Timeline pushed back for Shared Digital Health Record system and more briefs
The joint digital health record project faces delay
Nehu Oora Joint Digital Health Register system.
Initially, the first phase of implementation of the project was appointed in June, which will now take to December to finish.
The organization said in a statement that the new deadline is “more realistic.” More work cut. This includes confirmation of privacy and safety requirements, which also include advice to patients about data collection; Work with primary care providers who choose to collect and exchange data for reading only from their practices management systems; On board more service providers and EHR systems in SDHR Applications; SDHR programming facades to the NZ Digital Service Center.
This revised timeline, however, will not affect the proposal of 24/7 Digital Health ServiceTE whatu Ora that you maintained. The new health care service has been set next month, July.
The next GP reservation capacity to NZ’s Healthline
Healthline, a free health advice service in New Zealand, will healine, will be able to help callers reserve an appointment with a public practitioner.
WHAKARONGORAU AOTEAROA, which runs 24/7 service with Valentia Technologies to develop a cloud -based platform that connects Healthline with different health care providers.
This allows nurses and their paramedics to book the appointments for the callers, who advised to see a doctor. They will also have an actual time to the availability of GP throughout the country.
It is said that a third of the Healthline is referred to GP or another health service. “Initially, this will be a date for health, shortly and shortly after personal appointments,” said Wakarongoro.
GP reservation capacity will be provided next month, July.
DHCRC smart experiment
The Australian government’s digital health research center will experiment with the application of the elderly, which adopts smart on the interfering framework and the exchange of data FHIR.
It seeks to obtain sellers and care for the elderly or primary care providers to join the pilot, which aims to show the feasibility of such a digital solution “to unify the career evaluation of the elderly Australians and generate evidence -based quality indicators.”
Sydney Project Development Chatbot multi -language sorting ED
A new project led by the doctor in West Sydney will develop a multi -language Chatbot that works for Amnesty International to sort the emergency department.
The National Project for Health Research and Medical Research aims to help ED employees, especially in various multicultural societies, to overcome language barriers to make evaluations sorting more accurately. More than half of the population of the southwest Sydney, as observed, observes different languages other than the English language.
“The idea is that this chat will listen to the registration point on a computer in ED and will be able to explain the patient’s description of his symptoms in the actual time, allowing employees to sort quickly and accurately to assess the patient’s condition at New South Wales University.