Presentations by Dallas Stower, Deputy Director-General, Transformation and Enabling Technologies, Department of Housing and Public Works and Damian Green
Deputy Director-General, eHealth Queensland
Chief Information Officer, Queensland Health
at the COVID-19 Partners in Technology briefing.
Summary and Q&As from Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer's presentation to the Queensland Digital Industry at the COVID-19 Partners in Technology briefing.
Summary and Q&As from Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer and presentation by Dr Sarah Pearson, Deputy Director-General Department of Innovation and Tourism Industry Development to the Queensland Digital Industry at the COVID-19 Partners in Technology briefing.
Summary and Q&As from Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer's presentation to the Queensland Digital Industry at the COVID-19 Partners in Technology briefing.
Presentation, summary and Q&A by Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer and presentation by Michael Nikolic, Chief Digital Officer, Queensland Correctional Services at the COVID-19 Partners in Technology briefing.
Presentation, summary and Q&A by Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer and presentation by Prof. Marek Kowalkiewicz, Founding Director, Centre for the Digital Economy, QUT at the COVID-19 Partners in Technology briefing.
Summary and Q&As from Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer's presentation to the Queensland Digital Industry at the COVID-19 Partners in Technology briefing.
Summary and Q&As from Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer's presentation to the Queensland Digital Industry at the COVID-19 Partners in Technology briefing.
Summary and Q&As from Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer and presentation by Dr Sarah Pearson, Deputy Director-General Department of Innovation and Tourism Industry Development to the Queensland Digital Industry at the COVID-19 Partners in Technology briefing.
Summary and Q&As from Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer's presentation to the Queensland Digital Industry at the COVID-19 Partners in Technology briefing.
Presentation, summary and Q&A by Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer and presentation by Michael Nikolic, Chief Digital Officer, Queensland Correctional Services at the COVID-19 Partners in Technology briefing.
Presentation, summary and Q&A by Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer and presentation by Prof. Marek Kowalkiewicz, Founding Director, Centre for the Digital Economy, QUT at the COVID-19 Partners in Technology briefing.
Summary and Q&As from Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer's presentation to the Queensland Digital Industry at the COVID-19 Partners in Technology briefing.
Presentation and contacts for 1 July Partners in Technology webinar hosted by Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer with Michael O’Leary, Chief Information Officer and Assistant Director-General (IT), Department of Education.
Presentation and Q&A by Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer and presentation by Prof. Marek Kowalkiewicz, Founding Director, Centre for the Digital Economy, QUT at the COVID-19 Partners in Technology briefing.
Partners in Technology - future of customer and digital delivery in Queenslan...Digital Queensland
Future of customer and digital delivery in Queensland Government
Department of Housing and Public Works
Andrew Mills, Queensland Government Chief Information Officer
Presentations by Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer and presentation by Dr Sarah Pearson, Deputy Director-General Department of Innovation and Tourism Industry Development to the Queensland Digital Industry at the COVID-19 Partners in Technology briefing.
This Partners in Technology briefing provided an opportunity for local ICT industry representatives to hear from Shaun Nesbitt, Chief Information Officer, Seqwater
The Challenges Facing Local CIOs | Geoff Connell | March 2016Anna Fenston
Presentation on 'The Challenges facing local CIOs' by Geoff Connell from the Local Digital Futures - Working as One: Platforms & Sharing event held on 4 March 2016 in London.
Talk given in Manchester for World IA Day on 24th Feb 2018.
The Home Office, like the rest of the UK government, is involved in a huge effort to modernise service delivery in line with the possibilities offered by the internet and the digital age.
Our role is to re-imagine how we might deliver fundamental public services through digital channels. But millions of working age adults have never used the internet. How will they interact with the government of the future?
Digital twin enabled services – digital twins and future trendsShaun West
We need to understand digital twins and how they can help us before we can consider future trends and applications.
