Intiva Health took the least glamorous corner of healthcare - credentialing - and rebuilt it on a distributed ledger.
Austin, Texas. A former Marine officer runs a group of four companies from a low building on Directors Blvd. The businesses look unrelated - software, gummy vitamins, IV-drip clinics, a crypto token - until you notice they all orbit the same person: the working healthcare professional.
Every hospital runs on a question that sounds trivial and isn't: is this clinician actually allowed to do this? Answering it is called credentialing, and it is a slog of licenses, board certifications, malpractice histories, and primary-source verifications. It can take months. During those months, a perfectly qualified doctor may be unable to work, unable to bill, and, from the hospital's perspective, an expensive liability sitting in a folder marked "pending."
Intiva Health decided this folder was worth a company. Its flagship product, Incredable - which spent its earlier years as Ready Doc - stores a clinician's credentials and their verification on a distributed ledger. The pitch is that once a credential has been verified and written to an immutable record, the next facility doesn't need to redo the archaeology. Verification that used to take months collapses toward minutes. This is the rare "blockchain for X" claim where the X is genuinely a good fit: credentials are exactly the kind of thing you want to be tamper-evident, portable, and verifiable without a phone tree.
What makes the company interesting is not that it discovered credentialing was annoying - everyone in healthcare knows that. It's that a firm which started in 2006 as a surgical-services and ER staffing agency, a deeply analog business of putting warm bodies in operating rooms, looked at its own back-office friction and decided the fix was distributed ledger technology. That is an unusual distance to travel.
"Ready Doc creates an immutable, digitized version of credentials and their verification - shortening future verifications from months to minutes."
— Intiva Health, on the product now called IncredableIntiva's argument rests on a single before-and-after. Traditional credential verification is a manual, repeated chore; a ledger-backed record aims to make it a one-time write with instant reads. The bars below are illustrative of that claim, not audited figures.
Sprawl usually kills young companies. Intiva Group's defense is that each of its businesses touches the same person - a healthcare professional - at a different point. Credentialing gets them cleared to work; supplements and clinics are what they sell and use; the token is the connective tissue the company is trying to run underneath it all.
The DLT-secured credentialing, compliance, and enrollment platform for facilities, providers, and administrators. Formerly Ready Doc.
A BNB Smart Chain token that powers payments, compliance modules, and rewards inside Incredable. Fixed supply of one billion.
Supplement maker in a cGMP and USDA Organic certified Arizona facility, staffed with a pharmacist, food scientist, and MD.
Wellness centers offering IV vitamin infusions, ketamine therapy, and personalized programs across Texas locations.
The interesting thing about infrastructure is that it's invisible until it fails. Nobody at a hospital wakes up excited about credentialing; they only notice it when a credential lapses and a clinician suddenly can't work. Intiva's real product, then, is not software so much as the absence of a 90-day wait. That's a hard thing to put on a billboard, which may be why credentialing has stayed quietly broken for so long - the people who could fix it were bored before they started.
The company built its platform on Hashgraph, the distributed ledger developed by Swirlds, with engineering help from the IT firm TxMQ. It later brought in Prysm Group - economists who had worked on other ledger projects - to design the token model. In 2019 it partnered with the credential verification organization 1st Assistant, which put thousands of providers onto the platform. None of these are household names. All of them are the kind of unglamorous, load-bearing partnerships that suggest a company solving a real operational problem rather than chasing a narrative.
Then, in October 2025, Intiva did the thing that invites eye-rolls: it launched a token. $TIVA went live on the BNB Smart Chain as the intended transaction layer for Incredable's credentialing and compliance modules, with a supply permanently capped at one billion. By July 2026 the token had picked up a listing on the exchange BitMart. Whether a healthcare-compliance token is a genuinely better rail or a solution in search of a problem is a fair question - but the discipline of capping supply and anchoring the token to an actual product is at least the responsible version of the idea.
"Incredable is the first DLT-secured credentialing solution for facilities, providers, and administrators."
— The company's own framing of its flagshipIntiva was founded and is chaired by Alexander C. Candelario, a former U.S. Marine officer with an accounting degree from Texas A&M and a Master's in Finance from Harvard. That resume - military, accounting, finance - reads less like a typical crypto founder and more like someone who genuinely enjoys operational plumbing. He built the group across manufacturing, software, healthcare, and aviation, which is either admirable range or a lot to keep in one head. The through-line, again, is the working professional: Candelario's companies keep circling back to the friction of actually practicing medicine.
Founded in Austin as a surgical-services and emergency-room staffing agency.
Raises a $6M seed round; begins building toward a ledger-based credentialing platform.
Announces plans to leverage Swirlds Hashgraph for an integrated healthcare career platform.
TxMQ delivers the Hashgraph-powered Ready Doc; partnership with 1st Assistant adds thousands of providers. Gummi World and Nova Vita launch.
Engages Prysm Group on token economics; names a new Medical Director as it expands.
Ready Doc becomes Incredable; the $TIVA token launches on BNB Smart Chain (Oct 22).
$TIVA expands its exchange footprint with a listing on BitMart.
A few honest caveats belong here. Intiva Health is a small team - roughly 20 people at the core entity - operating in a market with much larger, better-capitalized credentialing incumbents like symplr, Modio, and Verifiable. Revenue figures floating around third-party databases (an estimate near $8M) are unverified. And the central bet - that a token improves a compliance workflow rather than complicating a regulated one - remains genuinely unproven. What's clear is the problem is real, the founder is an operator rather than a tourist, and the company has been chipping at the same unglamorous seam for twenty years. In healthcare tech, that kind of patience is itself a differentiator.
Sources include intivahealth.com, the company's press releases, GlobeNewswire, PR Newswire, BusinessWire, and Crunchbase. Financial estimates are third-party and unverified; forward-looking claims about token utility are the company's own.