It must be clear that Blockchain is not a complete solution and should be seen as a piece within the gear.
Who we have approached blockchain, we see it as an opportunity for innovation, which needs "some surgery" to be used in the health area, and that its current implementation is not to make "CTRL + C - CTRL + V" in the health area. It seems to me totally valid to make a map in what blockchain has won and all the weaknesses that the current implementations have, even applying standards, since, the possibility of implementing standards is not in the hands, nor in the pockets of Third World countries. Businesses like SAP and Deloitte do see a great opportunity to eliminate certain gaps in the health area. As an implementer, I hope that the organizations that manage the standards consider objectively and seriously if a technology such as blockchain would give us a great leap in the management and empowerment of health ... my two cents ;-) <https://mailtrack.io/> Enviado con Mailtrack <https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/mailtrack-for-gmail-inbox/ndnaehgpjlnokgebbaldlmgkapkpjkkb?utm_source=gmail&utm_medium=signature&utm_campaign=signaturevirality> Powered by Gmelius <https://gmelius.com?ref=mail> 2017-11-14 9:08 GMT-06:00 Bert Verhees <[email protected]>: > On 14-11-17 15:50, Bert Verhees wrote: > >> Can it be that data refer to data on other systems, or may they only >> refer to data on the same system, copies of data from other systems? >> > > In the Netherlands we have a national system called the LSP, which makes > medical data available to other clinicians. They can look into medical data > from other institutions (of course, in the right legal context, however > that is also a problem, but apart from that) > > Data which a clinician has seen, but not copied in a *accountable way* to > his own system, may disappear from another system, by system error, or by > an other clinician trying to hide an error > > Remember this quote from Leslie Lamport (from DEC, was it in 1988?) > > "A distributed system is one in which the failure of a computer you didn't > even know existed can render your own computer unusable." > > Replace the last "computer" by "data" and you have the current context. In > the Netherlands people will discover the meaning of this quote when they do > not handle information carefully > > > > _______________________________________________ > openEHR-technical mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.openehr.org/mailman/listinfo/openehr-technical_ > lists.openehr.org > -- *Alejandro Benavides Garro* *Acronym Software* Especialistas Informáticos Gestión de Imágenes Médicas Digitales *Móvil:* +50688285301 *Skype:* abenavidescr *Email:* [email protected] *Web:* http://www.acronymcr.com Facebook <http://facebook.com/acronymcr> Twitter <http://twitter.com/acronymcr> Google+ <http://plus.google.com/+Acronymcr506>
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