<Politicine/>

Dec 30, 2008

Venture Nashville: Bart Gordon announces Sci-Tech priorities

I replied at the DNJ link saying (after seeing the Venture Nashville blog post):

One thing we need to consider is making a Results-Only Work Environment (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ROWE ; http://www.culturerx.com ; http://caliandjody.com/blog ) the DEFAULT work condition in both schools and businesses. One should have to make a business case for being required to "drive into work". With so much employment moving toward knowledge work, the costs of not promoting telecommuting (Net-Working) have not been studied by area CEOs and they would be astounded how much money they are wasting on real estate, etc.; costs which were necessary in 1980 -- but not today. That is not to say that their competitors are also wasting these resources unnecessarily -- think about why cloud computing and virtualization have been in the IT press lately. ROWEs are not a panacea -- but definitely an option that very rarely shows up on the C-Suite table.

What think ye?

Dec 18, 2008

Reply to Susanna Dodgson RE: Broadband Build Out in Nigeria

over at http://vcafrica.ning.com/

Her post:

This is all great, but the hurdles are still huge. I went to a Corporate Council on Africa Health Forum in November and was listening to a talk by a South African CEO of a pharmaceutical company. He said something astounding: he refuses ever to pay a bribe anywhere. This is the first time I have heard this said and it is exciting.


What has this to do with highspeed internet in Nigeria? Everything. This is a country with daily power outages (and the power company employees demand bribes to provide even sporadic power, at least that was what I saw in BAV studios where I work in Surulere); a country when even canned tomatoes has to be imported (and Nigerian food has tomatoes in everything). Given that back-drop, is high-speed internet somehow avoiding all payment of bribes, avoiding corruption? I desperately want the answer to be yes. http://mjota.org.

My reply:

Technologically, of course, the answer is easy. WiMax and solar energy vendors should team up to build out the grid. One could avoid the ground by using blimps, drones, etc. RE: Bribes seen as a fee-for-service where there is no other meaningful industry exists, well, that's a catch-22. Broadband could bring knowledge work (if global employers would learn to pay for something other than butts-in-seats, i.e. driving into a plant in order to post on a wiki or write software {see Results-Only Work Environments at your local search engine}). Bribes purely for sloth, well, that's a theological problem, which, ironically, broadband could help (at least in delivering seminary curricula). The one anti-corruption benefit of broadband is the enabling wiki-eske ability to create "walls of shame" near real-time -- both of the ones perpetrating the corruption -- and of the law enforcement officials for not prosecuting them (in those cases where the actors aren't the same people). XBRL was just mandated yesterday in the US for firms over 5 billion -- so getting to underlying data is at least theoretically going to be easier. Wish I had more optimistic answers.

Dec 10, 2008

Importing RSS feeds from PubMed into Drupal

2008, December 9 Kristof Van Tomme
Video: 


In this demo Kristof Van Tomme explains how articles from PubMed can be integrated in a Drupal site. First he focuses on the end-user perspective (e.g. adding RSS feeds for specific PubMed queries). Afterwards he talks about how you can implement this on your own website.

Dec 09, 2008

Tom Daschle Healthcare Holiday Parties

Sign up to host a health care community discussion over the holidays

Health care is a top priority for President-elect Obama, and he wants your help in reforming the system to provide quality, affordable health care for all Americans. That's why this holiday season, we're asking you to give us the gift of your ideas and input.

Sign up to host a Health Care Community Discussion anytime from December 15th to 31st.

We'll provide all our hosts with special moderator kits that will give you everything you need to get the discussion going. And Senator Tom Daschle, the leader of the Transition's Health Policy Team, will even choose one discussion to attend in person.

Thanks Ruslan David, ehealthserver.com for the heads up!

Dec 06, 2008

AMIA Open Source Working Group Offers White Paper Examining Benefits of Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) in Healthcare 1.0

<ed.note>Update: Just to go on public record, I have submitted the post and links to Change.gov in response to President Elect Obama's call for ideas on healthcare.</ed.note>


Bethesda, MD, December 4, 2008 – The AMIA Open Source Working Group today released a white paper: Free and Open Source Software in Healthcare 1.0 which examines Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) and its unique properties that can solve multiple difficult problems of HIT. The paper defines pertinent terminology, references important works in the field and has data on the number of current deployments and patients that use Free and Open Source Software systems such as Webreach, ClearHealth, and Veterans Affairs VistA-based systems in both the public and private sectors.

