Clinic-owned open inventory network
Clinics, surgery centers, and community health providers could operate shared open-source inventory systems that expose anonymized demand, shortages, substitutions, and local surplus to a cooperative procurement network.
Thesis
Bitcoin / decentralization role
Coordination mechanism
Verification / trust model
Failure modes
- • Small providers may lack the operational discipline to keep inventory data accurate.
- • The cooperative may still depend on incumbent distributors for many products.
- • Supplier price breaks may be unavailable until the network reaches meaningful purchasing volume.
Adoption path
- • Deploy OpenBoxes or similar open systems inside clinics for internal stock control.
- • Standardize product identifiers, units of measure, substitutions, and shortage alerts across participating sites.
- • Create cooperative purchasing and surplus-transfer rules for low-risk supplies before expanding into higher-compliance categories.
Decentralization fit
74.0/10
Coordination credibility
66.0/10
Implementation feasibility
58.0/10
Incumbent pressure