Art of medicine

Sandra Steele
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Humans are now living much more closely with animals and this increases the risk of zoonoses

Expert/s: Sandra Steele
Prof Jeffrey Craig
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The general concepts around the impact of early development on later health and disease

Dr Linda Calabresi
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Findings from a newly published study are likely to silence those who suggest doctors need to return to wearing white coats to improve patient respect. According to US researchers, patient perception in terms of a doctor’s capability, trustworthiness and reliability is not affected by the presence of visible tattoos and non-traditional piercings (on the doctor not the patient). “Physician tattoos and facial piercings were not factors in patients’ evaluations of physician competence, professionalism or approachability,” the study authors said. This interesting study, published in the Emergency Medicine Journal involved surveying over 900 patients who had attended the emergency department of a large teaching hospital in the US. The patients were not told the purpose of the survey, they were simply asked to rate their experience, including the care they received from their attending doctor across a range of domains including competence, professionalism, caring, approachability, trustworthiness and reliability. The doctors provided their own controls meaning that some shifts they worked without any ‘exposed body art’, other shifts they were ‘pierced’ (hoop earrings for men or fake nasal studs for women) and other shifts they were ‘tattooed’ (with a temporary standardised black tribal tattoo around the arm). Sometimes the doctors were both pierced and tattooed. Nurses asked the patients to complete the survey and they did provide prompts to remind the patient of the doctor who had attended them, but the prompt was along the line of ‘the young male doctor with red hair’ rather than drawing attention to the tattoo or piercing. More than 75% of the time the patient gave the attending doctor the top rating across all the domains surveyed regardless of appearance. The findings appear to be in contrast with previous research which has found patients prefer their physicians to be traditionally dressed. However, the authors of this study suggest that the evidence to date has been limited by a lack of patient blinding to the study purpose. What’s more, they suggest that existing policies regarding visible body art on doctors are likely to be driven by administrator preferences rather than data on patient satisfaction. There were a number of limitations to the study in particular the small number of doctors involved (seven) and because the patients weren’t specifically asked about the body art we don’t know whether they actually didn’t care about it or whether they were able to overcome their disapproval of it. Given the trial took place in an emergency department, the results cannot necessarily be extrapolated to the community setting as in general practice. Nonetheless, the results will be of interest given the increasing popularity of body art, especially tattoos with the study authors citing research showing, in 2006, 24% of young and middle adult persons had at least one tattoo. Concerns that a doctor’s visible body art has a negative impact on a patient’s perception of their professionalism or a patient’s satisfaction do not appear founded, the researchers concluded. Ref: Doi: 10.1136/emermed-2017-206887

Dr Kees Van Gool
Clinical Articles iconClinical Articles

The winners of this year’s health budget are aged care, rural health and medical research. The government has announced A$1.6 billion over four years to allow 14,000 more older Australians to remain in their home for longer through more high-level home care places. For those in aged care, an additional A$82.5 million will be directed to improve mental health services in the facilities. The budget includes A$83.3 million over five years for a rural health strategy, which aims to place more doctors and nurses in the bush and train 100 additional GPs. There’s A$1.3 billion over ten years for a National Health and Medical Industry Growth Plan, which includes A$500 million for new research in the field of genomics. Other key announcements include: - A$1.4 billion for new and amended listings on PBS - A$302.6 million in savings over forward estimates by encouraging greater use of generic and bio similar medicines - A$253.8 million for a new Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission.
Read more:Infographic: Budget 2018 at a glance

Aged care

Helen Dickinson, Associate Professor, Public Service Research Group at UNSW It was well foreshadowed that this budget would bring with it significant provisions for aged care. It has been widely reported that reforms to pension and superannuation tax have resulted in disaffection in the Coalition within older age groups. Making older Australians the cornerstone of budget measures is a calculated political tactic in a budget that in the short term makes only limited tax cuts for low- and middle-income earners. The A$1.6 billion for 14,000 new places for home-care recipients will be welcome, but are a drop in the ocean, given there are currently more than 100,000 people on the national priority list for support. Additional commitments around trials for physical activities for older people, initiatives to improve connections to communities and protections for older people against abuse will bolster those remaining in homes and communities. Commitments made for specific initiatives for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and aged care facilities in rural and remote Australia will be welcomed, although their size and scope will likely result in little to address older age groups with complex needs. While investment in aged care services will be welcome, it remains to be seen whether this multi-million-dollar commitment will succeed in clawing back support from older voters. Recent years have seen around A$2 billion of cuts made to the sector through adjustments to the residential care funding formula. The current financial commitments go some way to restoring spending, but do not significantly advance spending beyond previous levels in an area of the population we know is expanding substantially in volume and level of need and expectation. A number of new budget commitments have been announced in relation to mental health services for older people in residential aged care facilities, for a national mental health commission, and for Lifeline Australia. However, given the current turbulence in mental health services, it’s unclear whether these will impact on the types of issues that are being felt currently or whether this will further disaggregate an already complex and often unconnected system.