“Even the most skeptical interpretation of the numbers presented on Free and Open Source deployments and patients shows that these systems are being used in sizable numbers,” said Ignacio Valdes, MD, MSc the primary author of the paper and chair of the AMIA Open Source Working Group. He continues, “This paper is for practitioners, CIO's, IT staff, and policymakers making difficult health IT decisions with valid concerns about cost, ethics, interoperability, patient privacy, security and the future of their organizations in the hands of proprietary software.

This white paper should be a must-read for every organization that uses or is contemplating the use of Electronic Medical Records.” Download a free copy of this white paper (pdf) at: http://www.amia.org/files/Final-OS-WG%20White%20Paper_11_19_08.pdf or call AMIA at: 301-657-1291.

Inquiries and feedback are welcome and may be sent by e-mail to Working Group Chair, Ignacio Valdes at: ivaldes@hal-pc.org

About AMIA
AMIA is the professional home for biomedical and health informatics. AMIA is dedicated to promoting the effective organization, analysis, management, and use of information in health care in support of patient care, public health, teaching, research, administration, and related policy. AMIA’s 4,000 members advance the use of health information and communications technology in clinical care and clinical research, personal health management, public health/population, and translational science with the ultimate objective of improving health. Complete information about AMIA is available at: www.amia.org.

About The Open Source Working Group (OS-WG)
The mission of the OS-WG is to act as the primary conduit between the broader open source community and AMIA. To provide information regarding open source benefits and pitfalls to other AMIA working groups, identify useful open source projects, assist with project community building, and to identify funding sources and provide grant application support to open source projects. Visit the Open Source Working Group site at: www.amia.org/os-wg

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE December 4, 2008 Media Contact: Tia Abner, 301-657-1291, tia@amia.org

OpenVista Health Information Technology (HIT) group launched

Albert Gnandt, Senior Software Engineer at Medsphere Systems Corporation, announces:

I'd like to take the chance to announce a new group for professionals that promote OpenVista and VistA-based systems to build a network that connects people, opportunities and ideas. OpenVista is a complete electronic medical record (EMR) based on an open source business model and is freely available under the AGPL (Affero General Public License). VistA (Veterans Health Information System and Technology Architecture) has been developed for around four decades and is in use across 1,200 nation-wide hospitals and health care facilities within the US Department of Veteran Affairs. As an enhanced port of the sucessful VistA, OpenVista relies on the newest cross-platform technology and is available for Windows, GNU/Linux and MacOSX. The OpenVista community is backed up by a commercial vendor for enterprise solutions. Commercial solutions of OpenVista have been successfully deployed nation-wide at different non-VA hospitals. One of Medsphere's customers, Midland Memorial Hospital, was able to reach the second highest level of US EMR adaption (Stage 6) with competitive low resources, costs per bed and time. If you are a manager, clinician, engineer or researcher trying to find a better way to deal with health care IT, then this group is for you.

http://www.linkedin.com/groups?gid=1369507

Oct 17, 2008

Fulfill The Promise

I am writing this post to the women of Tennessee who have a strong interest in issues impacting women and children, as well as the capacity to bring about positive change in Tennessee public policy. We have talked for many years about how women are disproportionately affected by long term care giving needs of family members affected by disability (“An estimated 44.4 million Americans age 18 and over provide unpaid assistance and support to older people and adults with disabilities, and between 60% and 75% percent of family and informal caregivers are women.”)

I also know that when Tennessee women are united in commitment to right an injustice to our most vulnerable families, we can be a powerful force for good. I am asking for your help in addressing an important issue that is before our state legislature this year:

What’s Wrong with this Picture?

