Provider-Owned Senior Care Cooperative Stack
A provider-owned senior-care cooperative stack would combine open EHR and practice-management software, FHIR-based payer data exchange, shared care plans, local pharmacy coordination, and cooperative home-health operations so independent clinics and care teams can coordinate senior care without being absorbed into a payer-owned CenterWell-style network.
Thesis
Bitcoin / decentralization role
Coordination mechanism
Verification / trust model
Failure modes
- • Independent providers may lack the capital, staff, and integration capacity to match CenterWell's managed-care alignment.
- • Privacy, consent, cybersecurity, malpractice, and clinical-quality failures could undermine trust in a federated care stack.
- • Payer reimbursement, network participation, pharmacy economics, and home-health labor constraints may keep many providers dependent on large incumbents.
Adoption path
- • Begin with independent senior primary care groups, community clinics, or risk-bearing provider groups that need lower-cost practice-management and care-coordination infrastructure.
- • Deploy open EHR and practice-management tools, then connect payer APIs, patient consent, pharmacy records, and referral workflows for selected chronic-care pathways.
- • Expand into cooperative home-health coordination and value-based contracts once clinical data quality, payment reconciliation, and audit processes are reliable.
Decentralization fit
8.0/10
Coordination credibility
6.0/10
Implementation feasibility
5.0/10
Incumbent pressure