The Latest

The General Services Administration instituted a new governmentwide telework policy Monday that essentially flips the managerial presumption that employees cannot telecommute to one that presumes they can. It also sets a new benchmark in detailing the government’s mobility and telework guidelines for federal employees and supervisors.

“Work is what we do, not where we are,” the GSA policy states, and a phrase that GSA Administrator Martha Johnson often repeats in her public remarks. Keep reading →

The level of threat from cyber attacks has been the subject of controversy for years. However, just recently, multiple officials who are in the know have publically stated that the threat posed by cyber attacks is very real and went on to state that such an attack could potentially be not that far away.

In my most recent blogs, I made the distinction that cyber attacks are much more serious than cyber threats. If someone puts a piece of code on your system that exfiltrates data or information, disrupts, destroys or otherwise harms your computer, device, network, applications or data–that would be considered an attack. Keep reading →

I got a chance to look through the Government Accountability Office’s latest report recommending that the Office of Management and Budget “needs to improve its guidance on IT investments” in government.

No doubt, the biggest underlying issue driving over investment in federal information technology is redundancy in government. Keep reading →

Federal government efforts to identify and track federal information technology investments remain insufficient to curtail duplicative spending, according to the latest in a series of a reports released by the Government Accountability Office critical of government IT spending practices.

The GAO report, released Oct. 27, took primary aim at the the White House Office of Management and Budget, and the way it categorizes and tracks IT investments, citing a number of principle shortcomings, although those familiar with OMB’s operating levers note the problem goes beyond OMB. Keep reading →

The National Information Exchange Model, with its XML Schema for Information Exchange Package Description messages that took root three years ago, has become a bona fide community. That point was reemphasized by Donna Roy, the Department of Homeland Security executive director for NIEM, at NIEM’s recent national training event.

With about 500 in-person attendees and about 200 remote attendees, this is a community that is trying to connect the dots between its members like LinkedIn does for its members according to Ellen Levy, vice president strategic initiatives, LinkedIn Corp.

While the NIEM community views itself as a significant player in the standardization of messages for interoperability, it realizes it is only a small island in the sea of social messages that people use to connect the dots between themselves and world events using message formats and tools such as Twitter.

In addition, I understand why EPA, my former employer, was reluctant to endorse NIEM, because it had already done this type of activity in building its National Environmental Information Exchange Network.

Department of Homeland Security CIO Richard Spires recently praised the NIEM community in an article republished on Breaking Gov from CIO.gov and said:

“NIEM is now the DHS enterprise architecture standard for how we interconnect systems” and that he has not seen a better return on investment for our taxpayer dollars than in supporting NIEM.

However, I found the content itself to be difficult to access. So I decided to apply data science to samples of the NIEM community content to create an interoperabilty interface–a kind of NIEM clearinghouse, that I believe is still needed.

It would include the following elements:

  • The NIEM IEPD Clearinghouse is a Web database;
  • The NIEM IEPD submission form is a Word Document;
  • The NIEM IEPD Clearinghouse Help is a PDF file; and
  • The NIEM Training Event Agenda is a PDF File, and NIEM Exchange Partners is a text file.
The term interoperability interface comes from the President’s Council of Advisors for Science and Technology (PCAST) Report on Designing a Digital Future (December 2010) and consists of the following according to this data scientist:

  • A dashboard of adjacent objects in a similar format that are data services (e.g. like the iPhone and iPad);
  • Data tables in Linked Open Data Format; and
  • Relationships between multiple data services that can be managed for mashups and statistical analyses.
The Spotfire dashboard created by the author using samples of the NIEM community content illustrates this. The full details of this work are found elsewhere. The author’s has done similar work to improve the accessability and integration of the National Information Exchange Model and the Universal Core Semantc Layer.

I am advocating that NIEM take the next steps of moving its clearinghouse to the cloud and implementing dynamic case management to better connect the dots than it does presently and showing that with four different kinds of their content in an interoperability interface (which happens to be a Spotfire dashboard).

Putting NIEM in the cloud is much more than just where you put it (e.g. AWS Gov Cloud), but how you put it there. They should put their clearinghouse and everything else they want people to know and use in a format and interface so that users can connect the dots between their different sources of information and keep it updated with dynamic case management.

