Re: [LINK] Apps for medicine not all goodness and light
On Thu, 2014-01-30 at 09:55 +1100, Jan Whitaker wrote: > I like the one about 'automation bias' which is to believe what the > computer tells you instead of the person sitting in front of you > telling you different. I still remember a Telstra employee with great fondness. Telstra cut off my business ISDN link a month early. They had my request IN WRITING - and still got the month wrong. Because I was not at home on the day they decided to disconnect the link, they were unable to access the house to restore the old analogue connections. But they did swap the exchange back to analogue, and to their eternal shame, marked the job as "complete". To restore my ISDN service, all they needed to do was go to the exchange and undo the swap. I knew *exactly* what the problem was, and spent a WEEK describing the problem, the cause and the solution to a conga-line of Telstra suckholes, each of whom said variations of "but the job has been completed". In vain did I tell them that it had not been completed, that it needed to be reversed anyway, and that a technician should be sent to check the exchange. Then - Clarissa! She listened. She checked her computer. I braced myself. Then she said "Yep. Could be. I'll send someone to check the exchange." Good on you, Clarissa. And yar boo sucks to the rest of the conga-line. Regards, K. -- ~~~ Karl Auer (ka...@biplane.com.au) http://www.biplane.com.au/kauer http://twitter.com/kauer389 GPG fingerprint: EC67 61E2 C2F6 EB55 884B E129 072B 0AF0 72AA 9882 Old fingerprint: B862 FB15 FE96 4961 BC62 1A40 6239 1208 9865 5F9A ___ Link mailing list Link@mailman.anu.edu.au http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link
Re: [LINK] Apps for medicine not all goodness and light
On 30/01/2014 9:55 AM, Jan Whitaker wrote: > http://www.theage.com.au/digital-life/smartphone-apps/risks-feared-in-medical-apps-20140129-31le8.html > > Interesting article reviewing some of the subtle risks involved in > apps for medical treatment and records. > I like the one about 'automation bias' which is to believe what the > computer tells you instead of the person sitting in front of you > telling you different. The Direst quote is: > ''Clinicians tend to believe information in medical records rather > than believe patients,'' she said. Clinicians may be expert in their health specialty but they are not expert in Information Systems. The golden rule in information systems is (or should be, there are too many IT specialists who do not realise this) that all data in an information system has a probability greater than zero of being incorrect. That probability varies according to the nature of the data, but you cannot assess or measure that probability just by looking at the data. From what I have read and know about automated medical records (a subset of eHealth) this single fact receives little or no attention. It is likely to bite someone very seriously in a highly sensitive part of their anatomy. For a clinician it could be their wallet, for a patient it could be far more severe or permanent. -- Regards brd Bernard Robertson-Dunn Sydney Australia email: b...@iimetro.com.au web: www.drbrd.com web: www.problemsfirst.com Blog: www.problemsfirst.com/blog ___ Link mailing list Link@mailman.anu.edu.au http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link
Re: [LINK] Apps for medicine not all goodness and light
Google and Apple health apps http://www.theverge.com/2014/1/31/5366242/apple-met-with-the-fda-to-talk-mobile-medical-applications-last-month FitBit http://www.livescience.com/40108-fitbit-flex-review.html ___ Link mailing list Link@mailman.anu.edu.au http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link