The web
version provides full indexed functionality with hyperlinks,
and may be downloaded, then read when
offline.ADVOCACY
WORKING ON YOUR BEHALF
The work of
the College continues unabated, with the Policy Unit
currently addressing issues such as After Hours,
multi-disciplinary teams, Stress certification, PHO
indicators, Sexual Health, ACC's Medical Misadventure,
Repeat Prescribing resource, Electronic special authorities,
Influenza vaccine consultation, Older Driver licensing,
workplace safety. Then there's Maori faculty development, in
the Pacific peoples area as well, with our education teams
working on the educational needs of Overseas Trained
Doctors. Primex is rolling on, with candidates sitting the
written papers in five centres on 9 October and the
clinical exams in four centres on 6 November. In the AVE
programme we have recently employed five assessors to
conduct the assessments at the end of the AVE programme. The
assessors will be involved in regular training and review.
Moving to a smaller more experienced group of assessors we
believe will bring greater consistency and robustness to the
process. We're reviewing the structure of our website, and
setting out the protocols around your crisis line, 0800
769 247
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POLICY
PHARMAC
Pharmac is consulting on a
number of issues that may affect you in everyday practice.
Comments to the Unit by Wednesday 6 October 2004 please:
policy@rnzcgp.org.nz
Electronic special authority
applications
What do you think of Pharmac's latest
proposal on electronic special authority applications,
audit, and requirements for GPs to inform their patients of
how their health information may be shared?
Pharmac
proposes to roll out the special authority process that
requires a digital certificate, Health Intranet access that
links with your PMS through broadband. It also intends to
introduce an audit of clinicians that use such a system and
will require them to sign an agreement stating they
understand they could be audited and that they have a duty
to remind their patients that their identifiable health
information may be used for such a purpose.
The College
considers quality outcomes require meaningful input from
clinician-based organisations such as the RNZCGP. Essential
to this is work on the criteria required for the audit and
the evaluation of the process. Of critical importance is
the definition of compliance with the criteria (which must
be evidence based), and the consequences for non-
compliance. These are issues of great interest and concern
to the RNZCGP, and we will request that we are involved with
any further development in this area.
As a related but
side issue do you belong to a PHO and if so how do you
ensure your patients are aware of what happens with their
health information in this organisation now they are
enrolled with the PHO and not just registered with your
practice?
Rural practitioners - Remote practitioner supply
order review
Would any rural GPs be affected by Pharmac's
proposal to change their criteria for being able to apply
for Remote PSO's? Do any of you at the moment meet
Pharmac's criteria but do not have a RRS of 35 or more?
Pharmac proposes to review the remote PSO list of rural
areas so it reflects the Ministry's list of rural areas
based on the rural ranking scale. The Pharmac list can be
found in Section E Part II of the Pharmaceutical Schedule.
They also want to change the word remote to
rural.
Influenza vaccination
Do you have any comments
to make on this suggested sole supply?
Pharmac proposes
to subsidise the Vaxigrip vaccine from 1 March 2005, with a
minimum order requirement depending on the time in the
influenza season that it is ordered (a minimum of 50 units
in March to 10 units in June). The eligibility criteria
remain the same, but there may be the opportunity for the
DHBs to arrange for their own variation of these criteria.
Should a pandemic occur this sole supply status would not
hold for the duration of the pandemic.
Bulk Supply Order
Review
Would the removal of BSO affect you as a GP?
Pharmac is proposing to remove the BSO provision. However
the PSO provision would remain available and would be
unaffected by this proposal
OLDER DRIVER LICENSING
The
Ministers of Transport, Transport Safety, and Senior
Citizens have directed the MOT to review, with key
stakeholder groups, the policy framework and operational
aspects relating to older driver licensing. The report back
date, with options and recommendations to Ministers, is 30
June 2005. GPs interested and qualified to represent the
College should contact Jim Turner, ph 04 496 5968, email: jturner@rnzcgp.org.nz
HEPATITIS B PROTOCOL
The Hepatitis Foundation in Whakatane
has asked the College to nominate a representative to a
committee to review the protocol for the follow-up and
treatment of Hepatitis B carriers. The revised guidelines
will be published and distributed to general practitioners
and other health professionals. It is envisaged that the
committee will also include a hepatologist, an infectious
disease physician, a hepatobiliary and transplant surgeon, a
gastroenterologist, a virologist, and the Hepatitis
Foundation CEO. Communication will normally be by e-mail and
teleconference. College members interested should contact
Jim Turner at the College
jturner@rnzcgp.org,nz.
