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6 in 10 humans still have no access to care, or do not adhere to it, despite rising investments. Alcohol-based hand rub and WikiMed illustrate how creating freely reproducible equipment and software with communities can: save millions of lives, increase integrity, cut costs by 90%. Cooperation-driven care is the only way to realize the 2030 agenda in time: health for everyone. We present nine alternatives to the dominant proprietary excluding innovation model, to drive development towards a responsible, solidar society. We also discuss ageing, public policies, quality systems, and cryptocurrencies. Français — Español — Português — русский — 中文 — हिंदी — বাংলা — العربية Editable file .odp included.
New version: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7833388
community-based healtcare, medical expenditure, free/libre software for health, open access commons, open-source medical supply, community-based healthcare, open hardware for health, adhesion to treatment, scientific integrity, 3d-printing, health for all, wearables, open science, mutual care, health data collection, co-creation
community-based healtcare, medical expenditure, free/libre software for health, open access commons, open-source medical supply, community-based healthcare, open hardware for health, adhesion to treatment, scientific integrity, 3d-printing, health for all, wearables, open science, mutual care, health data collection, co-creation
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