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Freitag, 9.05.2025
Transforming Government since 2001

AU: Australien / Australia

  • Digital Regions Initiative To Improve Regional Health Services In Australia

    The Rudd Government today announced four additional projects for the Digital Regions Initiative.

    “These projects will change the way essential services are delivered to regional, rural and remote Australian communities,” the Minister for Broadband, Communication and the Digital Economy, Senator Stephen Conroy said.

    “The initiative will ensure Australians living outside our major metropolitan centres benefit directly from improved access to digital health services, online educational opportunities and improved emergency and disaster response.”

  • Draft released for Australia smartcard rollout

    Draft standards and an interoperability framework for all Australian public sector agencies has been released in preparation for the federal government's billion dollar smartcard rollout.

    The three new whitepapers announced Thursday address what Special Minister of State Gary Nairn considers to be the biggest stalling point for a national smartcard rollout - interoperability.

  • E-elections put to vote in Australia and Indonesia

    The government of Australia, currently in the throes a general election, is toying with the idea of automated polling for the next election, an Australian Electoral Commission official has told FutureGov. Meanwhile Indonesia has revealed plans to introduce electronic voting in time for the country’s next presidential election in 2014.

    While electronic voting is not possible under the current legislation in Australia, other forms of automation are under discussion, said Michael Cuddihy, Director, Project Management Office, Strategic Capability Branch, AEC.

    More than 70 per cent of the AEC’s budget goes on maintaining the voter register, and automation could significantly reduce this cost, Cuddihy noted.

  • E-government in Australia: Is it working or not?

    Key Australian government agencies are failing to properly measure whether their delivery of services through online channels is "efficient and effective," according to a newly-released federal audit report.

    In a report entitled "Measuring the Efficiency and Effectiveness of E-Government", the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) said an audit of six agencies, including Austrade, Centrelink, the Child Support Agency (CSA), the Department of Health and Ageing, the Department of Veterans' Affairs (DVA) and the National Archives of Australia, found methods "were inadequate to assess whether their delivery of government services and programs through the Internet was efficient and effective".

  • e-health Has Huge Potential And Challenges For Rural Australia

    Australians living in rural and remote areas stand to benefit substantially from e-health. However, those areas also have the poorest infrastructure in Australia - particularly access to Broadband - presenting huge challenges for rural and remote GPs.

    The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP) says that e-health strategies need to take this into account and find out how rural and remote GPs can receive the resources and support they will need.

  • e-Health identifiers for Australians to be allocated next week

    The new Australian electronic healthcare database service has been on the cards for a while now. The legislation that flags off this scheme passed in the federal parliament and may be implemented next week on 1st July. This will ensure that every Australian is given a unique healthcare identification number. Doctors, hospitals, healthcare organisations and allied health providers will receive similar identifiers.

    Both bills [Healthcare Identifiers Bill 2010 and Healthcare Identifiers (Consequential Amendments) Bill 2010] were passed with government amendments.

  • E-Health Infrastructure Being Put In Place In Australia

    All the necessary infrastructure for e-healthcare is being put in place in Australia, says Peter Fleming, Chief Executive Officer of National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA).

    The standards and foundations for nationwide e-health solutions in Australia have now mainly been completed, he asserts.

  • E-health market set to grow as Australia ages: KPMG

    Population living longer which would mean more health requirements, says KPMG partner

    IT companies are been urged to look at opportunities in the e-health market as Australia faces an aging population over the next 10 years.

    KPMG Australia partner, Bernard Salt, told delegates at Gartner’s Infrastructure, Operations and Data Centre Summit that as the baby boomer generation retires and lives longer, the requirement for e-health will rise.

  • E-health records sign onto australia.gov.au

    Whole-of-government sign-on system gains second member.

    The Department of Health and Ageing has settled on the Federal Government’s single sign-on portal as the primary method of accessing consumer e-health records when they are made available later this year.

    Consumers who opt for a personally controlled electronic health record from July 1 will be required to link their record to their login credentials on the australia.gov.au online portal in order to access the record online.

  • e-Health revolution will give Australian patients access to their health records

    The Australian Medical Association (AMA) which represents than 27,000 doctors across Australia has criticised the government's plans for 'e-health' medical records reform.

    The proposal suggested by the National Health and Hospitals Reform Commission (NHHRC) would give Australians access to their health records online and medical professionals would need a patient's permission to access the data.

    Having access to their own records is seen as vital to ensure consumer acceptance of the proposed e-health revolution and it would allow individuals to go online and update their records and add relevant information and doctors, specialists, pharmacists and other health professionals would all have to become "e-enabled" to access the data.

