Blockchain in Health Care
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The health care sector is a $3 trillion industry, and about $1 trillion of it goes to waste annually. Care coordination is becoming more complex as chronic conditions in the aging population continue to rise. In many instances, the technology available to health care providers is not adequate enough to capture all aspects of the care being provided. The result is a rugged transfer of information between parties that ultimately reduces the quality of care being provided to patients. This is largely due to providers having legacy systems, lack of integration with non-vendor-specific technologies, paper-based medical records, and a lack of horizontal transfer between allied health care professions. Hospitals are investing a considerable amount of resources into duplicating the work that can be completed by a sophisticated technology infrastructure, and amplifying the inefficiency of using poorly designed systems. In this use case, we discuss the payer–provider–patient model in the context of the incentives and services each provides and how this model is likely to change in the near future. We then introduce how blockchain can integrate into tracking the workflow of a patient from the first visit to final diagnosis and treatment plan. We introduce two new features that blockchain integration can enable: hot switching of components and medical data curation. Finally, we conclude by discussing waste management in health care and the efforts by Capital One + Gem to increase the economic output.