I am yet to hear a good argument for blockchain in healthcare.
I'm no expert on blockchain tech by any means, but I'd love to hear good ideas about how it could be implemented
anywhere in the healthcare field, pharmacy services in particular, and if it would truly offer an advantage. My opinion is that people are trying to crowbar the tech into industries that don't really need it, and they're doing it for their own gain and not to actually solve problems.
The first thing that comes to mind for me is the postal system. Seems like a blockchain would be a good tracking system for 1st class mail (letters), which doesn't currently exist. I'd love to be able to track regular letters I send without having to pay for priority mail. Yes, I still pay my bills through the mail, and I also use the postal system to purchase stocks. I'm very old school. And as it stands, there's no tracking system for a letter sent with a $0.50 stamp on it.
As an aside, I can't stand most of the posts in this thread, which are mostly generic shitposts that aren't even addressing the question asked in the thread title. God damn you sons of bitches and your spam. And I guess the question is which industries
don't need blockchain tech. My intuition tells me that the list is a pretty long one.
In any case, I haven't seen it getting adopted by many companies in order to improve their businesses, and bitcoin itself is now 10 years old. It's not like there's a secret that's being kept from the corporate world.