  • E-health Services to Boost IT Spending in Australian Healthcare

    Health information technology is the fastest growing segment of the Australian healthcare industry. With increasing use of e-health services, spending of healthcare industry in ICT has seen a significant surge during the past few years. As per our new research “Australian Healthcare IT Market Analysis”, healthcare IT market of the country is forecasted to grow at a CAGR of around 5.2% during 2010-2012. Our report has also discussed other drivers that are fuelling growth in the industry.

    In terms of overall spending trend of the Australian healthcare industry, IT spending has a very minor share in the overall spending. As per our industry estimates, healthcare industry spent only 2% of its overall healthcare spending in 2009, which is very less in comparison to the international standards. Thus, the segment holds a lot of potential for future growth. Our report will help clients to better understand the market dynamics and get an insight of the current and the future outlook of the Australian healthcare IT industry.

  • E-Health System to Soon Change the Lives of Australians

    In a bid to channelize the medical records of millions of Australians, the government has finally decided to keep track of the medical history so that it can be fused together later to form a summarized mega database.

    Unveiling the plan, the Health Minister, Nicola Roxon, said that every minute detail of a person’s medical record will be combined together through electronic medium in a short form by the mid of the next year.

    He further added that the e-health system will be accessible to both patients and physicians only after they enter they unique 16-digit identification number, which will be given to them very soon.

  • e-Health To Assist Treating Mental Health, Australia

    The potential future individual electronic health record (IEHR) will give healthcare providers better access to patient information and improve information-sharing among different health care professionals, leading to better quality care for patients.

    Typically, mental health patients visit a number of healthcare providers and it is possible for a patient to have a GP, psychologist and psychiatrist and also deal with other health professionals, pharmacists and even rehabilitation programs, who all need accurate and up to date information about the patient's care and medication.

  • E-Health: Australia's $5bn black hole

    Australia's health sector has made only "marginal" progress towards being able to exchange information electronically, despite governments investing more than $5 billion in the field over the last 10 years, according to a report released late last week.

    The report, which was developed by consultancy Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu earlier this year but only partially published last week, was endorsed by state and federal health ministers last week as a key strategy document outlining how the nation's outdated and dysfunctional health IT systems should be brought up to date.

  • e-Procurement-Marktplatz in Australien realisiert

    Auf Basis der Enfinity Procurement-Software von Intershop wurde der virtuelle Marktplatz in New South Wales realisiert. Die Regierung des australischen Bundesstaates erhofft sich durch die elektronische Beschaffung Einsparungen von jährlich mehr als 400 Millionen australischen Dollar.
  • Education technology in Australia

    In Australia, ICT played and continues to play a significant role in ensuring access to education by remote and rural communities, said Elodie Journet, Trade Commissioner, Singapore & Asean Industry Team Leader (ICT, Health and Medical), Australian Trade Commission (Austrade).

    Journet’s role in Austrade demands that Australian education and training is marketed and promoted internationally and it certainly helps the agency’s case when “Australia has become a leader in e-learning content and educational technology systems”.

  • Egovernment stretches to ehealth in Australia

    Egovernment technology is to stretch to ehealth in Australia after the Federal government approves an electronic health record system.

    Like most countries, walking into a doctors surgery can be a laborious process, with medical records being re-told over and over again before diagnosis can get under way. However, the Federal government has looked to amend this process by putting medical records online through an electronic health record system.

  • eHealth in Australia: Don't hold your breath

    After spending $5 billion over a decade on eHealth initiatives and countless reviews and reports on improving health sector ICT interoperability, the drive toward eHealth in Australia has stalled and is showing few signs of moving forward.

    According to a new report from consults Ovum, Australia's national level eHelath strategy development has slowed to a crawl.

  • Electronic health records rollout has not met expectations, Australian Medical Association says

    The Australian Medical Association says the rollout of electronic health records has not met expectations.

    Federal Health Minister Peter Dutton has announced an independent review of the project to see how it can be improved.

    AMA national president Dr Steve Hambleton, one of the panel members for the review, says e-health records need to be made easier for doctors to use.

  • Ernst & Young brands Australian governments digital laggards

    Global advisory and accounting firm Ernst and Young has blasted the Australian government’s efforts to digitise its services to the community and business as “poor”, warning that “the nation’s ability to gain competitive advantage through innovative use of digital technology will quickly be eroded” unless a lack of political and financial commitment is reversed.

    A new report — Digital Australia: State of the Nation — released on Monday by the firm report paints a dismal picture of government digitisation efforts to date, highlighting new findings that say that “almost a third of citizens nominated the public sector as providing their worst digital experience, putting it at the bottom of our national rankings.”

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