Equity, prevention and Indigenous health

Lesley Russell, Adjunct Associate Professor, Menzies Centre for Health Policy at the University of Sydney The government states its desire for a stronger economy and to limit economic imposts on future generations, but this budget highlights a continued failure to invest in the areas that will deliver more sustainable health care spending, reduce health disparities, and improve health outcomes and productivity for all Australians. We know what the best buys in primary prevention are. But despite the fact that obesity is a heavy and costly burden on the health care system, and the broad agreement from experts on a suite of solutions, this can is once again kicked down the road. There is nothing new to address the harms caused by excessive alcohol use or opioid abuse. The crackdown on illegal tobacco is about lost taxes rather than smoking prevention. There is A$20.9 million over five years to improve the health of women and children – an assorted collection of small programs which could conceivably be claimed as preventive health. There is nothing in this budget to address growing out-of-pocket costs that limit the ability of many to access needed care. Additional funding (given in budget papers as A$83.3 million over five years but more accurately described as A$122.4 million over 2018-19 and 2019-20, with savings of A$55.6 million taken in 2020-21 and 2021-22) is provided for rural health that should help improve health equity for country Australians. Continued funding is provided for the Indigenous Australians’ Health Program (A$3.9 billion over four years); there is new money for ear, eye and scabies programs and also for a new Medicare item for remote dialysis services. There are promises for a new funding model for primary care provided through Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services (but no details) and better access for Indigenous people to aged care. The renewal of the Remote Indigenous Housing Agreement with the Northern Territory will assist with improved health outcomes for those communities.

PBS, medicines and research

Rosalie Viney, Professor of Health Economics at the University of Technology Sydney The budget includes a notable increase in net expenditure on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme (PBS) of A$1.4 billion for new and amended listings of drugs, although most of these have already been anticipated by positive recommendations by the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee (PBAC). Access to a number of new medicines has been announced. The new and amended medicine listings are clearly funded through savings in PBS expenditure from greater use of generic and bio-similar medicines, given the net increase in expenditure over the five year outlook is around A$0.7 billion. In terms of medical research, there is an encouraging announcement of significant further investments through the Medical Research Futures Fund. This will be welcomed by health and medical researchers across Australia. What is notable is the focus on the capacity of health and medical research to generate new jobs through new technology. While this is certainly important, it is as much about boosting the local medical technology and innovation industry than on improving health system performance. And the announcements in the budget are as much about the potential job growth from medical innovation as on providing more or improved health services. There is new funding for medical research, development of diagnostic tools and medical technologies, and clinical trials of new drugs. The focus on a 21st century medical industry plan recognises that health is big business as well as being important for all Australians. All of this is welcome, but it will be absolutely critical that there are rigorous processes for evaluating this research and ensuring the funding is allocated based on scientific merit. This can represent a major challenge when industry development objectives are given similar standing in determining priorities as health outcomes and scientific quality.

Rural health

Andrew Wilson, Co-Director, Menzies Centre for Health Policy at the University of Sydney Rural Australians experience a range of health disadvantages including higher rates of smoking and obesity, poorer survival rates from cancer and lower life expectancy, and this is not solely due to the poor health of the Aboriginal community. The government has committed to improving rural health services through the Stronger Rural Health Strategy and the budget has some funding to underpin this. The pressure to fund another medical school in rural NSW and Victoria has been sensibly addressed by enhancing and networking existing rural clinical schools through the Murray Darling Medical Schools network. This will provide more opportunities for all medical students to spend a large proportion of their studentship in a rural setting while not increasing the number of Commonwealth supported places. There is a major need to match this increased student capacity with a greater investment in specialist training positions in regional hospitals to ensure the retention of that workforce in country areas. Hopefully the new workforce incentive program will start to address this.

