The Most interesting feature of blockchain
The models will identify robust patterns for example let’s say something you would do this in your twenties will in someway have a negative effect on your fifties, so you don't want to do that. Because right now it's like, ‘I will do what I enjoy today and worry about it when I go and see the physician, but really my doctor is responsible for my health.'
Wonderful thing about medical records is there is no Facebook for medical records yet, so perhaps we could, in a timely way, do what we’re doing, which is a universal, open, noncommercial layout -- almost like were designing a web and HTML for medical records."
All this information was connected to the identity of a patient; the patient then could decide who gets to see what. Perhaps a knee specialist does not need access your sexual health history. Blockchain could allow for this level of personal control.
The Most interesting feature of blockchain from the health industry is the ability of patients to control and own their own health information.
The we own our data, we have agency over our data, and we also own our health. And if providers run a program module on their computer to access the database, as instructed by the smart contracts, which can be initiated by the individual.
Back to the idea that this must start with the USA, healthcare comes from a patchwork of private companies, which means the handling of patient data is much more fragmented.
The system they outlined was to use Ethereum applications -- which, unlike bitcoin, can integrate and implement smart contracts -- to create a private blockchain, linking healthcare providers together and permitting them to share their information.
Are many reasons you might want to give someone access to your medical data. Perhaps you just moved into a new city and need to provide your new physician access to your medical history, or maybe you need to nominate a health care proxy in the event of emergency or have your prescription delivered to your pharmacy.
I'm not necessarily talking about all the intricacies of data when you went to a hospital. I'm referring to your genome, your nutrition, and your exercise data. All these things are important to maximizing your health over long periods of time, and yet we don't track them
Reasons blockchain make that possible is because we can have decent data that can also be trusted. Those two things have the ability for individuals to keep their data -- but also have that information be trusted by others.
Security is the holy grail for Blockchain, every one of these directions by a patient produces a specific smart contract on the blockchain that only the individual can cryptographically sign.
Web 2.0 is when a central authority basically monitors you, uses that information to help you -- and also monetizes that information for them by essentially leasing the algorithms that result from it to advertisers. All of the Internet 2.0 giants do this; that's their business model. So Web 3.0 is: we have our data, we have agency over it, and we want permission for other people to see it.
Regards to medical records DXchain does three core things: First, it allows the health care provider access to the information when the blockchain is instructed to give it. Second, it implements the patient's instructions as and third if needed it sends data to a pharmacy or a professional for referral -- assuming the patient gives their consent.
Referral link https://t.me/DxChainBot?start=q00x8s-q00x8s
DxChain’s website https://www.dxchain.com/
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