Is a Healthcare Digital ID Already Here in US?
Does America already have a national digital ID based around healthcare and every aspect of your life supposedly connected to healthcare? Dr. Robert Malone, mRNA vaccine inventor and vocal voice for medical accountability, thinks so.
He’s flagging a new version of US Core Data for Interoperability (USCDI) from the U.S. Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC—when the title’s that long, you know they’re up to nothing good). “The National Digital Health ID is being implemented by the Federal Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology,” Malone wrote June 5. “Most US Citizens have no idea it is being implemented. The National Digital Health ID system is in direct conflict with the US Constitution Bill of Rights.”1
With everything from guns to “misinformation” being flagged as supposed health crises, all kinds of sensitive personal information could soon be shared among federal and state governments and private entities without even patients’ informed consent. And how could such data be applied?
ONC posted about its new USCDI with “20 new data elements” multiple times on Twitter. HealthIT.gov lists the areas USCDI covers, which are Allergies and Intolerances, Care Team Member(s), Clinical Notes, Clinical Tests, Diagnostic Imaging, Encounter Information, Facility Information, Goals, Health Insurance Information, Health Status Assessments, Immunizations, Laboratory, Medical Devices, Medications, Patient Demographics/Information, Patient Summary and Plan, Problems, Procedures, Provenance (“metadata”), and Vital Signs. Remember when proof of Covid vaccination was required to travel or enter a lot of venues? That could be just the preview, if Malone’s assessment is correct.
While USCDI might not be intended as a social credit system now (though that’s doubtful, with the Biden administration), it could be co-opted. And the current administration has a track record of trampling Americans’ freedom and rights, using tech to do so.
And what if the government decides that everyone who disagrees with lockdown policies cannot get healthcare? Or what if a supposed “misinformation” spreader is blacklisted? China has a social credit system that doesn’t allow people to buy or do anything if they have done one thing in public or online that the government dislikes (that includes healthcare access). The U.S. government and major businesses have many ties to World Economic Forum, which also explicitly plans a digital ID that ties together healthcare, voting, social media, travel, banking, and other areas. That system could be coming to America all too soon. If Malone is right, the digital ID is already here.
Images in this piece are all from Dr. Malone’s Substack