Hi George.
Greetings from Bombay.

I expect that you are busy with HISA.

I wondered if there was any Bluetooth device for BP machines such as Omron
which could automatically record, (perhaps) store [- I know that BSL
machines are capable of storing 1 month's data] and transmit to a recording
device.
It would make hypertension management easier and perhaps allow remote
monitoring of behaviours and attempt to ensure/help compliance.

Good luck with your conference

Best wishes

David de Bhál
www.v-practice.com 
________________________________

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of George Margelis
Sent: Thursday, April 27, 2006 1:11 AM
To: General Practice Computing Group Talk
Subject: Re: [GPCG_TALK] Clinical software recommendations

Great story David

Yes it truelly is a sorry situation where the medical profession is not 
fully utilising technology. It seems we are limited to using it as a storage

modality when it is capable of much more.

George Margelis
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "David de Bhál" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'General Practice Computing Group Talk'" <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, April 26, 2006 7:31 PM
Subject: RE: [GPCG_TALK] Clinical software recommendations


We are merely the custodians of the record - we hold the record in trust for
the person to whom it is most relevant.
If you practice proper medicine and you do what is right and document the
history and the examination and show how you came to the conclusion that you
did, as required by law, then you have little to fear.
I have never met anybody nor heard of anybody who was told "indemnity
insurer tells him his arse isn't sufficiently covered". My understanding is
not documentation, per se, but the lack of it that is the problem.

What we have now is very poor documentation often secondary to very poor
medicine. Better no medicine than bad medicine.

Most mistakes are made not by not knowing but by not looking. If people are
afraid of the system, then they are better off out of it.

What I would implore is the ability to leverage the knowledge in and the
power of a patient-centric record and preferably with access from the
patient.

A good example is that of Andy Gore of Intel quoted in Fortune Dec 2005 when
he reports on having prostate cancer. He was told that surgery was the best
option and that was pretty much all there was to it. Was it though? It took
very little to discover that there was much, much more to it. There were
alternatives to surgery. No surgeon advised him to take them seriously. But
the expert opinions were just that - opinions, based on little if any hard
data. Data did exist. What he found most shocking is that no one had done
the hard work of pulling it together. Plainly, Grove would have to do it
himself.

What he "found most appalling, in the end, was the utter fixity of belief
among doctors who failed to separate knowledge from conventional wisdom.
Even the doctor who carried out the procedure was captive to it". Grove had
prostate cancer in 1995 and researched it himself and came up with the idea
(then) that brachytherapy was the best therapy. It is interesting that the
patient can now often have as much information as the doctor. What he often
lacks is experience.

I was amazed when in the US in the 1970s that the students often had more
knowledge on a particular subject than the consultants and they
(consultants) often had to defend their position. Grove apparently fostered
a culture at Intel in which "knowledge power" would trump "position power".

If you talk to patients (who are not your patients) is that they are amazed
at the inability of the brightest and most powerful group in the community
to embrace the power of information technology for their( the patients')
benefit.

David de Bhál
www.v-practice.com


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Greg Twyford
Sent: Wednesday, April 26, 2006 4:48 PM
To: General Practice Computing Group Talk
Subject: Re: [GPCG_TALK] Clinical software recommendations

David de Bhál wrote:
> The view is that the patient is more important than the practitioner in
the
> whole equation.
>
> David de Bhál
> www.v-practice.com

David,

I'm not sure what that means.

In one sense if I see my GP, I certainly think my problem is the most
important one I'll have that day, but I'm sure the GP's view is often
different. Who is right will vary from occasion to occasion.

I guess it also depends on who your business partner is. If the GP is
contracting to use your system, he won't be too happy if his indemnity
insurer tells him his arse isn't sufficiently covered if he does so. If
you are selling to the patient, it may be a different story.

 From a societal provision perspective, we need to keep most of our
doctors practising, even if they don't always do so optimally. Simply
because the alternative is likely to be a worse outcome for many of us
if we have a lot fewer of them.

Greg


-- 
Greg Twyford
Information Management & Technology Program Officer
Canterbury Division of General Practice
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Ph.: 02 9787 9033
Fax: 02 9787 9200

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