National blockchain challenge explores micro-identities to improve healthcare interoperability

Blockchain technologies will enable patient identity matching, identity linking, redundant connectivity, location, and the retrieval of granular patient data to and from any EMR. A recently submitted a proposal paper leads the national healthcare innovation agenda.

A lot has been written covering blockchain and healthcare over the last year.  From articles on blockchain applications for healthcare to articles by healthcare industry experts exploring blockchain technology as the solution for healthcare interoperability. In early 2016 Forbes even wrote an article titled, “How Blockchain Could Change the World.”

Government uses of blockchains

Once governments are involved, it’s a pretty sure bet something substantial exists.  The Dubai government launched an investment fund focused on the blockchain. The U.K. government awarded a framework agreement to a Blockchain-as-a-Service company, Credits, the blockchain platform provider. Credits won the U.K.’s “Best Blockchain Startup” at this year’s Europas Awards. The French government will be attending a Parliamentary blockchain forum in October 2016. The Denmark government was the 1st political party to use blockchain for e-voting. Of course, this was back in 2014. With Dubai, U.K., French, and the governments Demark exploring blockchain it seems only fitting that the United States government would dip a toe into the potential blockchain has to offer.

Why should governments care about blockchain? First, at the most primary level blockchains are distributed ledgers that can use to build digital trust. Tax systems, property tax, e-voting, contract automation, tracking provenance for imported food supply chains and identify management (passports, drivers licenses, birth certificates, work certificates, state-issued IDs, certifications) all are natural applications for blockchain technologies.

The startup frenzy forgot about healthcare

The world is talking about FinTech. This seems reasonable given that there has been USD $1.2 billion invested in blockchain startups. The majority of these investments have been within the financial sector. The cumulative investment in blockchain likely is double. Several of the stealth mode startup companies were funded with pre-seed or seed money and to-date are staying well under the radar. However, many startups are eager to get noticed and have published formal press releases including: Brave, Coinigy, Netki, Circle Internet Financial, Mediachain, TechBureau, Fluent, Tierion, bitFlyer, Ethcore, Tibit, BitKan, Custos Media Technologies, Bitwala, Bitt, Stratumn, Rootstock, Elliptic, Chronicled, Keza,Loyyal, Chainalysis, Simplex, SurBTC, Blockstream, SatoshiPay, Digital Asset Holdings, Gem, and Zebpay.

The focus has been on the financial markets and out of the public startups, only two (Gem and Tierion) or 7 percent have anything to do with healthcare, and only one startup is primarily concentring on applying blockchain to healthcare (Gem).

Somehow we need to get back the basics of the blockchain and start to dive into real solutions that can root causes of the healthcare interoperability in the United States. The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in partnership with the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) have opened the ONC Blockchain Challenge. In this national challenge, NIST and ONC requested healthcare and technology innovators submit a proposal paper exploring the “use of blockchain in Health IT and Health-Related Research.

Micro-identities for better patient care

A paper titled, Micro-Identities Improve Healthcare Interoperability with Blockchain: Deterministic Methods for Connecting Patient Data to Uniform Patient Identifiers focused on patient identifiers. The drive behind this paper was to present a hybrid model, integrating HL7 FHIR, interoperability standards describing data formats and elements. This model also included an Application Programming Interface (API) for exchanging electronic health records using blockchain technologies for better patient access to health information.

Think mico-identities that travel with you and providers that leverage new patient matching logic to remove the need to transfer sensitive demographic information when validating a patient’s identity.

The paper was authored by Peter Nichol and William Dailey, MD. Peter Nichol is an expert in digital, innovation, and healthcare. William Dailey, MD is a practicing physician and Chief of Medical Information at Golden Valley Memorial Healthcare. Together they co-authored a paper for the ONC Blockchain Challenge titled,Micro-Identities Improve Healthcare Interoperability with Blockchain: Deterministic Methods for Connecting Patient Data to Uniform Patient Identifiers.

The proposal paper states that interestingly enough, patients only visited their primary care physician 54.6 percent of the times when they went to the doctor. Where do they go for the other 55.4 percent? The patient would go to another doctor, and that doctor would have no access to the patient’s historical medical records.

Do patient management systems between providers talk to one another? How are clinical treatments shared? What is the process flow to move administrative and billing information to payers? In the United States, the care experience is not integrated each integration is a one-off.