- Digital twins and complex systems
- Digital twins help us to make decisions and act
- Digital twins must support different outlooks
- Digital twin design
Big Data in Malaysia: Emerging Sector Profile 2014Tirath Ramdas
Big Data has become part of everyday organisational parlance. Increasingly, this awareness is being transformed into practice. Support for harnessing data to amplify capabilities and achieve organisational objectives at practitioner and senior management levels is becoming aligned. A report by Forrester on Big Data adoption in Asia Pacific in 2013-2014 observed a trend across all industries of ‘using more types of data, from more sources, to enable timelier better-informed insights’. Similarly in Malaysia, there is growing cultural acceptance that Big Data can and should enhance decision-making processes, although pathways for adoption are not uniformly understood. Nevertheless, we are now observing a transition phase from curiosity and enthusiasm to buy-in and action across startup, corporate, and government organisations. This groundswell of interest fuels the basis of Big Data Malaysia, a networking group for professionals with interest in all things Big Data, including NoSQL, Hadoop, data science, visualisation, business use cases, data governance, open data, and more. Our community has welcomed participation from stakeholders ranging from computer scientists to data journalists, reflecting a broad societal interest in Big Data. Our mission is to encourage high caliber knowledge sharing and to provide a space for professionals with different interests to collaborate. This report grew out of a need to understand in more detail the various networks that Big Data Malaysia helps to connect. In order to support the Big Data ecosystem that we see emerging, we identified critical questions that required further investigation, in particular:
• What are the opportunities and barriers to Big Data activity in Malaysia?
• Who is merely ‘interested’, versus who is actually committed?
• What is the current and future capacity for Big Data talent?
• Where are the critical gaps in training and skills?
• What are the soft inhibitors, including data access, regulation and perception?
There are two parts to this report. The first includes results from a questionnaire, while the latter features interviews conducted in-person or via email. In collaboration with various partners, we devised and distributed a questionnaire online across our networks and collected responses during October 2013. In our final sample, we collected responses from 108 individuals over 90 organisations. As our report will show, these viewpoints represent a diversity of organisational stakeholders and industries in the Big Data space. We followed up with interviews of high-profile respondents for richer insight.
Summary of a talk I did at Beyond The Smart City June 25th 2015 in Devon for the Devon Node of the ODI. It includes examples of some of the work we do at Visceral Business.
The Home Office, like the rest of the UK government, is involved in a huge effort to modernise service delivery in line with the possibilities offered by the internet and the digital age.
Our role as designers and researchers, is to re-imagine how we might deliver fundamental public services through digital channels. But we have an unusual challenge - we need to make services that work for everyone.
In this talk I share some real life examples of how we are making sure Home Office services work for everyone who needs them, as we work to re-shape the department around the end-to-end services that millions of people have to use.
Infographic | The Growing Need for Fast, Secure TelehealthInsight
Could telehealth be the way patients are triaged in the future? Let’s explore the current landscape, the benefits of telehealth and what’s needed for it to gain widespread traction across the industry.
Presentation and contacts for 1 July Partners in Technology webinar hosted by Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer with Michael O’Leary, Chief Information Officer and Assistant Director-General (IT), Department of Education.
Presentation and Q&A by Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer and presentation by Prof. Marek Kowalkiewicz, Founding Director, Centre for the Digital Economy, QUT at the COVID-19 Partners in Technology briefing.
Partners in Technology - future of customer and digital delivery in Queenslan...Digital Queensland
Future of customer and digital delivery in Queensland Government
Department of Housing and Public Works
Andrew Mills, Queensland Government Chief Information Officer
Presentations by Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer and presentation by Dr Sarah Pearson, Deputy Director-General Department of Innovation and Tourism Industry Development to the Queensland Digital Industry at the COVID-19 Partners in Technology briefing.
This Partners in Technology briefing provided an opportunity for local ICT industry representatives to hear from Shaun Nesbitt, Chief Information Officer, Seqwater
The Challenges Facing Local CIOs | Geoff Connell | March 2016Anna Fenston
Presentation on 'The Challenges facing local CIOs' by Geoff Connell from the Local Digital Futures - Working as One: Platforms & Sharing event held on 4 March 2016 in London.
Talk given in Manchester for World IA Day on 24th Feb 2018.
The Home Office, like the rest of the UK government, is involved in a huge effort to modernise service delivery in line with the possibilities offered by the internet and the digital age.
Our role is to re-imagine how we might deliver fundamental public services through digital channels. But millions of working age adults have never used the internet. How will they interact with the government of the future?
Digital twin enabled services – digital twins and future trendsShaun West
We need to understand digital twins and how they can help us before we can consider future trends and applications.
