(https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2020/05/25/the-rogue-experimenters) The Open Insulin Foundation (<https://openinsulin.org/>) serves as one inspiration for this challenge. The group is “creating the means for communities in-need to have local sources of safe, affordable, high-quality insulin…governance is shared between people with diabetes and people working on the project.”
Cardano offers enormous potential to build on or replicate this model, by offering the capacity for globally decentralized coordination and governance. The blockchain provides the perfect means to transfer power from centralized corporations to the people at the edges.
This challenge is looking for projects that will boost Cardano’s profile and spur adoption in the developing, among the global medical and pharmaceutical communities, and, most importantly, will offer hope and opportunity to the world-wide suffers of critical and devastating diseases and ailments.
Some directions projects can take:
· Blockchain improvements for global supply chains
· Decentralized or “citizen-science” approaches to research and development
· DAOs for the management of research, manufacturing, or distribution projects
· Decentralized identity (Atala PRISM) solutions for:
- Access to healthcare services
- Protection of sensitive data
- Monetization of data for research such that the data owners benefit
- Supply chain tracking
- Access and control of medical records
- Improve processes and remove costs for health insurance providers
· Blockchain solutions for cost-reduction initiatives in hospitals or care centers
· Blockchain-based standardization for health-care administration to reduce waste
· Solutions for interoperability, locally and globally, for health care records in order to promote accessibility and reduce costs
“He who has health has hope, and he who has hope has everything” Thomas Carlyle
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