Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > The application of distributed autonomous organ...

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

The application of distributed autonomous organization governance mechanisms to civic medical data management

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

E-pub ahead of print

Standard

The application of distributed autonomous organization governance mechanisms to civic medical data management. / Cunningham, James; Davies, Nigel; Devaney, Sarah et al.
In: IET Blockchain, 26.01.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Cunningham, J., Davies, N., Devaney, S., Holm, S., Harding, M., Neumann, V., & Ainsworth, J. (2024). The application of distributed autonomous organization governance mechanisms to civic medical data management. IET Blockchain. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1049/blc2.12062

Vancouver

Cunningham J, Davies N, Devaney S, Holm S, Harding M, Neumann V et al. The application of distributed autonomous organization governance mechanisms to civic medical data management. IET Blockchain. 2024 Jan 26. Epub 2024 Jan 26. doi: 10.1049/blc2.12062

Author

Bibtex

@article{8987c289ae174dc5a5915cbdebc1c2c7,
title = "The application of distributed autonomous organization governance mechanisms to civic medical data management",
abstract = "Decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) have emerged as a novel governance mechanism that operates through distributed ledgers and smart contracts, enabling members to direct an organization's actions. The widespread adoption of DAOs has occurred in response to their utility in managing emergent semi‐structured projects and has led to the development of various innovative governance mechanisms. The mechanisms employed by DAOs has the potential to be generalized beyond their core financial domain to a wide range of use cases. In the medical field the use of blockchain and DAOs can provide secure and transparent access to medical data, while ensuring patient privacy. Civic access to medical data is a growing area of interest, where individuals have control over their own medical data and can share it with healthcare providers, researchers, and other stakeholders. DAOs can facilitate this civic access, enabling individuals to share their data securely and selectively with authorized parties for research and other purposes. This paper explores the use of DAOs to medical data sharing, with a focus on ownership, governance, and transaction models. An application framework and API that enables the deployment of DAO‐like organizations is derived and this approach is applied to the patient‐centric management of medical data.",
keywords = "ethereum, blockchain applications and digital technology, decentralized applications",
author = "James Cunningham and Nigel Davies and Sarah Devaney and S{\o}ren Holm and Mike Harding and Victoria Neumann and John Ainsworth",
year = "2024",
month = jan,
day = "26",
doi = "10.1049/blc2.12062",
language = "English",
journal = "IET Blockchain",
issn = "2634-1573",
publisher = "Wiley Open Access",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The application of distributed autonomous organization governance mechanisms to civic medical data management

AU - Cunningham, James

AU - Davies, Nigel

AU - Devaney, Sarah

AU - Holm, Søren

AU - Harding, Mike

AU - Neumann, Victoria

AU - Ainsworth, John

PY - 2024/1/26

Y1 - 2024/1/26

N2 - Decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) have emerged as a novel governance mechanism that operates through distributed ledgers and smart contracts, enabling members to direct an organization's actions. The widespread adoption of DAOs has occurred in response to their utility in managing emergent semi‐structured projects and has led to the development of various innovative governance mechanisms. The mechanisms employed by DAOs has the potential to be generalized beyond their core financial domain to a wide range of use cases. In the medical field the use of blockchain and DAOs can provide secure and transparent access to medical data, while ensuring patient privacy. Civic access to medical data is a growing area of interest, where individuals have control over their own medical data and can share it with healthcare providers, researchers, and other stakeholders. DAOs can facilitate this civic access, enabling individuals to share their data securely and selectively with authorized parties for research and other purposes. This paper explores the use of DAOs to medical data sharing, with a focus on ownership, governance, and transaction models. An application framework and API that enables the deployment of DAO‐like organizations is derived and this approach is applied to the patient‐centric management of medical data.

AB - Decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) have emerged as a novel governance mechanism that operates through distributed ledgers and smart contracts, enabling members to direct an organization's actions. The widespread adoption of DAOs has occurred in response to their utility in managing emergent semi‐structured projects and has led to the development of various innovative governance mechanisms. The mechanisms employed by DAOs has the potential to be generalized beyond their core financial domain to a wide range of use cases. In the medical field the use of blockchain and DAOs can provide secure and transparent access to medical data, while ensuring patient privacy. Civic access to medical data is a growing area of interest, where individuals have control over their own medical data and can share it with healthcare providers, researchers, and other stakeholders. DAOs can facilitate this civic access, enabling individuals to share their data securely and selectively with authorized parties for research and other purposes. This paper explores the use of DAOs to medical data sharing, with a focus on ownership, governance, and transaction models. An application framework and API that enables the deployment of DAO‐like organizations is derived and this approach is applied to the patient‐centric management of medical data.

KW - ethereum

KW - blockchain applications and digital technology

KW - decentralized applications

U2 - 10.1049/blc2.12062

DO - 10.1049/blc2.12062

M3 - Journal article

JO - IET Blockchain

JF - IET Blockchain

SN - 2634-1573

ER -