Health-IT news articles usually follow a perennial pattern of loud hype followed by quiet failure. If what was at stake were not so important, the never ending raft of optimistic and un-critical press releases and articles about ‘progress’, ‘advances’ and ‘announced plans to’ would be a cause for amusement, guffaws and occasional cavorting at the lemming-like behavior of so many organizations and journalists touting the next big thing. To illustrate, here’s a list of recent news items for your reading pleasure. For further amusement, please use the following 3 ambulance scoring system for each of the projects described: 0 ambulances (succeed), 1 ambulances (fail), 2 ambulances (multi-million dollar fail) and 3 ambulances (multi-million dollar fail with firing) for their likelihood of success or failure. Let the fun begin!

 

  1. Insurers Announce Interoperable PHR Model
  2. My(Medical)Space: Social Networks, Blogs Turn To Health Care
  3. Proposed Legislation Would Implement Quality Reporting System for Physicians
  4. Major U.S. Employers Join to Provide Lifelong Personal Health Records for Employees
  5. Vendor to Offer Web-based EHRs to Docs in Exchange for Data
  6. RHIOs Will Lead Next Phase of NHIN program
  7. Vermont to Announce Statewide
    RHIO
  8. HHS Advances Nationwide Health Information Network Initiative
  9. VA Moves IT Development, Management Under CIO

Eben Moglen’s Plone Conference Address

This is a must listen too video keynote address to the 2006 Seattle Plone Conference by the Free Software Foundation’s Eben Moglen: ‘…Software can prevent software from being owned. Software itself can lift the software tax. That’s where we are at this moment. On that cusp. In this neighborhood, at this moment, the richest and most deeply funded monopoly in the history of the world is beginning to fail…the very engineering limits of trying to make software that you own work as well as software that the community produces are becoming apparent…’

Free Software Magazine Interviews Fred Trotter

Free software magazine has an in-depth interview with Fred Trotter about the Medsphere saga, including comments by Richard Stallman: ‘…Medsphere is treated with the kind of respect that you would expect the top FOSS medical software company to receive. In reality, the top medical FOSS company is probably Uversa with their ClearHealth project (Note: Uversa is a friendly competitor of mine). Medsphere does not even warrant the title of �top VistA company�. Blue Cliff is a good example of a company that has a good reputation within the community, but gets far less attention than Medsphere. There are many other FOSS medical companies out there all of whom have contributed more than Medsphere. Yet Medsphere dominates the placement in the mainstream press, probably because they have received considerable funding…’

PCMag: Is Microsoft Going to Start a Linux War?

Columnist John C. Dvorak on PC Magazine writes: ‘In a surprise announcement, Microsoft’s Steve Ballmer seems to be doing a deal with Novell and the SUSE Linux folks. Apparently, the goal is to make Linux interoperable with Windows and perhaps move some apps onto the Linux platform. What could be brewing? Does it make any sense that Microsoft is going to embrace Linux in a big way? After all, Ballmer used to demean it…’

eChannel: Open Source Spreading Fast

eChannel line reports: ‘According to a newly released IDC study, open source software has spread far beyond Linux and is gaining enormous momentum. The study, which analyzed IDC surveys from over 5,000 developers in 116 countries, finds that developers worldwide are increasing their use of open source. The study declares that open source software represents the most significant all-encompassing and long-term trend that the software industry has seen since the early 1980s. IDC believes that open source will eventually play a role in the lifecycle of every major software category, and will fundamentally change the value proposition of packaged software for customers…’

LinuxWorld Healthcare Day Presentations

There is a wiki page of all the presentations at the recent Linux World Healthcare Day presentations: ‘On August 15th, 2006 OSDL hosted the first ever Healthcare Day at LinuxWorld Expo. Below is a recap of the event as well as links to the presentations from Medsphere CEO Dr. Kennth Kizer, Joe Alexander – Bull’s Director of Strategy and Planning as well as panel discussions moderated by Bernard Golden and Fred Trotter…’

Wash. Times: Bill Frist Weighs in on EMR’s, VistA

Senate majority leader Bill Frist in the Washington Times has weighed in on the subject of electronic medical records in general and VistA in particular: ‘…The Veterans Affairs Department hospital system — once widely loathed — has almost entirely turned itself around, thanks largely to a well designed computer system called Vista. When the New England Journal of Medicine used 11 measures to compare VA patients with Medicare patients treated on a fee-for-service basis, the VA’s patients were in better health and received more appropriate treatment, though Medicare-paid care, on average, actually costs more than services from VA hospitals…For more than 20 years, the private sector has tried to set standards to make these records interchangeable, interoperable and fully privacy protected. Efforts have never succeeded…’