Navigating between possibility and reality: An assessment of blockchain's potential for the Dutch healthcare sector
Summary
Blockchain technology promises to revolutionise how different entities transact and interact and is
regarded as the most promising innovation since the advent of the Internet. Discussions about
blockchain’s relevance have largely concentrated on financial applications, such a Bitcoin. This thesis
examines blockchain’s potential for the Dutch healthcare sector. Using a constructive technology
assessment combined with a vision assessment, two guiding visions are identified that show
blockchain’s potential to make the healthcare sector more efficient and more personalised. However,
blockchain is accompanied by substantial hype which raises concerns because many technical,
organisational and societal barriers have to fall before blockchain can fulfil its promises. Technology
developers, project managers, consultants, patients, medical professionals, health insurers and policy
makers reflected on the use of blockchain for the healthcare sector and identified of the following that
might hinder the implementation of the guiding visions: Interoperability, conservative culture, hype,
incumbent power, misconceptions by non-experts, privacy and security, disruption of power
structures and relationships and lack of evidence. Blockchain is still in an early phase of development.
However, as the healthcare industry is becoming more dedicated to solve interoperability issues, small
blockchain experiments, which include users early on and built in privacy-be-design, may find
sufficient support from healthcare stakeholders to become successful. Because blockchain is
economically scalable, profitable experiments can grow into complex ecosystems over time, which
could transform the healthcare sector into a more sustainable system.