Posts tagged as:

health

News

NT AIDS and Hepatitis Council worried there may be HIV outbreak in remote communities. However no signs from testing http://bit.ly/fYBFYS

A national suicide prevention strategy for Indigenous Australians. An overview by Croakey http://bit.ly/fjCXGI

Major mental health services at risk in South Australia and a lack of action in Aboriginal mental health http://bit.ly/dSZmgQ

Average life expectancy of Aboriginal men in Wilcannia is 37.5 years Extraordinary view of Wilcannia http://bit.ly/eliFXH

Remote regions and Closing the Gap disappearing off the radar http://bit.ly/gjeJrK

The Indigenous News Updates are sourced from news and other articles from around the country that I have posted on Twitter.



The categories I use for Indigenous News Updates can be found here.

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

If you like this post and what else you see on the blog please subscribe by RSS feed (the orange button) or by email. Visit my subscription page.

{ 0 comments }

News

Researchers report dementia is an ‘epidemic’ in some Indigenous communities. More aged care facilities required http://bit.ly/h2BOQ0

NT Health Department warned Church of Scientology that drug detoxification therapy promoted to Aboriginals could kill http://bit.ly/gcSxWk

NPY Women’s Council did not know about SA plan for food security in SA. Seems they are losing political connections http://bit.ly/gWBnEN

Uniting Care Wesley criticises A food security program for APY lands, $800k a pittance really and not sustainable http://bit.ly/ewD468

In SA bush tucker used to help control diabetes http://bit.ly/gZO2mM new program old news. see my post from 2008 http://bit.ly/fd412L

Pre-existing diabetes was 3 to 4 times as common in pregnant Indigenous women as for non-Indigenous mothers says AIHW http://bit.ly/fkF7fU

Rural Health Journal: playing didgeridoo improves asthma. social skills improved in girls. http://bit.ly/fE6WWf Didg is men only instrument

Australian cancer rates rise by 27% in 15yrs, but cancer deaths decrease. Indigenous have higher death rates http://bit.ly/fxmJ3a

Research shows indigenous people in mid to late 20s suffering heart attacks up to 30x general population http://bit.ly/gjuUb2

SA government food plan for APY lands should be scrapped say Greens. Past attempts to grow food on lands have failed http://bit.ly/fQkN4P

The Indigenous News Updates are sourced from news and other articles from around the country that I have posted on Twitter.



The categories I use for Indigenous News Updates can be found here.

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

If you like this post and what else you see on the blog please subscribe by RSS feed (the orange button) or by email. Visit my subscription page.

{ 2 comments }

News

A preventative health scheme for Indigenous Australians has failed and needs to be reviewed http://bit.ly/bE2Ior

Anna Bligh early December announced a $7.5 million Queensland Government diabetes action http://bit.ly/i3SAN1

An article on Narooma’s Katungul Aboriginal Health Service using Close The Gap initiatives to increase medication use http://bit.ly/eSIKwp

Fast-food philanthropy ‘eradicating one disease at a time’ – eliminate scabies http://bit.ly/dXQ4Ir need to improve overcrowding first

$800,000 of state funding to help ease the problem of poor foods in shops on APY lands http://bit.ly/hCYMKx A miserly amount

A study of acute lower respiratory tract infections found nearly six times the incidence in Indigenous kids 93/100,000 http://bit.ly/gIzVIg

Fifty per cent of indigenous people smoke compared with less than 20 per cent of the wider community. http://bit.ly/fdwltz

A new Tackling Smoking Workforce has been created to put hundreds of health workers in areas where they are most needed http://bit.ly/h00XK3

Indigenous under 65yrs much heavier users of aged care facilities than other Australians of same age http://bit.ly/f9bxRy

Federal government won’t force regional petrol operators to sell Opal unsniffable fuel. http://bit.ly/eGvdsl

The Indigenous News Updates are sourced from news and other articles from around the country that I have posted on Twitter.



The categories I use for Indigenous News Updates can be found here.

Image source: OpenClipArt.org, public domain.

If you like this post and what else you see on the blog please subscribe by RSS feed (the orange button) or by email. Visit my subscription page.

{ 1 comment }

Meeting 1. E-Health Conference, Revolutionising Australia’s Health Care

An invitation only two day seminar on e-Health was held in Melbourne on November 30 and December 1st. Apparently a “draft concept” of the shared e-health record concept was shown. It seems like there is $55 million splashing about for projects based on the personally controlled e-health record (more about money later on).

The Minister for Health and Ageing, Nicola Roxon gave the opening address. Here is part of what she had to say.

Part of our job in embracing this change and exploring further opportunities is to explain to the wider public the benefits of this big step into the future.
Let’s consider some of the situations that face clinicians and patients today.

Take the case of a young mother whose two children suffer from asthma.

The children might have tried many asthma drugs on and off, and keeping track of what each child has tried is challenging – for parents, for doctors, for hospitals.
Or consider the case of a Melbournian retiree escaping to Darwin for a holiday, becoming sick and being raced to hospital by ambulance.

He arrives without his current tablets and is not in a condition to talk about his medical history. What does the ED team need to know to make the treatment effective?

Or let’s think about a carer’s perspective for a moment. Hundreds of thousands of Australians care for a loved one, many of whom can’t participate in their own care which might involve a GP, then local pharmacist, the district nurse, specialists and the local hospital.

There’s a constant worry that the wrong medication might be taken at the wrong time. These fears are well grounded – medication errors currently account for 190,000 admissions to hospitals each year (my italics).

And take the case of the hundreds of thousands of Australians with chronic disease. Many of whom want to better manage their diseases, but lack the connection over their information that can make this happen.

These scenarios reflect the kinds of real-life situations that occur all around Australia every day.

national electgronic health transition authority

Let me digress a bit here. It does have something to do with the second meeting.

Pharmacists reviewing medication histories and more pharmacists in wards in hospitals reduce error rates. And an electronic patient record should reduce them even further.

Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisations (ACCHO) are where Aboriginal Australians wish to receive their healthcare. There are five pharmacists I know of that work full time for an ACCHO.

Meeting 2. 28th June 2010 No title, attended by stake holders in remote Indigenous Health

This meeting was called after a presentation and some networking at the National Medicines Symposium. It was to discuss the lack of dispensing software, tools and training for remote area S100 ACCHOs and other Aboriginal Health Services.

  • Dispensing is usually done by Aboriginal Health Workers, Doctors and Remote Area Nurses who in the main have have no specific training for this task and may under-appreciate its importance in Quality Use of Medicines. In some states this may be illegal
  • Dispensing systems either stand alone or incorporated into electronic patient management systems for tasks such as labelling, recording of supplied medication and stock control are for the most part primitive or non-existent. Indeed in many cases medicines are dispensed with handwritten, incomplete, or no labels at all.
  • Yes, that’s right. We are spending millions on eHealth but in remote Australia we still can’t print a legible label for a patient’s medication. Does it surprise anyone that there seems to be no money to rectify this lack of not only dispensing, but no pharmacist involvement?

    Is it too far a stretch to think we are building a whizz bang house, but out bush it is on very poor foundations?

    Blog Widget by LinkWithin

    { 7 comments }