Health technology and medical innovation: why open-source is vital
Main Author: | Balli, Fabio |
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Format: | Proceeding Journal |
Bahasa: | eng |
Terbitan: |
, 2021
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: |
https://zenodo.org/record/5070342 |
Daftar Isi:
- Resources that fulfill fundamental needs must have a participatory governance, regardless of who owns them (Rodotà Commission and Italian Supreme Court building on Nobel Prize Dr Elinor Ostrom). Examples: open-source hand rub saves 8 million lives yearly; open-source MRI scanners could spare 60-140 million € yearly in Germany alone; open-source prostheses mobilize 30000 volunteers with a 0 € business model; Open Source Drug Discovery gathers 110 projects on neglected diseases; open-source games for health showcase a ludic model to mutually take care. It is vital because: 1) being healthy requires commoning; 2) it can double access to care; 3) it helps fight corruption; 4) costs can be cut by 10 or 100. Additional resources: reminder of definitions (free/libre and open-source vs gratis); three steps to start (Goals, design principles, validation); self-assessment (health, people, process, licences, resource allocation, physical availability, impact); links to guide for makers, poster with further examples, report on open source in Switzerland. Version en français
- Extended version on open-source respiratory health commons: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5515632 – Editable version on NextCloud/OnlyOffice: https://cloud.houseofcommons.ch/index.php/s/4tK94nbQMYQBJNo