Doc.com Applies for Nasdaq Listing to Scale AI + Blockchain Telehealth Platform
NEW YORK — Feb. 5, 2026 — Doc.com Inc., a healthcare technology company focused on expanding access to care, said it has submitted an application for a proposed listing on the Nasdaq Stock Market, subject to Nasdaq review and approval, under the proposed ticker symbol DOCC.
The company framed the filing as a milestone in its push to deliver technology-driven healthcare to underserved communities, arguing that a potential Nasdaq listing could help it accelerate international growth and expand an integrated ecosystem built around AI-driven telemedicine and a blockchain-based data integrity layer.
What Doc.com says it offers
Doc.com says its model differs from subscription-based telehealth providers by offering initially free, 24/7 primary healthcare via video visits, connecting users with licensed doctors and nurse practitioners, with plans to add psychologists and veterinarians.
The company also described a roadmap where premium services—including AI-enabled clinical decision support and follow-up care—would roll out on a planned, phased basis, and only where permitted under applicable licensing and regulatory approvals.
CEO Charles Nader said the Nasdaq filing supports Doc.com’s long-term vision around health equity and would help the company expand globally while advancing its AI and blockchain technologies.
The “vertical” ecosystem pitch
Doc.com describes itself as building a vertically integrated healthcare platform that covers multiple categories of well-being, including:
- Telemedicine
- Mental health
- Veterinary care
- Pharmacy
- Education
It also said it is developing “Hospital AI” tools and other early-stage research initiatives aimed at more efficient and personalized care.
How AI and blockchain fit in
On the AI side, Doc.com said it trains systems using de-identified, real-world medical data, consistent with applicable healthcare privacy and data-protection requirements, with the goal of improving diagnostic support and treatment personalization.
On the blockchain side, the company said its framework is designed to enhance transparency and data integrity by securely hashing each healthcare interaction—positioning this as a trust mechanism for both patients and providers.
Geographic footprint and next steps
Doc.com said it operates across the U.S. and Latin America and plans further international expansion through partnerships and free-access initiatives tailored to local markets.
As the Nasdaq review process continues, the company said it will remain focused on advancing its technology stack, widening care access, and scaling its mission of making healthcare more universally accessible.
Industry takeaway: why this matters for blockchain in healthcare
Healthcare is a real-world test for blockchain—not for hype, but for auditability and trust. If Doc.com’s approach works as described, hashing patient interactions could become a practical integrity layer that helps:
- Prove records weren’t altered after the fact (tamper-evidence)
- Strengthen compliance and accountability in multi-provider workflows
- Build trust in AI-assisted care, where provenance and traceability matter as much as outcomes
For the crypto sector, it’s another signal that “blockchain infrastructure” narratives are increasingly being tied to regulated, privacy-constrained industries—where the value proposition lives in integrity, governance, and verifiable processes rather than tokens alone.