Hospitals and private health insurance

Peter Sivey, Associate Professor, School of Economics, Finance and Marketing, RMIT University There was no new money in today’s budget for Australia’s beleaguered public hospitals. The government is still locked in a deadlock with Queensland and Victoria, which have refused to agree to the proposed 6.5% cap on yearly funding increases from the Commonwealth. With health inflation of about 4% and population growth close to 2% the cap doesn’t allow much room for increased use due to ageing or new technology. There is no change in the government’s private health insurance policy announced last year and nothing to slow the continuing above-inflation premium rises. The ConversationOn the savings side, there was also no move yet on the private health insurance rebate which some experts think could be scrapped. Kees Van Gool, Health economist, University of Technology Sydney; Andrew Wilson, Co-Director, Menzies Centre for Health Policy, University of Sydney; Helen Dickinson, Associate Professor, Public Service Research Group, UNSW; Lesley Russell, Adjunct Associate Professor, Menzies Centre for Health Policy, University of Sydney; Peter Sivey, Associate Professor, School of Economics, Finance and Marketing, RMIT University, and Rosalie Viney, Professor of Health Economics, University of Technology Sydney This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.
Dr Vivienne Miller
Clinical Articles iconClinical Articles

From February this year, changes to privacy laws have been put in place that are likely to significantly affect doctors and their practice. Many doctors will not be aware of their new obligations leaving them vulnerable to inadvertently breaching the Privacy Amendment Act, 2017. “Ignorance is no excuse as a legal argument,” Dr Peter Walker, GP and senior risk manager at Avant explained. This latest amendment to the privacy laws demands that doctors must have an updated protocol on how breaches of a patient’s privacy should be handled. Both the patient and the relevant authority must be notified if a breach occurs that is thought to potentially cause the patient harm. If something goes wrong and the patient’s privacy is breached, doctors must now conduct a risk assessment, including an assessment of the risk of harm resulting from the breach. If harm is possible (physical, emotional, psychological, financial, or harm to reputation), the doctor is then obliged to alert the patient/s concerned and write a statement for the Office of the Australian Information Commission via their online form. Fines may be incurred if the action to reduce the risk of possible breaches has not been made, or if it is insufficient, especially if serious harm results. Fines are also possible for doctors who fail to comply with the amended Privacy Act (for example, if they do not notify the Australian Information Commission of a breach or if they do not have an updated privacy plan). The obligation to notify a patient of a privacy breach does enable that patient to take further action if they perceive they have been harmed. They may then escalate the issue themselves, perhaps in Court. In serious circumstances, the Commission will also refer to other entities, such as the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency or if the matter is criminal, to the Police. If no harm is likely to result, doctors do not have to notify the patient or the Commission, but this is likely to be difficult for a clinician to assess without legal advice. “Prevention really is better than cure, but many doctors are unaware of this new legislation.” Dr Walker said. The following examples are given to illustrate to GPs considerations about privacy in the light of the amended Act. “Sorry, Mr B, I need your consent before I fax that referral letter to the specialist for you because this is not a form of communication that is absolutely safe regarding your privacy. For example, a wrong number may be typed in by accident or the specialist may not receive the fax. For your interest, the fax has a hard drive that will store information and so for this reason we remove this before we dispose of the fax machine. If any of this is of concern to you regarding your privacy you can pass the letter over yourself on the day of your consultation…” “Sorry, Mr B, we don’t email information either to you or the specialist, as email may be hacked; this is less likely to happen to medical email systems, but it is still possible and our practice policy has decided not to use email…” “Mr B, I can text the information from the referral letter to the specialist’s mobile phone with your permission to do so. However, please understand that someone who is holding his phone for him may see the message. This is quite possible, as he is operating now…” “Sorry, Mr B, I understand your concern about needing an urgent appointment, and that the post is slow and the referral may not get to the specialist in time, but this is considered to be a legally safe way of sending correspondence if you don’t take the referral with you now. I know the specialist wants to see the referral before offering you an urgent appointment …” Other possible scenarios in which privacy breaches may occur include the theft of documents (e.g. laptop, briefcase), conversations about a patient’s condition being overheard where the patient can be identified, the incorrect disposal of paperwork that identifies a patient, and discussions about a patient with a third party (who is not part of the health team managing them) without that patient’s consent. The Privacy Amendment Act 2017 builds upon the Privacy Act, amended in March 2014, that instructed all medical practices to have a Privacy Policy. The Australian Information Commission is able to audit any medical practice regarding this to see if that practice complies. This legislation is aimed at promoting the security of a patient’s personal details in all communications between themselves and health professionals, and among health professionals generally. To this end, doctors will need to look carefully for any potential breaches of these new privacy laws resulting from their current means of communication with colleagues and the patients themselves. Reference Office of the Australian Information Commissioner. Notifiable Data Breaches. Available at: oaic.gov.au/engage-with-us/consultations/notifiable-data-breaches This article is based on Dr Peter Walker’s video interview conducted at the Sydney Women’s and Children’s Health Update on Saturday February 17th 2018.