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EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT DATABASE DEVELOPMENT Posted By : James Coleman

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Tories unveil NHS database plans

Computer keyboard

The Conservatives have promised huge cost savings for the NHS by scrapping government plans for a central database of patient records.

Proposals include electronic medical notes being stored locally by GPs and hospitals and patients having online access to their medical records.

IT firms such as Google or Microsoft could host the information.

But the government said the Conservatives’ plans raised concerns about patient confidentiality.

The Tories are promising NHS trusts a choice of computer systems, rather than having a single one imposed.

Every patient would have a username and password and could update their records with information like blood pressure and cholesterol levels.

Behind schedule

Shadow health minister Stephen O’Brien told BBC Radio 4′s Today programme: "We want to give patients the ability to give themselves greater control over their information."

He added: "If we hold the data locally it’s more likely to be protected than within this massive [NHS] database…

"There’s always a need to protect data, whether it’s in the public or private sector.

"What has to happen is to focus on patients’ health and improve their outcomes."

The £12bn NHS programme in England – the world’s largest civilian IT scheme – has been dogged by problems since its launch in 2002.

It aims to replace hundreds of different computer systems in hospitals and GP practices with compatible versions which allow staff to access patients’ medical records.

"NHS IT will only succeed in improving patient care if information is held locally and centred on the patient"

Dr Glyn Hayes

It is thought the project is five years behind schedule.

Although some parts have been implemented successfully, there have been problems in upgrading computer systems in hospitals and setting up the electronic patient record.

The Tories say contracts in place with IT service providers – two out of four of whom have already pulled out – should be brought to a halt and renegotiated to "prevent further inefficiencies".

But Health Minister Ann Keen said: "The Tories need to make it very clear how their plans will ensure patient confidentiality.

"We have already set out our plans to give patients greater access to health information, for example through Healthspace where patients can see their summary care record."

A Department of Health spokesman said: "Patients are now directly benefiting from the modernisation of NHS IT – including being able to make their first outpatient appointment through Choose and Book, new digital images and a new electronic prescriptions service."

He added that the programme was already being delivered locally, with "detailed care records" continuing to be held in an electronic form.

The government has made it clear to the companies contracted to deliver the upgrades that it expects further significant progress by the end of November, he said.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Vertica Enhances Data Storing, Processing in Upcoming Database

Vertica has a number of performance enhancements on the menu for the upcoming version of its column database. When the company releases Vertica 3.5 later this year, users can expect new capabilties around data storage and processing to be included in the mix, as well as support for MapReduce.
– Vertica Systems has enhanced its column database with a new data
storing and processing architecture designed to improve
performance.
The company has dubbed the new architecture FlexStore. With it,
customers can organize different parts of the database in different
ways to achieve maximum per…



Oracle Price Hikes May Be Part of Procurement Game

Oracle’s raising of prices on three database components by as much as 40 percent prompts Microsoft to advertise its SQL Server 2008 and options as remaining at the same price point. One analyst suggests that Oracle’s price bump may be a play to appeal to procurement managers, who can earn bonuses and salary perks based on bringing in steeper discounts on infrastructure products.
– Oracle
recently increased the costs of a few database products, leading Microsoft
to address the issue in a corporate blog post affirming the value of SQL Server
2008.
However, Oracle’s move may be a play to appeal to procurement managers, in
order to build a greater degree of customer loyal…


Oracle Adds Database In-Memory Caching Option

Oracle releases a new version of its TimesTen In-Memory database as well as a new database caching option for 11g customers. Both offerings are aimed at the middle tier.
– Oracle has announced the
release of Oracle TimesTen In-Memory Database 11g as well as a new database
caching option in a nod toward the middle tier.
The TimesTen In-Memory
Database is a stand-alone in-memory relational database with full persistence
and recoverability. With the caching option…


Oracle Buys GoldenGate to Boost Database, Middleware Products

Oracle has picked up another company and plans to integrate its technology into its database and middleware products. Oracle announced that it has bought GoldenGate Software for an undisclosed sum, adding that company to a list that includes the likes of Sun Microsystems and Virtual Iron.

Oracle
is adding to its stable of acquisitions and announced June 23 that it is
buying GoldenGate Software, a private company that specializes in data
integration technology that works in real-time.
Oracle
is expected to close the deal with GoldenGate later this year. The two
companies did n…


Police still failing black people, MPs report

The treatment of black people by the police on issues such as stop and search and the national DNA database has worsened since the official inquiry into the murder of Stephen Lawrence 10 years ago, according to MPs.

