CryptoCutie
|
|
April 06, 2018, 07:57:01 PM |
|
yes i also think health related informations are important in the maintenance of good health and the prevention of disease.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Advertised sites are not endorsed by the Bitcoin Forum. They may be unsafe, untrustworthy, or illegal in your jurisdiction.
|
bitcoin-shark
|
|
April 06, 2018, 07:58:16 PM |
|
the project has a team of first-class professionals and this can give further confidence to investors, if it will be confirmed that vitalik have invested in the project the reputation would skyrocket...
|
|
|
|
CryptoCutie
|
|
April 06, 2018, 09:53:50 PM |
|
It seems to many that de Grey is a megalomaniac. But it's not that simple. On the contrary: De Grey hits an important point.
|
|
|
|
belechau
|
|
April 06, 2018, 10:43:17 PM |
|
It seems to many that de Grey is a megalomaniac. But it's not that simple. On the contrary: De Grey hits an important point. This is the vision of many skeptics and people who still do not know their work and their foundations, but deepening their visions, it is possible to recognize the full potential of the Foundation and the Team. Just as it works with the Ehealth project, videos and WPP, albeit long, have the potential to bring knowledge and hope to all
|
|
|
|
PS92
|
|
April 06, 2018, 11:19:27 PM |
|
|
|
|
|
Altcoinrusher
|
|
April 06, 2018, 11:53:13 PM |
|
Everything connected with health and blockchain will 100% succeed, that's for sure Heard a lot of EHF, I'm very interested in the project
Correct!, any health products, services and platforms will eventually be patronized for the fact that health is an essential part of our lives and we have to attend to it seriously.
|
|
|
|
Piggy
|
|
April 07, 2018, 01:49:23 AM |
|
It seems to many that de Grey is a megalomaniac. But it's not that simple. On the contrary: De Grey hits an important point. He is quite widely recognized as one of the experts for his contribution to the research on aging process. I don't know if he has a peculiar character but what matter here is the dedication to his work
|
|
|
|
hicaribou
|
|
April 07, 2018, 02:10:57 AM |
|
Everything connected with health and blockchain will 100% succeed, that's for sure Heard a lot of EHF, I'm very interested in the project
Health like banking services is one of those areas that indeed fits quite well the use cases/benefits that the blockchain brings There is nothing like 100% in crypto! But you could be right the chance that eHealth will succeed is high, because they make a good job and have reputable scientists on board. Exactly. Combining healtcare and blockchain technology isn't a guarantee for success. It still needs a strong, hard working team with a good idea and a clear plan how to achieve their targets. Indeed, as we can see on ehealth there are many experts in medical and even technology, so the only thing left for us to see is the development progress and how they will do it, still waiting for that.
|
|
|
|
|
omwibya
Member
Offline
Activity: 434
Merit: 10
|
|
April 07, 2018, 05:11:12 AM |
|
thanks, but do you have a non-german source? google translate isn't so good.
|
|
|
|
jonnytracker
|
|
April 07, 2018, 05:30:44 AM |
|
Everything connected with health and blockchain will 100% succeed, that's for sure Heard a lot of EHF, I'm very interested in the project
Health like banking services is one of those areas that indeed fits quite well the use cases/benefits that the blockchain brings There is nothing like 100% in crypto! But you could be right the chance that eHealth will succeed is high, because they make a good job and have reputable scientists on board. Exactly. Combining healtcare and blockchain technology isn't a guarantee for success. It still needs a strong, hard working team with a good idea and a clear plan how to achieve their targets. Indeed, as we can see on ehealth there are many experts in medical and even technology, so the only thing left for us to see is the development progress and how they will do it, still waiting for that. It is a long wait with those roadmaps, but along the way many experts will join them probably
|
|
|
|
hicaribou
|
|
April 07, 2018, 05:46:15 AM |
|
thanks, but do you have a non-german source? google translate isn't so good. Thats a german site sir, i think google translate is the only way to read it with english / other languages, use google chrome and translate the site directly.
|
|
|
|
Piggy
|
|
April 07, 2018, 06:08:24 AM |
|
That is quite good to hear, is referring to the statement about human being able to leave 1k years or something else?