More specifically, in order to connect the dots with both messages and data, the NIEM community needs to start using what Gartner and Forrester call Dynamic Case Management Tools that use semantic web standards and state-of-the-art semantic technologies based on those standards like Be Informed that the author recommended recently to the European Commission’s CIO Francisco Garcia Moran. The community would also be well-advised to adopt a Service Oriented Architecture – see for example recent 12th SOA for eGovernment Conference.

Dynamic Case Managment would: support the process to get the messages to the clearinghouse, enhance the functionality of the clearinghouse, build a fusion center, and support the data fusion process for “turning information into knowledge.”

Be Informed has done this for the Dutch Immigration Service and recently won an International Architecture Award and Gartner and Forrester recognitions for it.

A few years ago when I led the Federal Semantic Interoperability Community of Practice (SICoP) I was asked to create a demo of a searchable semantic knowledgebase of NIEM IEPD messages which I did. Now I can take that one significant step further with a new tool (Be Informed) that can use a semantic knowledgebase to make a dynamic case management system.

Last week’s news that the Department of Veterans Affairs was expanding its efforts to promote its Blue Button personal health record system prompted me to research the Blue Button program for Personal Health Records (PHR) and make them easier to use by our readers not just our Veterans.

President Obama highlighted the Blue Button Initiative, as have many others in recent weeks. The program is just one of a series of successful government challenges to promote innovation in government.

This is similar to my efforts to make Traumatic Brain Injury information more accessible and useful in another story.

An authoritative online resource: Managing Your Health Information Online explains the difference between: Electronic Health Records (EHRs) (much in the news) and Personal Health Records (PHR) as follows:

  • An Electronic Health Record is a safe and confidential record your doctor, other health care provider, medical office staff, or a hospital keeps on a computer about your health care or treatments. EHRs let your providers share up-to-date information about your conditions, treatments, tests and prescriptions. If your providers use EHRs, they can join a network to securely share your records with each other. EHRs help cut down on medical errors and can keep you from getting duplicate tests.
  • A Personal Health Record is a record with information about your health that you or someone helping you keeps for easy reference using a computer. You control the health information in your PHR and can get to it anywhere at any time with Internet access.
So two questions that one naturally asks are: Who offers PHRs? and is my health information private and secure in PHR?


The previously mentioned authoritative online resource: Managing Your Health Information Online answers:

  • PHRs are often offered by providers, health plans, and private companies. Some are free, while others charge fees.
  • Some independent companies create and maintain PHRs for you. If you give them permission, they may be able to get your health information from your doctor or health plan.
  • If your doctor or health plan doesn’t offer a PHR, check what’s available from other companies at http://myPHR.com.
  • Special permissions or passwords let you choose who can access your PHR so others can get your critical information quickly. When you use a PHR, make sure it’s on a secure Web site. With a secure Web site, you usually have to create a unique user ID and password, and the information you type is encrypted (put in code) so other people can’t read it.

My comment is: why not do it yourself for free, without the Internet (especially if you are not always connected or not able to use the Internet), and in a familiar environment like a spreadsheet, notepad, or word processing document.

So I am providing the “Blue Button PHR for All Americans” as an Excel spreadsheet (XLS) and Comma Separated Value (CSV) files that can be imported into most other softwares for the convenience of our readers and their family members and friends that need them but cannot afford a commercial service or use Internet services.

On August 2, 2010, President Obama announced the Blue Button capability that allows veterans and Medicare beneficiaries to download their personal health information by a simple click of a blue button.

So now you can just download the files, read the background information and do it yourself for free and with your own security. It can be on your iPhone, iPad, and/or laptop and desktop PC or Mac. Keep reading →

President Barack Obama took new action today on a growing crisis for patients unable to get certain prescription drugs, by directing the Food and Drug Administration Monday to take steps to reduce drug shortages across the USA, especially for those needing life-saving cancer drugs.

Obama signed an executive order intended to ease a problem that has been mushrooming in recent months, forcing delays in surgeries and cancer treatments. Keep reading →

Steven VanRoekel’s first public appearance last week since taking over the role as federal CIO in August from Vivek Kundra was perhaps as notable for where he spoke as for what he had to say.

Unlike Kundra, who made his first public remarks inside the Washington Beltway as federal CIO, at the 2009 FOSE Expo (transcript available here), VanRoekel headed to the West Coast, speaking at an event co-hosted by TechAmerica, TechNet and PARC Oct. 25 at the Churchill Club in Palo Alto, Calif. Keep reading →

Page 180 of 2071...176177178179180181182183184...207