DHBNZ LOOKING FOR GP INPUT ON
MEDICATION SAFETY
Waitemata DHB CEO Dwayne Crombie chairs
the Safe Use of Medicines group for DHBNZ, and seeks GP
input for the group. Any GP with a particular interest in
improving medication safety across DHBs should contact him
directly, Private Bag 93 503, Takapuna or Ph 09 486
8953.
COLLEGE QUALITY WORKSHOP
Date: 15 & 16 October
2004 Friday - 15 October: 2pm to 6.30pm Dinner - 7pm @
Downtown or College?? Saturday - 16 October: 8.30am to 3pm
Where: The College, 3rd floor, 88 The Terrace, Wellington
Cost for attendance: $100 per person
Workshop theme:
Practice Accreditation - Getting started? The CORNERSTONE
Accreditation Programme is now underway. - This
workshop will help you to apply Aiming for Excellence
effectively and prepare for a successful outcome to an
assessment visit. Success depends on: - Working together
as a team - Having good systems in place - Being
organised
This means - 'Buy in' from the whole team -
Effective clinical practice - Effective management -
Demonstrating to others that you are providing good care The
College Quality team will use indicators from Aiming for
Excellence to help you: - Learn about - effective
processes to prepare for practice accreditation - Learn
from those who have been through the assessment and those
who carry out the assessments. We want to continue to
build a network of people who are passionate about quality
in general practice & primary care. This workshop is aimed
at GPs, practice nurses, practice managers/administrators,
GP liaison group, and others working in PHOs or DHBs.
Do
you have a burning issue, new idea or concern? The College
is keen to respond and support where possible. Write down
your thoughts and bring them to the Issues Forum on
Saturday afternoon.
RSVP - 1 October, 2004 - Liz Walters,
lwalters@rnzcgp.org.nz
- phone (04) 496 5993
MOPS Reporting
For the people
reporting 1 September 2003 ~ 31 August 2004 the credit
summary request was sent out last week. The delay will give
registered providers time to get their participation
documentation up to date either by paper or by using the
MOPS Online process. We will also send to this group the
MOPS Programme for the 3rd triennium which began 1 June
2004.
CME
NZRC Core Certification Level 4 -7 Courses at
Wakefield Hospital. (8 hours = 16 endorsed credits for MOPS
and AVE purposes) Course dates for 2004: Oct 16, Nov 13.
You will require the text six weeks prior to the course date
to allow for pre-reading. For information or to book please
contact: Ginny Abernethy Wakefield Hospital Private Bag 7909
Newtown, Wellington. Ph (04)3818100 Ext 5316 or Email:
ginnya@wakefield.co.nz
CONFERENCES
http://www.rnzcgp.org.nz/conferences.php
The Winds of
Change, New Zealand Private Hospitals Association
conference, 18-19 October, Westpac Stadium, Wellington.
Email:
joy@eventlinknz.co.nz, tel (03)372 9116
Regional
Conference on Cost Effective Healthcare 21-23 October 2004,
Grand Copthorne Waterfront Hotel, Singapore. Further
information:
http://www.cehealth2004.com
Integrated Women's Health
Care, The Royal Hospital for Women - Centenary Scientific
Conference, 20-22 October 2004, Masonic Centre, Castlereagh
Street, Sydney Enquiries: Ph (61) 1300 797 794; email:
registrations@healthed.com.au
Three conferences,
Wellington,1-6 November 2004 Wellington Convention Centre, 6
November 2004.
Evidence in Action (www.g-i-n.net)-
Guidelines international network 1 November - 3pm 3 November
5th International Conference on Priorities in Health Care
www.healthcarepriorities.org) - Internatinal Society on
Priorities in Health Care. 4pm 3 November to 5 November.
