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Medical records & lab results

Medical data is rarely missing — it is fragmented, distrusted, and re-acquired. See five specialists in a year and you repeat blood panels, imaging, and intake forms that already exist somewhere else.

Khrome anchors a per-patient evolution chain. Each clinical event — a lab result, a visit summary, a prescription, a procedure note — is written by the producing provider as a signed, content-addressed entry. The raw PHI lives in a HIPAA-compliant store (encrypted at rest, per-patient field-level keys); the chain holds the proof, the metadata, and the audit trail.

When you see a new specialist, you grant a scoped consent token. Their system pulls the relevant entries through the API, and a records-summary agent produces a clinical brief in the format that practice already uses.

What changes:

  • Insurers save redundant test spend — a recent CBC already on chain is visible before a third one is ordered.
  • You stop repeating yourself — intake becomes a consent grant, not a clipboard.
  • Providers get a structured, agent-summarized history in their existing system, not a fax.
  • Every access is logged on chain — HIPAA's accounting-of-disclosures becomes a query, not a quarterly audit.