The Problem
Medical information moves through a maze of clinics, labs, insurers and research teams:
Fragmented files - patients repeat tests because records stay in siloed portals.
Data breaches - central databases leak highly sensitive histories.
Manual credentialing - every new doctor photocopies IDs and forms.
Research delays - scientists struggle to verify consent and provenance.
Patients lose control, providers waste time, and breakthroughs arrive more slowly.
The Solution
The Solution
Humanity Protocol links every medical fact to the patient’s verified human identity.
Proof of Humanity confirms the patient is a real, unique person.
Treatment-specific credentials - each diagnosis, test result, prescription, or consent is issued by the doctor or hospital as its own encrypted credential and stored in the patient’s wallet.
Patients decide which credentials to share, and with whom, using zero-knowledge proofs that reveal only the necessary facts (e.g., "blood type O+" or "under treatment with X medicine").
Providers and researchers can trust that every credential traces back to the same human without seeing the patient’s full record.
How It Works
One-time human verification
The patient scans their palm once and receives a Proof-of-Humanity credential.Point-of-care issuance
After each visit or lab test, the care provider creates a new credential, for example:
“MRI scan completed 12 May 2025,” “Type 2 diabetes diagnosis,” “Amoxicillin 500 mg prescription.”Selective sharing
When another clinic, pharmacy, or research team needs information, the patient discloses only the relevant credentials, nothing more.Auditable provenance
Because every credential is signed by a licensed provider and anchored to the patient’s PoH identity, duplicates and forged records are easy to spot and reject.
Benefits & Results
Complete, patient-controlled history - no need to chase faxed records or repeat tests.
Reduced breach risk - no central database of full charts for hackers to target.
Instant, trustworthy referrals - specialists view exactly what they need, when the patient allows.
Higher-quality research data - scientists receive verifiable, de-duplicated records with confirmed patient consent.
Regulatory compliance with ease - sharing happens via zero-knowledge proofs, satisfying HIPAA/GDPR while improving care.