I have a photograph in my desk drawer. I took the picture a couple of years ago when I was making a home visit to one of UCP’s families. It shows a smiling young African-American boy sitting in a wheelchair.  Next to him is his mother, also sitting in a wheelchair. The little boy’s hands are twisted and clenched in what are called contractures. This occurs when a child with cerebral palsy doesn’t get the physical therapy necessary to keep muscle groups flexible.  This child’s cerebral palsy is severe.  He requires home based care giving supports for all times when he is not in school. Despite his physical challenges, this remarkable kid makes A’s and B’s on his report card.  He is mainstreamed in a regular public school classroom where he receives the school-based supports necessary for him to succeed in this setting. Due to the level of his disability, affordable neighborhood day care centers and after school recreation programs for typically developing children are not available for him. 

The little boy’s mother is an attractive single mother who gave up her once-promising full-time career to provide care for her disabled son. She is also smiling, but her eyes are weary.  She is sitting in a wheelchair because of a ruptured disk, acquired after years of lifting her disabled child in and out of the bathtub, and from his wheelchair and bed, with no assistance.

Somewhere in the background, out of the picture, is the boy’s 12-year old sister. She is the one in the family who is now lifting her brother, helping him get bathed and dressed, getting him in bed at night, and doing everything she can to meet his care giving needs while her mother recovers from back surgery.

Convoluted State Infrastructure

This is just one of many families of children and young people with developmental disabilities who do not have access to Home and Community Based Supports and Services in Tennessee.  While we have a Division of Mental Retardation that addresses one form of developmental disability, i.e., mental retardation, there is no comparable entity in Tennessee that provides intensive home-centered supports for persons with other types of developmental disabilities. This includes severe conditions such as autism, cerebral palsy, spina bifida and other acute disabilities defined under Tennessee State Title 33 as conditions acquired prior to age 22 and typically identified as severe developmental disabilities by the time the child reaches age 5.  By definition, these disabilities have lifelong impact on an individual’s functional abilities and capacity to earn a sustainable living.

Did you realize that the Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities has no services and no funding for people with Developmental Disabilities? Despite a legislative mandate in 2000 that changed the name from the “Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation” to the “Department Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities” and made persons with Developmental Disabilities eligible for services beginning in March 2002, the legislative intent was never carried out.

In order to address a series of federal court orders, during the Sundquist Administration, the Division of Mental Retardation was moved out of this Department to the Department of Finance and Administration. All Developmental Disabilities funding went with the Division, and when that happened, children and adults with some of the most severe forms of developmental disability in our state were simply dropped out of the equation. Over the years, commissioners under various administrations have attempted to address this gap, but with no funding stream and no definitive “home” in state government for these families, their efforts have been fruitless.

Help Needed for Families in Serious Trouble

In my fifteen years as Executive Director of United Cerebral Palsy, I have visited the homes of many families. I have watched severely disabled children grow up without benefit of home and community based supports that they would have received in other states. I have seen families driven into poverty over the cost of care for their children. I have seen other families split apart at the seams because of unremitting stress. Inevitably, this leaves a single mother trying to cope alone with the needs of a disabled child, not to mention the needs of other children, and sometimes even aging seniors in the extended family.

I have testified in child support cases where judges threw up their hands in frustration over the impossibility of meeting a developmentally disabled child’s critical needs on the income basis of the parents in question.  I have seen young people with disabilities who graduated from Tennessee high schools and colleges who were shuffled off to nursing homes because we have no place in our communities for them.

On the other hand, I have also witnessed caring, sacrifice, and fortitude from these families in the face of amazing odds.  I know one eighty-something year old mother who has for the past sixty years been the primary caregiver for her daughter who has cerebral palsy so severe she can voluntarily move the muscles in only one part of her body, her right foot. This wonderful elderly lady is now also caring for her husband who has dementia related to aging.

Year after year, these families are told to wait until the state gets the problems with the Division of Mental Retardation Services solved; then their issues will be addressed. The only thing is, we never seem to get the problems with DMRS solved. This year, there has been much attention focused on the Division of Mental Retardation budget cuts, the Division’s long waiting list (6,000+), and initiatives on aging. Yet few Tennesseans realize there is a group of severely disabled people, many of them children, who were aren’t even on the radar screen in our state. In effect, these families are told they are second class citizens with second class disabilities.

