| Literature DB >> 31917371 |
Tim Mackey1,2,3, Hirofumi Bekki4, Tokio Matsuzaki5, Hiroshi Mizushima6,7.
Abstract
Japan is undergoing a major population health transition as its society ages, and it continues to experience low birth rates. An aging Japan will bring new challenges to its public health system, highlighted as a model for universal health coverage (UHC) around the world. Specific challenges Japan's health care system will face include an increase in national public health expenditures, higher demand for health care services, acute need for elder and long-term care, shortage of health care workers, and disparities between health care access in rural versus urban areas. Blockchain technology has the potential to address some of these challenges, but only if a health blockchain is conceptualized, designed, localized, and deployed in a way that is compatible with Japan's centralized UHC-centric public health system. Blockchain solutions must also be adaptive to opportunities and barriers unique to Japan's national health and innovation policy, including its regulatory sandbox system, while also seeking to learn from blockchain adoption in the private sector and in other countries. This viewpoint outlines the major opportunities and potential challenges to blockchain adoption for the future of Japan's health care. ©Tim Ken Mackey, Hirofumi Bekki, Tokio Matsuzaki, Hiroshi Mizushima. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 09.01.2020.Entities:
Keywords: Japan; aging; blockchain; global health; health informatics; health policy; information storage and retrieval
Year: 2020 PMID: 31917371 PMCID: PMC6996742 DOI: 10.2196/13649
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Summary of blockchain potential for the Japanese health care system. EHR: electronic health record; IoT: Internet of Things; SIP: Cross-ministerial Strategic Innovation Promotion Program.