Timeline pushed back for Shared Digital Health Record system and more briefs
The shared digital health file project faces a delay
Te Whatu Ora Health New Zealand announced a delay in launching the Shared digital health recording system.
Initially planned for a completion of June, the first phase of implementation of the project will now take until December to finish.
The new deadline is “more realistic,” the organization said in a statement, such as the digital services of Health NZ have always No more cut work. These include confirming confidentiality and security requirements, which also consist in advising patients on data collection; Work with primary care providers who opt for collecting and sharing data in only reading data from their practice management systems; Integrate more suppliers and DSE systems shared with SDHR APIs; And set up the SDHR APIs at the NZ Health Digital Services Center.
This revised chronology, however, will not affect deployment 24/7 digital health service, Te Whatu Ora. The new Télésanté service is expected to be deployed next month, July.
GP booking capacity to come on NZ’s Healthline
New Zealand’s free health advice service, Healthline, will soon be able to help appellants make an appointment with a general practitioner.
Whakarongurau Aotearoa, which operates the 24/7 service, collaborated with Valentia Technologies to develop a cloud-based platform that connects Healthline to various health care providers.
This allows his nurses and paramedical paramedics to make appointments for the appellants, who were invited to see a general practitioner. They will also have real -time access to the availability of general practitioners across the country.
It is said that a third of the appellants of health are referred to a general practitioner or another health service. “Initially, it will be a remote manary and shortly after, appointments in person,” said Whakarongorau.
The GP booking capacity will be introduced next month, July.
DHCRC to control smart on the Fir application for the care for the elderly
The Cooperative Digital Health Health Research Center funded by the Australian government will be piloting a care application for the elderly who adopts the intelligent framework on interoperability and data exchange.
He seeks suppliers and care for the elderly or primary care providers to join the pilot, which aims to demonstrate the feasibility of such a digital solution to “normalize the functional evaluation of older Australians and generate quality indicators based on evidence”.
Sydney project development of the multilingual chatbot for ed triage
A new project led by the doctor west of Sydney will develop a multilingual chatbot fueled by AI for the sorting of emergency services.
The project funded by the National Health and Medical Research Council aims to help ED staff, in particular in multiculturally diverse communities, to overcome linguistic obstacles to carry out more precise on -site sorting assessments. It is noted that more than half of the population in the southwest of Sydney, it should be noted that different languages other than English.
“The idea is that this chatbot will listen to the inscription point of registration on an ED computer and will be able to interpret the description of a patient of his symptoms in real time, allowing the sorting personnel to assess faster and precisely the gravity of the state of a patient,” explained the project of project manager, Dr Padmanesan Narasimhan, an emergency doctor and an academic researcher with a New South University University Walles.