Dear Bob

Discharge summaries or letters are routinely not finalised at the time a 
patient is discharged from a hospital. In the case of inpatient wards, the 
clinician writing up their notes and preparing such clinical documentation is 
often not physically anywhere near the patient or their Medicare card.  

Secondly, given the well-known issues with Medicare card fraud and children 
often being on separate Medicare cards with parents who are not speaking, I am 
not sure that relying on all of the information being on a card itself is the 
best option.


Peter

(disclaimer - all views are my own and are not the official view of my 
employer).


-----Original Message-----
From: Link <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Dr Bob Jansen (in 
Korea)
Sent: Wednesday, 18 July 2018 3:02 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [LINK] Urgent: MyHR Opt-Out

Why not use a chip inside our Medicare card? We need it for treatment anyway so 
why not have a system wherein the treating clinician uploads their notes or 
discharge summary into that chip. Then security is dependent on physical access 
with presumably some sort of PIN/Biometric. 
Chip can be scrambled so unreadable without correct code. Then the patient is 
completely in charge. If they want the treatment recorded they have to present 
the card else it will not be recorded. A true patient medical record, My 
Medical Record!

bobj

On 18/7/18 1:25 pm, Bernard Robertson-Dunn wrote:
> On 18/07/2018 10:37 AM, David wrote:
>> On 16/07/2018 10:44 AM, Roger Clarke wrote:
>>> This record is all-but useless for patient care.  It's purpose is to enable 
>>> government agencies to get access to people's health care data.
>> The only potential value I can see might relate to someone with a chronic 
>> condition which rendered them unable to talk about it in an emergency 
>> situation.  But even then, they might be better served by wearing a 
>> medical-bracelet containing the relevant information.
>>
>> It would certainly be cheaper...
> And people can take photos of their meds, or cut up a bit of the box 
> it comes in and put it in their wallet or purse, or write it 
> down...... And you don't need the internet or computer skills.
>
> And a lot safer than giving your data to the government.
>
> Bernard
>

--
--------------------------------
Dr Bob Jansen
Turtle Lane Studios Pty Ltd
122 Cameron St, Rockdale NSW 2216, Australia Ph (Korea): +82 10-4494-0328 Ph 
(Australia) +61 414 297 448
Resume: http://au.linkedin.com/in/bobjan
Skype: bobjtls
KakaoTalk: bobjtls
http://www.turtlelane.com.au

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