Queries: Wendy Edgar (MOH), (04) 496 2299,
wendy_edgar@moh.govt.nz
Economics, Priority setting
and Health Care Funding, One-day workshop for
decision-makers, practitioners and researchers interested
in priority setting in health care organisations. To
register online:
http://www.saviosulutions.com/secure/phc04reg.htm
NEWS DIGEST (from the NZPA wires)
FIRST BABY BORN AFTER
OVARIAN TISSUE TRANSPLANT
Brussels, Sept 24 Reuters - A
Belgian woman has given birth to the first baby born after
an ovarian tissue transplant, a medical breakthrough that
brings hope to young cancer patients whose fertility may be
damaged by treatment. The baby, a healthy girl named
Tamara, weighed 3.72kg. Her mother is Ouarda Touirat, 32.
"The mother and baby are in excellent health," the
spokeswoman told Reuters. "This astonishing feat gives
tremendous hope to all women rendered infertile by cancer
treatments," the hospital added in a statement. Doctors led
by Professor Jacques Donnez, head of the Department of
Gynaecology and Andrology at the Cliniques Universitaires
Saint-Luc, removed and froze ovarian tissue from Touirat in
1997, when she was 25. Touirat had Stage IV Hodgkin's
lymphoma and needed both chemo- and radiotherapy. Such
treatments can save patients' lives but can also damage or
destroy their fertility. The ovarian transplant was carried
out six years after her treatment, when doctors declared she
was free of cancer. Four months after the ovarian tissue
was transplanted Touirat's ovarian function was restored.
Tamara was conceived naturally after the
transplant.
RESEARCHERS PUZZLED BY HIGH NUMBER OF
PNEUMONIA CASES
Auckland, Sept 26 - Auckland children are
five times more likely to be hospitalised with pneumonia
than children in other developed countries and researchers
are trying to find out why. Childhood pneumonia costs the
country about $7 million a year in direct medical costs but
much of it is thought to be preventable. Dr Cameron
Grant, associate professor of paediatrics in Auckland
University's Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences is the
principal investigator of a study to look at the reasons
for New Zealand's high hospitalisation rates. A
paediatrician at Starship Children's Hospital, he said
between 1993 and 1996, the admission rate for children aged
0-14 with pneumonia was 5 per 1000. In the United States
the figure was five to 10 times lower.
RUSSIA MUST IODISE
SALT, UNICEF ENVOY KARPOV SAYS
Geneva, Sept 23 Reuters -
Russia and Ukraine must iodise all salt to protect their
children from the risk of mental retardation, former world
chess champion and Unicef ambassador Anatoly Karpov said on
Thursday. Russia and the Ukraine account for half of the 2.5
million babies born each year in the former Soviet Union
and eastern Europe who are exposed to iodine deficiency,
the leading cause of retardation, according to the UN
Children's Fund (Unicef). "This is one of the few problems
we know how to solve -- we must act strongly and quickly.
It only costs five US cents per person per year," Karpov
told a news briefing in Geneva. Only 48 percent of homes in
Central and Eastern Europe, the Commonwealth of Independent
States (CIS) and the Baltic States use iodised salt,
according to Unicef.
HUMAN STEM CELLS SHOW POTENTIAL FOR
EYE REPAIR Washington, Sept 23 Reuters - Corporate
researchers working outside controversial federal
restraints said on Thursday they had engineered human stem
cells that they believe could be used to repair eyes. The
team at Advanced Cell Technology in Massachusetts worked
with stem cells taken from human embryos made by a team at
Harvard University, and coaxed them to form retinal cells.
"This is the first derivation of retinal cells from human
embryonic stem cells," said Dr. Robert Lanza, Advanced Cell
Technology's scientific director. "We believe these new
retinal cells could be used to treat blindness and may, in
fact, be the one of the very first applications of embryonic
stem- cell technology.''
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The
contents of ePULSE are sourced from a wide range of
organisations and other publications and are presented for
the information of recipients. Nothing herein should be
construed as reflecting the views, or carrying The
endorsement, of the Royal New Zealand College of General
Practitioners unless this is specifically indicated.
We
also welcome your feedback on what should be included in
this update. Use reply email to let Bob Fox know your views,
>
bfox@rnzcgp.org.nz
To UNSUBSCRIBE from this
newsletter please send an email message to
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Permission is hereby granted to
redistribute this newsletter either electronically or in
print provided that it is either done so in its entirety or
that the source is acknowledged.(c) 2004 Royal New
Zealand College of General Practitioners. All rights
reserved.
ENDS
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