- Digital twins and complex systems
- Digital twins help us to make decisions and act
- Digital twins must support different outlooks
- Digital twin design
Big Data in Malaysia: Emerging Sector Profile 2014Tirath Ramdas
Big Data has become part of everyday organisational parlance. Increasingly, this awareness is being transformed into practice. Support for harnessing data to amplify capabilities and achieve organisational objectives at practitioner and senior management levels is becoming aligned. A report by Forrester on Big Data adoption in Asia Pacific in 2013-2014 observed a trend across all industries of ‘using more types of data, from more sources, to enable timelier better-informed insights’. Similarly in Malaysia, there is growing cultural acceptance that Big Data can and should enhance decision-making processes, although pathways for adoption are not uniformly understood. Nevertheless, we are now observing a transition phase from curiosity and enthusiasm to buy-in and action across startup, corporate, and government organisations. This groundswell of interest fuels the basis of Big Data Malaysia, a networking group for professionals with interest in all things Big Data, including NoSQL, Hadoop, data science, visualisation, business use cases, data governance, open data, and more. Our community has welcomed participation from stakeholders ranging from computer scientists to data journalists, reflecting a broad societal interest in Big Data. Our mission is to encourage high caliber knowledge sharing and to provide a space for professionals with different interests to collaborate. This report grew out of a need to understand in more detail the various networks that Big Data Malaysia helps to connect. In order to support the Big Data ecosystem that we see emerging, we identified critical questions that required further investigation, in particular:
• What are the opportunities and barriers to Big Data activity in Malaysia?
• Who is merely ‘interested’, versus who is actually committed?
• What is the current and future capacity for Big Data talent?
• Where are the critical gaps in training and skills?
• What are the soft inhibitors, including data access, regulation and perception?
There are two parts to this report. The first includes results from a questionnaire, while the latter features interviews conducted in-person or via email. In collaboration with various partners, we devised and distributed a questionnaire online across our networks and collected responses during October 2013. In our final sample, we collected responses from 108 individuals over 90 organisations. As our report will show, these viewpoints represent a diversity of organisational stakeholders and industries in the Big Data space. We followed up with interviews of high-profile respondents for richer insight.
Summary of a talk I did at Beyond The Smart City June 25th 2015 in Devon for the Devon Node of the ODI. It includes examples of some of the work we do at Visceral Business.
The Home Office, like the rest of the UK government, is involved in a huge effort to modernise service delivery in line with the possibilities offered by the internet and the digital age.
Our role as designers and researchers, is to re-imagine how we might deliver fundamental public services through digital channels. But we have an unusual challenge - we need to make services that work for everyone.
In this talk I share some real life examples of how we are making sure Home Office services work for everyone who needs them, as we work to re-shape the department around the end-to-end services that millions of people have to use.
Infographic | The Growing Need for Fast, Secure TelehealthInsight
Could telehealth be the way patients are triaged in the future? Let’s explore the current landscape, the benefits of telehealth and what’s needed for it to gain widespread traction across the industry.
Digital Transformation of Healthcare amid COVID-19 Pandemic.pdfShelly Megan
The COVID-19 pandemic led to the digitalization of the healthcare sector, primarily influencing the remote working capabilities and user experience. Digitalization of healthcare fastened the diagnosis, enabling faster and better treatment. Tele medicine has proved to be very beneficial. The digital supply chain management solution is another significant advancement. These digital advancements will have a long-term impact on the healthcare system, boosting the user experience and affordability.
Webinar: Digital Health Strategy: Leveraging Emerging Technologies in HealthcareIntellectsoft
WEBINAR VIDEO - https://www.intellectsoft.net/l/31/webinar-digital-healthcare
JOIN OUR WEBINAR TO:
- Explore what changed for healthcare practices and operations during COVID-19 and predict what leaders can expect in terms of recovery;
- Discover today’s featured examples of our clients’ technology solutions that can help you provide better and more efficient services;
- Discuss how to evolve and adapt for the rest of 2020 and into 2021 using emerging technologies and more efficient solutions.
BEST FOR:
- Сhief Medical Officers
- Doctors Pharmaceuticals
- HR Department Outstaffing
- Telemedicine Workers
- Insurance Companies
- Pharmacies
- Laboratories
- Private Hospitals
- Academical Health Centres
- Private Healthcare Facilities
- Management Information Systems
https://www.intellectsoft.net/
Digital health innovation - future nhs stage, 1pm, 2 september 2015NHS England
Expo is the most significant annual health and social care event in the calendar, uniting more NHS and care leaders, commissioners, clinicians, voluntary sector partners, innovators and media than any other health and care event.
Expo 15 returned to Manchester and was hosted once again by NHS England. Around 5000 people a day from health and care, the voluntary sector, local government, and industry joined together at Manchester Central Convention Centre for two packed days of speakers, workshops, exhibitions and professional development.