A report published by the Commons home affairs select committee tomorrow says the police have made some “tremendous strides” in the past decade in the way they investigate race crimes and other criticial incidents involving minority ethnic communities, but MPs say there remains a number of outstanding concerns.

“Black communities in particular are disproportionately represented in stop and search statistics and on the national DNA database; in fact, the gap has increased,” they conclude.

The cross-party group of MPs say that black people are now seven times more likely to be stopped by the police than white people. A decade ago, when the Macpherson report into the murder of black teenager Stephen Lawrence was published, black people were six times more likely to be stopped.

The MPs also heard evidence that more than 30% of all black men who have been arrested now have their DNA profiles logged on the national DNA database, compared with 10% of all white men and 10% of all Asian men. The committee also expresses its disappointment that the police still fails to meet its target of employing 7% of its officers from minority ethnic communities by 2009.

They are also concerned that black and minority ethnic officers continue to experience difficulties in achieving promotion, as well as being more likely to be subject to disciplinary procedures. Keith Vaz, chairman of the home affairs select committee, said such disproportionate representation of black people in the criminal justice system would continue to damage community relations.

The home secretary, Alan Johnson, said the majority of Macpherson’s recommendations had been implemented, bringing many positive changes in race equality.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Burr Oak Cemetery Opening Online Records Database

ALSIP, Ill. (AP) — Authorities plan to give the public access to a searchable online database of nearly 100,000 graves at the historic black cemetery where four people are accused of digging up graves to resell the plots.

The Cook County she…

Sybase Grows Database Business in 2Q

Sybase reported a strong second quarter 2009, with profits increasing 26 percent year-over-year. Some of that can be attributed to its database business, which released a new version of Sybase IQ earlier this year.
– Sybase reported double-digit growth in its database business as part of a solid second quarter 2009.
According to the company, database license revenue increased 23 percent year-over-year. Overall, Sybases second quarter profit jumped 26 percent to $37.6 million, up from $29.8 million a year ear…


“Michael Jackson’s Law” For Prescription Drug Regulation

Celebrity advocacy rights group Stoparazzi is proposing the passing of “Michael Jackson’s Law,” a statue named after the late pop star that would regulate how physicians, practitioners, and dentists prescribe highly addictive medications.

The proposed law would create a national database which would track prescriptions of all controlled substances and medications. The group has already started [...]

Chain mail by e-mail: Medieval battle records go online

Re-enactment of medieval soldiers

The detailed service records of 250,000 medieval soldiers – including archers who served with Henry V at the Battle of Agincourt – have gone online.

The database of those who fought in the Hundred Years War reveals salaries, sickness records and who was knighted.

The full profiles of soldiers from 1369 to 1453 will allow researchers to piece together details of their lives.

Thomas, Lord Despencer is the youngest soldier on the database, whose career began when he was aged just 12 in 1385.

Elsewhere, the career of Thomas Gloucestre, who fought at Agincourt, can be traced over 43 years and includes campaigns in Prussia and Jerusalem.

‘Remarkable survival’

The website is the product of a research project by Professor Anne Curry of the University of Southampton and Dr Adrian Bell of the University of Reading.

Dr Bell said: "The service records survive because the English exchequer had a very modern obsession with wanting to be sure that the government’s money was being spent as intended.

"Therefore we have the remarkable survival of indentures for service detailing the forces to be raised, muster rolls showing this service and naming every soldier from duke to archer."

He said accounts from captains showing how funds were spent and entries detailing when the exchequer requested the payments can be found.

The free-to-use website, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, also shows which soldiers rode the furthest.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

The Media Consortium: Weekly Immigration Wire: The Morality of Reform

This post features links to the best independent, progressive reporting about immigration.

Microsoft Reveals SQL Azure Database Plans

Microsoft releases pricing details for SQL Azure Database and announces plans for a CTP later in 2009. The announcement comes alongside the news that Microsoft will make its Azure public cloud platform available for free until its Professional Developers Conference in November.
– Microsoft officials provided a sneak peak at the road map and
pricing information for SQL Azure Database at Microsoft’s Worldwide Partner Conference July 14 as they talked
up their overall plans for the Windows Azure platform.
Microsoft SQL Azure and
SQL Azure Database formerly known as SQ…