Dave Forslund's work, including a minimal reference to the 
Sourceforge site and the mention of free, got a favorable 
writeup in the Nov. 19, Infoweek.  Here is the URL:

http://www.informationweek.com/story/IWK20011116S0004

Congratulations Dave!  (So how come the article ends with a 
quote from Sandia :)

In that same issue is another article on how the 9/11 
terrorism should be a wakeup call to health care IT to get's 
it data sharing act together.  The initial focus is all 
wrong in my opinion, focusing on patient privacy.  Here is a 
quote from:

http://www.informationweek.com/story/IWK20011116S0007

" "Bioterrorism was never taken into account with HIPAA," 
Liss says. "Putting the brakes on information that gets 
shared in the middle of a bioterrorist attack doesn't make 
any sense. We need to make bioterrorism the top priority and 
deal with privacy next."

On Oct. 23, more than 30 health-care organizations wrote to 
Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson asking 
for urgent changes to HIPAA patient privacy rules. They said 
the current rules would, among other things, hamper 
information sharing needed for medical research. The groups 
most strongly oppose two provisions: requiring patient 
consent before any information can be shared or disclosed by 
health-care providers for tasks from care to prescriptions 
to billing, and restricting patient information from being 
used in research."

I am worried that the 9/11 attacks are being used as a 
blanket call to end privacy, with no real analysis of 
weakness's.
For example, privacy is fully protected in Dave's New Mexico 
public health system and that was used in the same article 
as an example of what should be done!

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