The goal of the Triple Aim is pretty straight forward: 1. Improve the patient experience of care (including quality and satisfaction), 2. Improve the health of populations, and 3. Reduce the per capita cost of healthcare. Unfortunately, progress has been limited, and national healthcare costs are on the rise. Shared-cost and inventive distributed decentralized solutions offer a way out.

HL7 FHIR the primer for healthcare interoperability

The paper provides an overview of HL7 FHIR and identifies HL7 FHIR as a critical piece of the solution.

“Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (HL7 FHIR, pronounced “fire”) is a draft standard describing data formats and elements (known as “resources”) and an Application Programming Interface (API) for exchanging Electronic health records….The HL7 FHIR specification allows secure information exchange and is a positive step towards interoperability. HL7 FHIR separates the data structure from the wider problem of entity-to-entity trust, centralized server broadcasting and patient identification and matching spanning entities.”

“Less is more. This adage is true of patient matching: the more discreet items you try to match, the less likely they are to match. Keying errors, pseudonyms, misspellings and the like, impact the conformability of patient data. Also, poor data quality results in searches with no data matches. Successful matching strategies are a proprietary mix of deterministic and stochastic or probabilistic methods. They are proprietary for numerous reasons, which are beyond the scope of this paper. Stochastic methods are commonly used to overcome poor data quality.”

Framework for healthcare interoperability

There is a lot of talk about blockchain for healthcare but not a lot of frameworks that provide a reference to explain the concepts. The papers authored by Peter Nichol and William Dailey, MD communicate a framework to explain interactions required for efficient blockchain supported care systems.

The below interoperability strategic healthcare framework establishes a model for incorporating blockchain technologies into healthcare.

“Accessible healthcare data that is open-sourced but siloed will transition to healthcare interoperability where ubiquitous access to data will be secure and ever-present. In this new healthcare environment, patients will be able to audit each other’s behavior mutually, obtaining provable security of patient health information.” 

Blockchain for healthcare frameworkNichol & Dailey

The proposal paper elaborates on how patient matching identities could be administered.

The ONC and NIST Blockchain challenge is strong indicator the United States government is paying attention to blockchain technology the impact it will have on our national healthcare system.

For additional information the proposal paper titled, Micro-Identities Improve Healthcare Interoperability with Blockchain: Deterministic Methods for Connecting Patient Data to Uniform Patient Identifiers can be downloaded.

 

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Peter is a technology executive with over 20 years of experience, dedicated to driving innovation, digital transformation, leadership, and data in business. He helps organizations connect strategy to execution to maximize company performance. He has been recognized for Digital Innovation by CIO 100, MIT Sloan, Computerworld, and the Project Management Institute. As Managing Director at OROCA Innovations, Peter leads the CXO advisory services practice, driving digital strategies. Peter was honored as an MIT Sloan CIO Leadership Award Finalist in 2015 and is a regular contributor to CIO.com on innovation. Peter has led businesses through complex changes, including the adoption of data-first approaches for portfolio management, lean six sigma for operational excellence, departmental transformations, process improvements, maximizing team performance, designing new IT operating models, digitizing platforms, leading large-scale mission-critical technology deployments, product management, agile methodologies, and building high-performance teams. As Chief Information Officer, Peter was responsible for Connecticut’s Health Insurance Exchange’s (HIX) industry-leading digital platform transforming consumerism and retail-oriented services for the health insurance industry. Peter championed the Connecticut marketplace digital implementation with a transformational cloud-based SaaS platform and mobile application recognized as a 2014 PMI Project of the Year Award finalist, CIO 100, and awards for best digital services, API, and platform. He also received a lifetime achievement award for leadership and digital transformation, honored as a 2016 Computerworld Premier 100 IT Leader. Peter is the author of Learning Intelligence: Expand Thinking. Absorb Alternative. Unlock Possibilities (2017), which Marshall Goldsmith, author of the New York Times No. 1 bestseller Triggers, calls "a must-read for any leader wanting to compete in the innovation-powered landscape of today." Peter also authored The Power of Blockchain for Healthcare: How Blockchain Will Ignite The Future of Healthcare (2017), the first book to explore the vast opportunities for blockchain to transform the patient experience. Peter has a B.S. in C.I.S from Bentley University and an MBA from Quinnipiac University, where he graduated Summa Cum Laude. He earned his PMP® in 2001 and is a certified Six Sigma Master Black Belt, Masters in Business Relationship Management (MBRM) and Certified Scrum Master. As a Commercial Rated Aviation Pilot and Master Scuba Diver, Peter understands first hand, how to anticipate change and lead boldly.