| Literature DB >> 32055097 |
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Blockchain technology is associated with the financial industry, but it can be applied to other industries. The supporting architecture of blockchain has the immense potential to transform the delivery of healthcare, medical, clinical, and life sciences, due to the extended functionality and distinct features of its distributed ledger. The potential scale of impact is comparable to that seen with the introduction of TCP/IP. Blockchain technology has captured the interest of healthcare providers and biomedical scientists within various healthcare domains such as longitudinal healthcare records, automated claims, drug development, interoperability in population health, consumer health, patient portals, medical research, data security, and reducing costs with supply chain management. It is not yet clear if blockchain is going to disrupt healthcare, but healthcare organizations are monitoring its potential closely for prospective concepts like secure patient IDs. Realistically, the adoption and implementation of blockchains will be a gradual evolution over time, but now is the time to take a fresh look at its possibilities in healthcare and biomedical sciences. Blockchain technology revolutionary solutions are bringing us closer to the possibility of every patient record being able to send updates to an open-source, community-wide trusted ledger that is accessible and understood across organizations with guaranteed integrity. AIM AND METHODS: This paper discusses as a review some potential areas of opportunity for blockchain in the health and biomedical sciences fields. RESULTS ANDEntities:
Keywords: Biomedicine; Blockchain; Cryptocurrencies; Distributed ledger; Healthcare
Year: 2019 PMID: 32055097 PMCID: PMC7004292 DOI: 10.5455/aim.2019.27.284-291
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Inform Med ISSN: 0353-8109
Figure 1.How Data Blocks Form a Blockchain
Figure 2.Permissioned and Permissionless Blockchain Uses
How Blockchain Works (Adopted from the HBR Article “The Truth About blockchain” [7]
| SN | Blockchain Principle | Details |
|---|---|---|
| 1) | Distributed Database | Each member on the blockchain has access to the entire ledger and its complete history. No single member has control over the data, while each has the ability to verify the transactions directly, without an intermediary. |
| 2) | Peer-to-Peer Transmission | Communication occurs directly between members without the need for a central authority (no intermediaries). |
| 3) | Transparency with Pseudonymity | Every transaction is visible to anyone with access to the blockchain. Each user, on a blockchain has a unique 30-plus-character alphanumeric address that identifies them. Users can choose to remain anonymous or provide proof of their identity to others. |
| 4) | Irreversibility of Records | Once a transaction is entered, the records cannot be altered. Each block contains the hash value of the previous block’s header (hence the term “chain”). |
| 5) | Computational Logic | Blockchain transactions can be tied to computational logic and in essence be programmed. |
Blockchain Advantages for Healthcare
| Blockchain Feature | Advantage for Healthcare |
| Peer-to-peer networks | Network infrastructure security |
| Smart Contracts | Permissioned access to patient data |
| Permissioned closed network | Data integrity |
| Distributed Ledger | Interoperability |
| Shared real-time updates to all members | Collaboration |
| Distributed, secure access | Patient longitudinal health record |
| Cryptography | Protecting patient identity |
| Disintermediation of trust | Secure health data |
| Distributed framework | Health information exchange |
| Disintermediation of transactions | Reduced transaction costs |
Real-World Use Cases in Healthcare and Biomedical Sciences
| Issue to Address | SN | Blockchain Supported Use Case |
|---|---|---|
| Counter Prescription Drug Fraud | 1) | Nuco, |
| Supply Chain Intervention | 4) | Pharmacosurveillance Blockchain System[40] |
| Biomedical Knowledge Retrieval | 5) | A Blockchain-Based Notarization Service [44] |
| Connect Dental Providers | 6) | Dentacoin [26] |
| Collect Patient Forms | 7) | Time-stamping Patients’ Consent [38] |
| Health Information Interoperability | 8) | FHIRChain[31] |
| Patient-Centric Data | 9) | Medicalchain [26] |
| Patient wearable medical devices | 12) | Wearable Embedded Devices [36] |
| Access Shared Genomics Data | 14) | Cancer Gene Trust |
| Commercial Genomic Data Distribution | 16) | Gene-chain |
| Integrate Genomic Data Analysis | 18) | Nebula Genomics[45] |
| Decentralize the Web | 20) | InterPlanetary File System [45] |