Increasing costs, discerning customers, and innovative disruption are just a few of the challenges faced by health and life insurance companies. How can a cryptocurrency technology like blockchain potentially solve these problems and more?
Health and life insurers are among the many players scrambling to determine how blockchain could be adapted to improve the way they maintain records, execute transactions, and interact with stakeholders. Key questions center on whether blockchain’s unique attributes could help insurers cut costs, manage risk, improve customer service, grow their business, and, ultimately, bolster the bottom line.
Deloitte’s Center for Health Solutions and Center for Financial Services recently partnered on a crowdsourcing research project to look into how health and life insurers might leverage blockchain and related technologies to strengthen key elements of an insurer’s value proposition. The crowd’s mission was to brainstorm how this emerging technology could be applied by insurers in the next five to 10 years to improve current standard operating procedures and systems while enhancing the customer experience.
So, what did we find? Six use cases that are the most realistic and promising for health and life insurers. While it is still early in the adoption curve, the applications explored here provide a starting point for insurers looking to unlock the potential of blockchain. Scroll down to explore these use cases and download the report for additional insights.
In this paper, we examine the feasibility and implications of these use cases in terms of how blockchain could directly and indirectly improve an insurer’s basic processes and business models. The use cases address improvements in an insurance company’s operational functions as well as dealings with providers, intermediaries, and policyholders, thereby improving the customer experience, enhancing product value, and laying the groundwork for greater consumer choice in the market. The end game is to decrease costs, improve operational effectiveness, and strengthen relationships with the insured. The following are the use cases presented in this report:
Health and life insurers should be bold when it comes to blockchain. The greatest opportunities may extend beyond making incremental improvements in current business models to harnessing blockchain’s unique attributes to create entirely new types of interactive policies and launch innovative services that add value and grow the business.
Blockchain’s added security and ability to establish trust between entities are two reasons why it can help solve the interoperability problem better than today’s existing technologies. An interoperable and comprehensive health record on the blockchain would most likely be pulled directly from existing EHRs in hospitals and physician offices. Today’s health records are typically stored within a single provider system. With blockchain, providers could either select which information to upload to a shared blockchain when a patient event occurs, or continuously upload to the blockchain.
Some of today’s interoperability challenges will remain with the integration of blockchain. However, the benefits of establishing an interoperable, comprehensive health record, both in the short and long term, should push stakeholders to explore this technology and may impact how health information exchanges operate in the future.
Blockchain: How it works