This year, Expo was more relevant and engaging than ever before, happening within the first 100 days of the new Government, and almost 12 months after the publication of the NHS Five Year Forward View. It was also a great opportunity to check on and learn from the progress of Greater Manchester as the area prepares to take over a £6 billion devolved health and social care budget, pledging to integrate hospital, community, primary and social care and vastly improve health and well-being.
More information is available online: www.expo.nhs.uk
Disruptive Insurance Product Innovation Using IoT in HealthcareAmazon Web Services
Potential for consumer healthcare
1. No more non-value apps – consumers want insights
2. Lifestyle and Wellness platforms will win
3. Data INTENSITY = New OPPORTUNITY
4. Real Time is the NORM
5. Machines learn to IMPROVE our lives
Speakers:
Gaurav Sharma, Senior Industry Principal and Lead for Finacle on Cloud business, Infosys Finacle
&
Michael Braendle, Principal Cloud Architect, Professional Services, AWS
EHR with Health Applications b.sc ii Sem.pptxanjalatchi
EHRs are a vital part of health IT and can: Contain a patient's medical history, diagnoses, medications, treatment plans, immunization dates, allergies, radiology images, and laboratory and test results. Allow access to evidence-based tools that providers can use to make decisions about a patient's care.
Future of Digital Healthcare on Cloud .pdfayushiqss
Healthcare has been an integral part of the discussion and a transformative force towards innovation. With increasing advancements and awareness, people are becoming more conscious about their choices, what they eat, and where and how to get the best treatment facilities. This brings the need to provide the best healthcare services, disease detection, and the right treatment, with the best tools and hospital staff. The internet has played a significant role in serving such kinds of top-notch consumer needs. One of these internets of things is Cloud Technology. Let’s look at cloud computing in healthcare, models of cloud computing and how it has transformed the digital healthcare sector.
How IoMT is Enabling Healthcare & Medtech Organizations to Tackle Critical Ch...JessiRyan1
This Infographics shows the best unique ways how IoMT will be helpful for healthcare industries and Medtech Organizations to overcome the critical challenges.
India Telemedicine Market [2030]: Top Trends, Size, and Competitive Intellige...Kumar Satyam
According to the TechSci Research report titled "India Telemedicine Market - Industry Size, Share, Trends, Competition Forecast & Opportunities, 2030F," the India Telemedicine Market stood at USD 1.54 billion in 2024 and is projected to grow at a CAGR of 20.75% during the forecast period from 2026 to 2030. The significant growth of the telemedicine market in India can be attributed to several factors, including the increasing penetration of internet and smartphone usage, government digital health initiatives, and the convenience and cost-effectiveness of telemedicine services. This comprehensive report aims to provide a detailed analysis of the current market trends, key drivers, competitive landscape, and the numerous benefits offered by telemedicine, making healthcare services more accessible and efficient for the Indian population.
Recent Trends in the India Telemedicine Market
Increasing Internet and Smartphone Penetration
One of the most significant trends driving the growth of the telemedicine market in India is the increasing penetration of internet and smartphone usage. With the widespread availability of affordable smartphones and data plans, a larger portion of the population, including those in rural and remote areas, can now access healthcare services through telemedicine platforms. This digital transformation has bridged the gap between healthcare providers and patients, allowing for remote consultations and continuous health monitoring.
The global telemedicine market size is projected to reach USD 272,756.3 Million by 2027 from USD 104,437.92 Million in 2021, at a CAGR of 26.9% during the forecast period (2020 - 2027).
Enabling community and patient centred care, pop up uni, 11am, 3 september 2015NHS England
Expo is the most significant annual health and social care event in the calendar, uniting more NHS and care leaders, commissioners, clinicians, voluntary sector partners, innovators and media than any other health and care event.
Expo 15 returned to Manchester and was hosted once again by NHS England. Around 5000 people a day from health and care, the voluntary sector, local government, and industry joined together at Manchester Central Convention Centre for two packed days of speakers, workshops, exhibitions and professional development.
This year, Expo was more relevant and engaging than ever before, happening within the first 100 days of the new Government, and almost 12 months after the publication of the NHS Five Year Forward View. It was also a great opportunity to check on and learn from the progress of Greater Manchester as the area prepares to take over a £6 billion devolved health and social care budget, pledging to integrate hospital, community, primary and social care and vastly improve health and well-being.
