The potential of blockchain in EHR

Danielle Siarri MSN, RN
Nuadox
Published in
2 min readOct 20, 2017

A person by the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto published a white paper in 2008, introducing bitcoin and applications of the blockchain. The blockchain is a decentralized digital ledger, the technology underlying bitcoin: a distributed network, a shared ledger, and digital transactions. In healthcare such could mean “… blockchain technology as a way to streamline the sharing of medical records in a secure way, protect sensitive data from hackers, and give patients more control over their information.

Estonia was the first country to implement a blockchain into their electronic healthcare record (EHR) system with the collaboration of a local company established in 2008 named Guardtime, using keyless signature infrastructure (KSI). The integrity solution KSI means in short: verifying the data without a third party, keys or credentials to access the ledger and compromise the ehr.

YouTube — “Implementation of blockchain-projects in Estonia”

In Tallinn, Estonia at eHealth Tallinn, Mirko De Maldè will moderate Blockchain: Unleashing the Power of Free-Flowing Data with speakers Dr. Catherine Mulligan, Jaan Priisalu, and Dr. Christian Dierks.

I recently had a conversation with Mirko, he stated:

“The blockchain is likely to have a profound impact on the future of healthcare, making it possible to move forward from volume-based to value-based healthcare. Concrete patient empowerment, with unprecedented control over personal datasets, together with enhanced interoperability, could particularly benefit the most fragmented healthcare systems, as the Italian one, facilitating data portability and patients’ mobility, and enabling — especially when it comes to chronic disease — the shift to personalized, proactive and participatory care by” Mirko De Maldè.

The blockchain in healthcare via Periscope with Mirko De Maldè, HIMSS Italy session in Malta

As healthcare technology evolves globally, accuracy becomes even more crucial. Data entered in electronic healthcare records need to be as accurate as possible because future clinical decision making will be based on prior and real-time information. The blockchain is a ledger to secure healthcare data, one of its main values are benefits associated with having a unique identifier for each patient that go beyond healthcare programs, jurisdictions.

This article was originally published on the HIMSS Europe Blog.

This is the follow-up Periscope from ehealthtallin in Tallinn, Estonia

Research, thoughts, and opinions are my own. Further references can be found on my personal sites innonurse.info and ammende.info

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Danielle Siarri MSN, RN
Nuadox
Editor for

Nurse Informatics Specialist | Health IT Consultant | Social Media Practitioner | Clinical Marketer | innonurse.info | ammende.info