The “Fulfill the Promise Campaign”

In 2006, the Tennessee Legislature appointed a Task Force under the auspices of the Tennessee Division of Mental Retardation Services to investigate the gap in Tennessee’s service infrastructure for children and adults with developmental disabilities other than mental retardation. Members of the Task Force included persons with developmental disabilities, family members, representatives of non-profits serving the population in need (including UCP, the Arc, and the Autism Society) TN Council on Developmental Disabilities, TennCare, DMRS, TDMH&DD, Commission on Aging and Disabilities, TN Division of Rehabilitation Services, University Centers for Excellence on Disabilities, and the Disability Law and Advocacy Center. Representatives from the TN Disability Coalition observed and monitored the process.

The Task Force worked intensively for a year to develop the recommendations they delivered to the legislature in a report called “Fulfill the Promise*.” It can be found at www.fulfillthepromise.org

The report asks for a very modest investment from the state in the coming year to provide direct services to a limited number of families, and for a concerted effort over the next few years to develop comprehensive and cost-conscious home and community based services that take advantage of federal dollars available to help this population.

United Cerebral Palsy has hosting two meetings for state legislators and families to talk about the report. The first meeting was on February 26 in Murfreesboro.  The second meeting was on March 6 in Nashville. We believe that the first and most important step is communication and education. We really need help in getting state legislators (or representatives from their offices) to read the report, and to meet with these families.

Some of the women who will read this post are policymakers.  Others of you have good friends in the state legislature.  I hope you will use whatever influence you may have to draw the attention of our legislators in Middle Tennessee to this issue.  Please ask our policymakers to talk with families who are affected by Developmental Disability, and to listen to what they have to say.

Thank you for taking the time to read this post.

Deana Claiborne, Executive Director
United Cerebral Palsy of Middle Tennessee
1200 9th Avenue North, Suite 110
Nashville, TN  37208
615-242-4091
Deana_Claiborne@ucpnashville.org

How do I know who my state legislators are?

Get your Tennessee voter registration card. Look at the back of the card to get the number of your state house and state senate districts.

To find your State Senator, go to: http://www.legislature.state.tn.us/senate/members/smembers.htm#Find

At the bottom of the page, you can find your senator by entering your senate district number

To find your State Representative, go to:

http://www.legislature.state.tn.us/house/members/hmembers.htm#Find

At the bottom of the page, you can find your representative by entering your house district number

*The “Promise” refers to provisions of Tennessee State Title 33, which made persons with Developmental Disabilities other then Mental Retardation eligible for Developmental Disabilities services beginning in March 2002. The citizens impacted include individuals who are born with severe disabilities such as cerebral palsy, autism, spina bifida, and other disabilities acquired during the developmental stages of life.

Despite the promise of state Title 33, no services have ever been implemented, and the only division of state government serving persons with Developmental Disabilities, i.e., the Division of Mental Retardation, was placed under the Department of Finance and Administration, leaving the remaining group of persons with Developmental Disabilities without a place in state government.   

The Fulfill the Promise bills in the Tennessee State Legislature are sculpted directly from the recommendations of the Task Force. The bills have bi-partisan support among sponsors in both the House and the Senate. Bill sponsors encourage families who are impacted by developmental disabilities other than mental retardation to contact their own representatives and ask for their support of the legislation. This is particularly important as the bills move into the legislative committees.

Since delivery of the report, grassroots advocates from across the state have held local meetings with legislators, giving families the opportunity to share stories about their own situations. Families have written and called their legislators.  They also attended the Tennessee Disability “Days on the Hill” and met with legislators in their offices at the Legislative Plaza.

Many families report that the cost of caring for their children and family members with severe disabilities without benefit of Home and Community Based supports has driven them into poverty and has resulted in instances of divorce and multiple physical and mental health problems among caregivers.  Individuals with disabilities are impacted because they do not have access to direct support services, after school and daycare services, therapies, and other essential services typically provided by other states in their Developmental Disabilities waiver programs.

