martes, 2 de agosto de 2016

Cyber Awareness Campaign stresses importance of protecting electronic health information | Health.mil

Cyber Awareness Campaign stresses importance of protecting electronic health information | Health.mil

Health.mil

Cyber Awareness Campaign stresses importance of protecting electronic health information

Are you cyberfit? Empower Yourself to Protect Your Information

The Department of Defense is launching the Empower the Patient Cybersecurity Awareness Campaign in August to share ways Military Health System beneficiaries can protect their personal health information.



AS Doctor-patient messaging, electronic health records and e-prescriptions make health care more convenient and more effective, they also make safeguarding health information more important. The Department of Defense is launching the Empower the Patient Cybersecurity Awareness Campaign in August to share ways Military Health System beneficiaries can protect their personal health information.
For example, choose a strong password for online health and fitness accounts and don’t share it with anyone. Don’t stay signed into accounts and sign out after each session. Send information only to sites you know are fully encrypted. Encrypted websites have “https” at the start of the web address. The “https” should appear on each page of the website, not just the sign-in page.
“Health care data is a gold mine of information,” said Servio Medina with the Defense Health Agency’s (DHA) Cyber Security Division. “And when you consider that our health information is updated on a regular basis, it’s not surprising that health care organizations and information have become the new targets of choice. Some estimates show it is targeted twice as much as the next leading industry (retail) for identity theft and fraud.”
The popularity of wearable devices—technology tracking fitness, nutrition and other health indicators—has increased the amount of health information being shared online as well. Many devices and applications ask for personal health information and connect to websites.
“Patients are able to access their medical information more than ever before,” said Frank Rowland, chief of DHA’s Cyber Security Division. “They need to understand more than their rights; they need to know their responsibilities.”
The good news is most health information breaches are due to human error and are preventable, according to Medina. The Empower the Patient Cybersecurity Awareness Campaign shares healthy cyber behaviors that minimize the risks.
More healthy cyber behavior tips are available on TRICARE.mil, health.mil and throughout military treatment facilities to educate beneficiaries.




Long Range Technical Architecture Strategy Accessible Version

Technical Document
7/28/2016
The Long Range Technical Architecture (LRTA) Strategy is a dynamic research and development roadmap to help guide and optimize the MHS’ investments over the next decade, based on data-driven analyses. The LRTA links business needs to technical solutions and provides enterprise 'knowledge' through data democratization.
Related Topics: Technology | Health IT Research and Innovation | Addressing Near-Term Needs through Advanced Technology Research | Health IT Challenge | Leaning Forward with Innovative Health Technologies | Joint Integrated Test and Evaluation Center

Long Range Technical Architecture Strategy Interactive Version

Technical Document
7/28/2016
The Long Range Technical Architecture (LRTA) Strategy is a dynamic research and development roadmap to help guide and optimize the MHS’ investments over the next decade, based on data-driven analyses. The LRTA links business needs to technical solutions and provides enterprise 'knowledge' through data democratization.
Related Topics: Technology | Health IT Research and Innovation | Addressing Near-Term Needs through Advanced Technology Research | Health IT Challenge | Leaning Forward with Innovative Health Technologies | Joint Integrated Test and Evaluation Center

Vendor Information Form

Form/Template
7/27/2016
The Vendor Information Form provides a standard way to collect your ideas, problem statements, and/or proposed solution sets for defense health IT.
Related Topics: Technology | Health IT Research and Innovation | Addressing Near-Term Needs through Advanced Technology Research | Health IT Challenge | Leaning Forward with Innovative Health Technologies

Advances in health information technology and Internet of Things changing health care delivery

Article
7/6/2016
Army Lt. Col. Mark Mellott, branch chief of the Defense Health Agency’s Health Information Technology Innovation and Advanced Technology Development Division, sees the Internet of Things as ‘the perfect storm’ when it comes to changing knowledge, attitudes and beliefs regarding how healthcare is administered to beneficiaries.
Last summer, Army Lt. Col. Mark Mellott discussed how the Internet of Things (IoT) has the potential to change the dynamic of health care. In many ways that potential has now become a reality.
Related Topics: Health Readiness | Technology | Health IT Research and Innovation Strategy | Innovation

MHS GENESIS Brand Style Guide, Version 9.0

Publication
7/1/2016
The purpose of this style guide is to establish the MHS GENESIS brand guidelines and educate its users to observe the brand standards. Branding is a key supporting element for communication, training and deployment activities.
Related Topics: Military Health System Electronic Health Record | Technology | MHS GENESIS Branding