More information is available online: www.expo.nhs.uk
PiT briefing at State Library of Queensland
Chris McLaren - Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer
Building a thriving Queensland digital economy
Rob Champion - Queensland Government Chief Information Security Officer
Cyber Security
Presentation and contacts for 10 February Partners in Technology briefing hosted by Chris McLaren, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer with Michael O’Leary, Chief Information Officer and Assistant Director-General (IT), Department of Education and Lea Diffey, Deputy Director-General Innovation, Department of Tourism, Innovation and Sport
Presentations by Chris Fechner, Queensland Government Chief Customer and Digital Officer and presentation by Michael Nikolic, Chief Digital Officer, Queensland Correctional Services at the COVID-19 Partners in Technology briefing.
The digital future of DES
Department of Environment and Science
Tim Barker, Chief Digital Officer, Digital and Information Services Branch, Science and Technology Division
Partners in Technology - Establish and prove foundational ICT capabilityDigital Queensland
Partners in Technology Briefing 2 August 2019
Ashley Hill
Chief Information Officer and Executive Director
Department of Justice and Attorney-General (DJAG)
Partners in Technology - Opportunities for delivering better ICT services Digital Queensland
Partners in Technology Briefing 2 August 2019
Michael O’Leary
Assistant Director-General, Information and Technologies and Chief Information Officer
Department of Education
Partners in Technology (PiT) - Be a Responsive GovernmentDigital Queensland
Irene Violet
Assistant Director-General
Responsive Government
Department of Housing and Public Works
Presentation on Responsive government for Partners in Technology 2 November 2018
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
Many ways to support street children.pptxSERUDS INDIA
By raising awareness, providing support, advocating for change, and offering assistance to children in need, individuals can play a crucial role in improving the lives of street children and helping them realize their full potential
Donate Us
https://serudsindia.org/how-individuals-can-support-street-children-in-india/
#donatefororphan, #donateforhomelesschildren, #childeducation, #ngochildeducation, #donateforeducation, #donationforchildeducation, #sponsorforpoorchild, #sponsororphanage #sponsororphanchild, #donation, #education, #charity, #educationforchild, #seruds, #kurnool, #joyhome
A process server is a authorized person for delivering legal documents, such as summons, complaints, subpoenas, and other court papers, to peoples involved in legal proceedings.
Understanding the Challenges of Street ChildrenSERUDS INDIA
By raising awareness, providing support, advocating for change, and offering assistance to children in need, individuals can play a crucial role in improving the lives of street children and helping them realize their full potential
Donate Us
https://serudsindia.org/how-individuals-can-support-street-children-in-india/
#donatefororphan, #donateforhomelesschildren, #childeducation, #ngochildeducation, #donateforeducation, #donationforchildeducation, #sponsorforpoorchild, #sponsororphanage #sponsororphanchild, #donation, #education, #charity, #educationforchild, #seruds, #kurnool, #joyhome
Russian anarchist and anti-war movement in the third year of full-scale warAntti Rautiainen
Anarchist group ANA Regensburg hosted my online-presentation on 16th of May 2024, in which I discussed tactics of anti-war activism in Russia, and reasons why the anti-war movement has not been able to make an impact to change the course of events yet. Cases of anarchists repressed for anti-war activities are presented, as well as strategies of support for political prisoners, and modest successes in supporting their struggles.
Thumbnail picture is by MediaZona, you may read their report on anti-war arson attacks in Russia here: https://en.zona.media/article/2022/10/13/burn-map
Links:
Autonomous Action
http://Avtonom.org
Anarchist Black Cross Moscow
http://Avtonom.org/abc
Solidarity Zone
https://t.me/solidarity_zone
Memorial
https://memopzk.org/, https://t.me/pzk_memorial
OVD-Info
https://en.ovdinfo.org/antiwar-ovd-info-guide
RosUznik
https://rosuznik.org/
Uznik Online
http://uznikonline.tilda.ws/
Russian Reader
https://therussianreader.com/
ABC Irkutsk
https://abc38.noblogs.org/
Send mail to prisoners from abroad:
http://Prisonmail.online
YouTube: https://youtu.be/c5nSOdU48O8
Spotify: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/libertarianlifecoach/episodes/Russian-anarchist-and-anti-war-movement-in-the-third-year-of-full-scale-war-e2k8ai4
Presentation by Jared Jageler, David Adler, Noelia Duchovny, and Evan Herrnstadt, analysts in CBO’s Microeconomic Studies and Health Analysis Divisions, at the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists Summer Conference.