Oct 15, 2008

National Governors Association's State Alliance for e-Health Report

Accelerating Progress: Using Health Information Technology and Electronic Health Information Exchange to Improve Care

In this inaugural report, the State Alliance examines the challenges states face in implementing HIT and HIE, including provider concerns about implementation costs, variations in technical standards for interoperability and consumer concerns about data privacy and security. The report is meant to spur continued innovation in states to make the vision of an interconnected, efficient, quality-based health care system – and ultimately a healthier American public – a reality.



<ed.note>What I want to see is an additional recommendation that XBRL be injected into the healthcare system -- not just at the reporting level -- but as far up the data stream as possible. No other current technology has the promise of bringing transparency as does this unappreciated one.</ed.note>

Sep 27, 2008

John Casillas, Medical Banking Project, on coupling healthcare to the financial bail out

A Medical Banking Addendum to the Financial Stability Plan Pending Before Congress over at MBlog.

Aug 18, 2008

Social Darwinism in the Buckle of the Bible Belt

<ed.note>RE: eugenics vs. euangellion -- Sunday brought Dean Barham's inspiring presentation at the Family of God at Woodmont Hills focusing on Bono's activities in the name of God  and Isaiah's charge to Israel (Isaiah 1:10-20). Monday brought Randy Alexander's email below. I don't get the sense that the scenario which Randy describes is in line with the general tenor of “Wash yourselves; make yourselves clean; remove the evil of your deeds from before my eyes; cease to do evil, learn to do good; seek justice, correct oppression; bring justice to the fatherless, plead the widow's cause". Update: Some local media links: 1, 2, 3.</ed.note>

There are a handful of Tennesseans about to face cuts to the services that support their decision to live in their home instead of an institutional setting. Some of these services include private duty nursing and extended personal assistance hours. These are people with disabilities with support needs that may range from several hours a day to having someone around 24 hours a day.

TennCare and the state contracted MCO’s are cutting these support services to those with the greatest needs, in what amounts to as a death sentence for people with disabilities. For the state, it appears they have decided to take a social Darwinistic policy approach. Where it is cheaper to cut services, and expedite your death, then to provide appropriate support services rather than the long term.

So why is this a death sentence? Many of these individuals will have to cut corners so severally they may have to risk their very lives on a daily basis to remain free from institutionalization. Some people will go to great lengths to state out of an institution including going without the very service that keeps them alive. One example is a person on a vent needs someone around 24 hours a day in case the machine stops working, the tubes get kinked, etc., but to stay out of a nursing home they may go without having someone around all the time. Other folks may have to rely on family, even family members that have neglected them in the past.

What about those that don’t have a family, a family that they can trust, a family that is safe or a family that can afford to quit their jobs to support them? These individuals will be forced by the state into nursing homes, which is surely a death sentence. Nursing homes do NOT provide the level of supports these individuals need and in so many cases are not available when needed. I know of several individuals in nursing homes that have died due to the lack of supports.

There are many ways to provide the services people need, and save the state money. Many of these services are currently only provided by nurses. Most of these support services could be provided by non-nurses, most other states already do this. TennCare could allow consumers to hire who they want. Consumer directed services was just passed into law but is not implemented yet.

If this was about saving some dollars there are ways to make that happen, but this is not about saving money it’s about making the Managed Care Organizations more money and eliminating services and supports to fellow Tennesseans. You see the Managed Care Organizations are about to come under capitation. Currently MCO’s are reimbursed for each service plus administrative fees. In November they all go under a capitation were they a paid a set fee per person and the more services they cut the more profit they make. So, if they can eliminate those with the greatest amount of support needs prior to November 1st, the more money they stand to make.

If you believe that we should provide the supports people need in a way that also allows the freedoms we all have, write us at MCIL. Tell us why you support providing these services, write condemning these cuts, just put it in your words and send it to:

Randy Alexander
randy@mcil.org
The Memphis Center for Independent Living
http://www.mcil.org
Stop the Cuts
1633 Madison Ave
Memphis, TN 38104
+1 (901) 726-6404

Donate to United Cerebral Palsy of Middle Tennessee, Inc. with the ActiveGivng.com Donation Page or thru the Capital One No Hassle Giving Site.





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