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  • Pharmacies

  • Churches

  • Public libraries
    Community colleges

  • Senior/Community Centers/YMHCA

  • Unions/work networks

  • Public libraries

  • Food coops

  • Government services (unemployment offices, Medicaid centers, local district/neighborhood/council offices, emergency/homeless shelters)

  • Charities (Salvation Army, Goodwill)

Example of Services Provided to Vulnerable People

Nurse practitioners at a church in Florida (Jim)

  • Face to Face service

  • No phone

  • Person seeking help is a known member of the community

  • Facial ID = a person recognizing another person

Boston (Dr Tom)

  • Many homeless have access to disability benefits, Medicare, have phones and ID/SSN

Red Cross (Bev)

  • Takes IC voucher from Fire department, teacher, nurse who knows them.

Knight Medical center (Dr. Tom)

  • provides food and supplies

  • no question asked

CUNY Food Pantry (Noreen)

  • mutual aid/informal services

  • no ID required

  • no questions asked

  • just need to get in building so could be a guest

Other Possible Use Cases:

Services in other countries (Simone)

  • Going on foreign travel soon

  • Interested to see how 3rd world countries handle ID for various purposes.

United Way (TomJ)

  • Concerned about deduplication to avoid fraud. Deduplication is contracted out to another entity. 2 methods: avoid killing patients, avoid fraud. Carmen at ONC working on patient matching.

Issues:

  • Dr Tom: Gov mandate to share medical records. Lots of duplication of records that aren’t exactly in synch.

  • Dr Tom: Healthcare is more disciplined due to potential harm to person.

  • TomJ: Stochastic, probabilistic problem. Isn’t always precise. Doesn’t need to be precise.