1. Queensland Digital Industry Webcast
Partners in Technology
Mr Dallas Stower
Deputy Director-General, Transformation and Enabling Technologies
Department of Housing and Public Works
and
Mr Damian Green
Deputy Director-General, eHealth Queensland
&
Chief Information Officer, Queensland Health
Moderator: Mr Mark Sydney
3. 2
Prevention,
Primary and
Community Care
Alternative
Models of Care
Pre-Presentation
Emergency
Diagnosis
In-Patient
Out-Patient
Continuity
of Care
Ongoing
Management
Patient
Clinician
Electronic
Medical
Records
Telemedicine
Connectivity
Anywhere
Wearables
Digitalenablers
Precision
Medicine
Data analytics
Robotics, AI
Predictive
Analytics
Remote
Monitoring,
mHealth Apps
Virtual care
centre
4. Horizon 1
within 3 years
Horizon 2
within 5 years
Horizon 3
within 10 years
Workstations
of Wheels
Follow Me
Desktops
Integrated
Medical
Devices
Infrastructure
Uplifts
Bring your
own
Device
Contemporary
Workplace
Identity
Access
Management
Systems
Interoperability
Patient
Online
Portal
Wearables
mHealth
Apps
“Healthier.
Happier.”
website
Telehealth
(Virtual Care)
Digital
Genomics
Strategy
Precision
Medicine
Clinical &
Business
Intelligence
Population
Health
Speech
Analysis
Diagnosis
Telehealth
between
Providers
Integrated
Referrals
Management
ieMR
Rollout
Next-
Generation
Nurse Call
Digital Care
Delivery
Roadmap
Current initiatives and
future capabilities
Laboratory
Information
System
Financial
Systems
Renewal
Integrated
Workforce
Management
Assistive
Robots
Drones
(Medications)
Remote
Monitoring
Virtual Care
Centres
Infrastructure
Uplifts
Healthcare
Interoperability
Enhanced
Network
Connectivity
Cloud
Computing
Digital
Medical
Imaging
Digital
Collaboration
(O365)
Cyber
Security
Information
Management
Strategy
Patient
Administration
System
My Health
Record
Implantable
and
Digestible
Expand
The
Viewer
Access
Notifiable
conditions
system
National
Digital
Pregnancy
Record
3
5. Strategic Goals
1. Greater patient engagement
2. Healthier and safer communities
3. More productive and targeted care
Delivering
Healthcare
4. More systematic, high quality and safer care
5. Improved resource management
Connecting
Healthcare
6. Better coordinated care
7. Improved access to expert knowledge
Pursuing
Innovation
8. Continuous system improvement
and learning
Focus AreasDirection
Patient Engagement
Personal Wellness
Population Health
Precision Medicine
Digital Hospitals and Facilities
Virtual Care
Digital Foundations
Interoperability and Automation
Digital Clinical Systems
Electronic Health Records
Integrated Care
Information Sharing
Digital Innovation
Clinical and Business Intelligence
Data Analytics
Learning Healthcare
Promoting
wellbeing
Strategic Direction
7. My Health, Queensland’s future:
Advancing Health 2026
Horizon 1 - within 3 years
Building
consistent and sustainable capability
Horizon 2 - within 5 years
Optimising
integrating, growing and expanding
digital health and digital workforce
capabilities
Horizon 3 - within 10 years
Transforming
scaled digital health
6
Digital Health Strategic Vision Queensland 2026 (released in 2017) to
support the delivery of Advancing Health 2026
8. COVID-19 - system response
7
Digital applications
to support airport
and border screening
Optimising
digital
platforms
Digital application
systems for Hospital
and Health Services
Procurement
and Suppliers
Critical
care
systems
9. 8
COVID-19 - Workforce mobility
Workforce
mobility
30,000
concurrent
connections
8 gigabits per
second
(60% increase)
Telephony
capacity
470 channels
(96% increase)
WAN increase
13.820 Gbps
(402% increase)
20% increase
in activity
266% increase
in activity33.5% increase
in activity
Mass
deployment
and update
30% increase
in activity
Increased
infrastructure
and security
uplift
10. COVID-19 - New models of care
9
Models
of care
Virtual
Emergency
Department
Virtual wards
and clinics
Telehealth and
Telemedicine
Hospital in the
Home
14. Key Links and Contact
Email: Share questions, ideas, challenges and offers of assistance by emailing
ICTIndustryEngagement@hpw.qld.gov.au
Online: Queensland Government ICT online resources at:
https://www.business.qld.gov.au/industries/science-it-creative/ict
Short form ICT contract: created especially for COVID-19 response where the
value is less than $1m and duration is less than 12 months
https://www.forgov.qld.gov.au/create-ict-contract#emergency
SME Access Incentive: https://www.forgov.qld.gov.au/guidelines-working-smes