|
|
|
|
rjp55
|
|
April 07, 2018, 06:08:52 AM |
|
Good thread, guys! I really dig the in-depth discussions here :-) However, I too, have my own doubts about this project's performance when it comes to the lesser-developed countries in, say, Africa. Here's hoping you will succeed everywhere :-)
the aim of the project is to make medicine more accessible to all mankind. I hope the project management will pay special attention to the third world countries. I think the ehealth team is well educated people not just ignorant some sort of nerds, so they won't neglect third world countries, also there are some doctors on the team so they know they have to cure people not just rich ones, cure everyone. Today, everyone has a smartphone, even in underdeveloped countries. I think this project is done for the whole social class. I think a problem would be treating the sick, not diagnosing. Considering the complexity of the project, I think they were also think about this thing. You can only go that far...treating and curing that's already something else. eHealth first should make sure the platform works good for diagnosing and then we'll see. Diagnosing is not easy, nowadays one doctor can say that you have cancer and another doctor says that you are healthy, nothing to worry about(I exaggerated a little bit) what I am saying is diagnosing can differ between doctors. So its not easy.
|
|
|
|
jonnytracker
|
|
April 07, 2018, 06:17:27 AM |
|
Most dentist are still using the old methods and can't even diagnose a simple infection in root canal. It is all business now, more treatment more profits they don't care about patients health.
|
|
|
|
batako
|
|
April 07, 2018, 06:20:01 AM |
|
Good thread, guys! I really dig the in-depth discussions here :-) However, I too, have my own doubts about this project's performance when it comes to the lesser-developed countries in, say, Africa. Here's hoping you will succeed everywhere :-)
the aim of the project is to make medicine more accessible to all mankind. I hope the project management will pay special attention to the third world countries. I think the ehealth team is well educated people not just ignorant some sort of nerds, so they won't neglect third world countries, also there are some doctors on the team so they know they have to cure people not just rich ones, cure everyone. Today, everyone has a smartphone, even in underdeveloped countries. I think this project is done for the whole social class. I think a problem would be treating the sick, not diagnosing. Considering the complexity of the project, I think they were also think about this thing. You can only go that far...treating and curing that's already something else. eHealth first should make sure the platform works good for diagnosing and then we'll see. Diagnosing is not easy, nowadays one doctor can say that you have cancer and another doctor says that you are healthy, nothing to worry about(I exaggerated a little bit) what I am saying is diagnosing can differ between doctors. So its not easy. Mostly different diagnosing caused by the different toll the doctors use. If ehealth will be mainstream then such different analysis can be reduced.
|
|
|
|
rjp55
|
|
April 07, 2018, 06:46:10 AM |
|
Most dentist are still using the old methods and can't even diagnose a simple infection in root canal. It is all business now, more treatment more profits they don't care about patients health.
I guess they know the quote "Shortest way is the known way" Yes you are right everything became a business even healthcare sector..
|
|
|
|
safariwave
|
|
April 07, 2018, 07:28:17 AM |
|
Most dentist are still using the old methods and can't even diagnose a simple infection in root canal. It is all business now, more treatment more profits they don't care about patients health.
I guess they know the quote "Shortest way is the known way" Yes you are right everything became a business even healthcare sector.. lol, this is fun because in my "advanced" country the are still a lot of false dentists playing around with mouth, and struggling against the cheap competition coming from countries abroad
|
|
|
|
matjas
|
|
April 07, 2018, 08:51:34 AM |
|
That is quite good to hear, is referring to the statement about human being able to leave 1k years or something else? I think people are generally undereducated as to aging and slowing it, that's why this kind of researches sometimes sound a bit like rocket science. But it's good more and more people get involved. I wish there would be more articles like this explaining the details.
|
|
|
|
king_of_alts
Member
Offline
Activity: 476
Merit: 10
|
|
April 07, 2018, 10:00:34 AM |
|
Most dentist are still using the old methods and can't even diagnose a simple infection in root canal. It is all business now, more treatment more profits they don't care about patients health.
I guess they know the quote "Shortest way is the known way" Yes you are right everything became a business even healthcare sector.. lol, this is fun because in my "advanced" country the are still a lot of false dentists playing around with mouth, and struggling against the cheap competition coming from countries abroad In each country health care is business. Even if there is universal health care. There are extra services that you have to pay from your own pocket and doctors always try to sell them to you.
|
|
|
|
|