Navy developing mobile app to help prevent prescription medication misuse

Article
6/2/2016
Naval Health Research Center Logo
The app is intended to support patients where they do not have immediate access to their health care providers but have questions about appropriate use of their prescription medication
Related Topics: Technology | Substance Abuse

Web, mobile technology helps MHS beneficiaries assess, improve mental health

Article
5/25/2016
Breathe2Relax, a mobile app, teaches how to reduce tension by breathing from the diaphragm, a deeper type of breathing that helps to induce a calming response in widely different circumstances.
DHA mental health professional talks mobile and web technologies that are available to beneficiaries
Related Topics: Mental Health Care | Mental Wellness | Technology

Scientists probe Traumatic Brain Injury effects at research lab

Article
5/20/2016
Sensors attached to a translucent model skull are used to measure explosive shock velocity and pressure at the Army Research Laboratory Weapons and Materials Research Directorate at Aberdeen Proving Ground in Aberdeen, Maryland. Data captured by the sensors are used to assist studies in traumatic brain injuries. (DoD photo by EJ Hersom)
The Army Research Laboratory’s specialized experiments offer repeatable parameters to attain more reliable data and to complement strides made by the Department of Veterans Affairs and the medical and academic communities
Related Topics: Traumatic Brain Injury | Research and Innovation | Medical Research and Development | Innovation | Technology

William Beaumont Army Medical Center first DoD hospital to use new stent graft

Article
5/11/2016
US Army Medicine Logo
William Beaumont Army Medical Center became the first military treatment facility to use newly FDA approved “off-the-shelf” aortic branch device
Related Topics: Access, Cost, Quality, and Safety | Military Hospitals and Clinics | Technology | Quality and Safety of Health Care

MHS partnering with Social Security Administration to improve electronic medical data sharing

Article
5/6/2016
Over the past decade, DoD and SSA have made substantial progress toward enhancing benefit support to all Service members, Veterans, and most notably to our Wounded Warriors.
DoD and SSA are committed to improving the timely processing of disability claims and access to Social Security benefits for all Service members, Veterans and eligible beneficiaries
Related Topics: Technology | Military Health System Electronic Health Record

New DoD mobile app helps diffuse nightmares for better sleep

Article
5/5/2016
Mental Health Month graphic
Dream EZ is the first mobile app that uses imagery rehearsal therapy to address nightmares
Related Topics: Technology | Mental Wellness | Mental Health Care

59th MDW ECMO team: Delivering life saving medical care across the globe

Article
5/3/2016
Members of the 59th Medical Wing Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation transport team connect a patient to an ECMO system for transport from Lafayette General Medical Center, Louisiana, to San Antonio Military Medical Center, Joint Base San Antonio-Fort Sam Houston, Texas.
The global Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation team is bedded down at the San Antonio Military Medical Center on nearby JBSA-Fort Sam Houston
Related Topics: Access to Health Care | Military Hospitals and Clinics | Quality and Safety of Health Care | Technology

Health IT City Plan

Presentation
4/26/2016
This HIT City Plan provides an understanding of the potential interface between the HIT Directorate and DHA enterprises, decomposing the relevant parts of the enterprises into functional segments.
Related Topics: Technology | Health IT Research and Innovation | Addressing Near-Term Needs through Advanced Technology Research | Health IT Challenge | Leaning Forward with Innovative Health Technologies | Leveraging Open Source Technologies | Transitioning to a Net-Centric, Service-Oriented Enterprise | Research and Innovation | Health IT Research and Innovation Strategy

Military children use website to cope with stress, connect with each other

Article
4/1/2016
Kids talking at a table outside
On Military Kids Connect, a DoD website that promotes mental health literacy for military youth, children offer tips and share their stories about growing up in a military family. The site contains interactive resources that promote positive mental health strategies for dealing with the stress of having family members in the military.
Related Topics: Children's Health | Mental Health Care | Deployment Health | Mental Wellness | Technology

Army Lt. Col. Francisco Dominicci talks hands-free technology

Article
3/4/2016
Army Lt. Col. Francisco Dominicci, a Nurse Informaticist with the Colorado Springs Military Health System, provides information about the effectiveness of using hands-free communication technology at the 2016 Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society 2016 Conference March 3 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Dominicci described how the military hospitals and clinics in Colorado Springs have begun integrating devices that improve quality and safety of care. (MHS photo by Jim Yocum)
Army Lt. Col. Francisco Dominicci, a Nurse Informaticist with the Colorado Springs Military Health System, provides information about the effectiveness of using hands-free communication technology at the 2016 Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society 2016 Conference March 3 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Dominicci described how the military hospitals and clinics in Colorado Springs have begun integrating devices that improve quality and safety of care. (MHS photo by Jim Yocum)
Related Topics: Technology

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