Australia to build national medicines record by 2026

CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA — Australia has announced plans to launch a national medicines record by 2026 that will require online prescribers to share medicines information by default through My Health Record, a reform aimed at reducing medication errors and strengthening digital prescribing safety.
According to a report from Healthcare IT News, the initiative will create a secure central repository that stores current and exact medical information. This solution will solve the existing problem of fragmented electronic prescribing systems, Active Script List, and My Health Record systems.
“Important information that provides clinical context for prescribing is not consistently available in one safe and secure location,” a spokesperson from the Therapeutic Goods Administration told Healthcare IT News, highlighting the current digital tools that support medicines management.
The spokesperson said that healthcare providers often need to search multiple platforms for a patient’s history of prescribed and dispensed medicines, diagnoses, or allergies.
Existing systems may also lack complete information, depending on whether prescriptions were handwritten or issued electronically.
The Department of Health, Disability and Ageing has set aside AU$4.4 million (US$3.1 million) for the initial design and is consulting stakeholders. The reforms will require online prescribers to upload medicines-related information to My Health Record by default, with the first phase expected to be completed by December.
Improving telehealth and digital prescribing safety
The National Medicines Record is part of broader efforts to strengthen digital medicines oversight and telehealth safety.
The TGA spokesperson stated that the consultations will develop features that enable prescribers to access a patient’s health data before they prescribe medications through alert and notification systems.
The reform will also enhance the 1800Medicare app to improve medication management and patient access to health data.
Health Minister Mark Butler framed the initiative as foundational.
“These reforms are the first step toward delivering a National Medicines Record for all Australians, ensuring that patients and their care teams can have accurate and up-to-date medicine information,” Butler said in a statement.
What Australia’s health tech reform means for the U.S.
For United States hospitals, clinics, and health systems, Australia’s method demonstrates a common problem that occurs when medication data becomes scattered through electronic health records (EHRs), retail pharmacies, telehealth systems, and written prescriptions.
American providers continue to grapple with incomplete medication histories, particularly as virtual care expands.
Australia’s mandate for default data sharing from online prescribers highlights a more centralized policy approach that could inform U.S. interoperability efforts, especially around e-prescribing and clinical context documentation.
“Ensuring this information is accessible to a patient’s usual GP and other healthcare providers will support safer clinical decision-making, reduce the risk of medicine-related harm, and strengthen trust across the healthcare system,” Butler emphasized.
For provider organizations watching global digital health policy trends, Australia’s National Medicines Record may serve as a case study in aligning telehealth growth with medication safety infrastructure — a balance increasingly relevant on both sides of the Pacific.

Independent




