First there was Bitcoin, a cryptocurrency that utilizes
blockchain, a decentralized system of data collection and transactions that we
are told will defy hacking. (Wasn’t the
Titanic said to be unsinkable?) We read
that cryptocurrency and other blockchain functions will be a societal
gamechanger, much like the internet was when Al Gore invented it some years ago.
My own state of Ohio will now accept Bitcoin as payment for
commercial taxes.
And, of course, there are many other cryptocurrencies mushrooming
around us. In my life, many innovations
seem to be solutions in search of problems.
I don’t find my current methods of transacting business – cash and
credit cards – to be so onerous that I am screaming for a new way to conduct
commerce. But, I will admit that I have
security concerns about my credit card number and other highly personal data
being ‘safely stored’ all over the internet.
Some years ago, I enjoyed the thrill of being a victim of identity
theft, which in gastrointestinal terms, is about as pleasurable as a rigid sigmoidoscopy. Just contacting the 3 credit agencies in the
quest to reach living breathing human beings is a task that separates the weak
from the robust.
Northeast Ohio is prepared to invest over $100 million to
attract and cultivate blockchain investors.
Will this create a Blockchain Bubble?
We will see. Initial investors in
Bitcoin hit the jackpot. But for many others
who didn’t time their investments at a propitious moment, they lost big.
There are many aspects of our personal and professional lives
that could utilize blockchain. And,
like any new innovation, we don’t have to understand it to benefit from
it. Do we really know how our routers at home work? Of course, whenever a new disruption
breaks in on the scene, many existing businesses and organizations will be
threatened. Consider Amazon, the Mother
of All Disrupters. Bitcoin, for example,
could assume many functions of traditional banks and perform them better, more
securely and at less cost. If
cryptocurrency can really deliver, then those under threat will have to adapt or
they will be run over. Those players who
are not adaptable will become obsolete.
Typewriter repair is no longer an occupation.
Who Can Fix This?
In my own profession, blockchain could offer incredible
benefits. As a physician, the notion
that I could easily access all of a patient’s medical data from my office would
be a gamechanger. And, every new medical
event would be instantly and securely added to a blockchain. The HIPAA police would become unemployed,
another blockchain casualty. Imagine how
this would affect medical care in an emergency department. Physicians, with access to the entire
record, would be less likely to order medical tests if they could determine
that they had already been done elsewhere.
And, beyond the medical advantages, I’m sure the billers, coders and
insurance companies would also be hitching rides on the Blockchain Express.
Patients and I today are often frustrated that even in our
digital era, I do not have easy access to their electronic records, which
often exist in different medical systems and institutions. Wasn’t electronic medical records supposed to
solve this?
Will blockchain become the coin of the medical realm? Has this post induced you to invest in
cryptocurrency? My advice? Buy a CD instead. But, stay tuned.
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