The Decentralised Autonomous Organisation (DAO)
A trustless coordination layer for healthcare, powered by people, providers, and machines
The dHealth DAO is a community-governed organisation building open infrastructure for verifiable healthcare. We operate the dHealth Protocol and steward dHealth Intelligence — a privacy-preserving foundation where individuals, organisations, and AI systems can act, prove, and be accountable across institutions.
The Mission
Healthcare runs on portals, PDFs, and vendor-controlled systems that cannot prove integrity across boundaries. We provide the primitives that make every healthcare action independently verifiable — while keeping sensitive data under user control and never on-chain.
What the DAO delivers
dHealth Protocol
a trustless layer of credentials, schemas, attestations, and mandates that anchor healthcare actions in cryptographic proof
dHealth Intelligence
AI care agents that turn scattered health information into structured, actionable knowledge for patients and organisations
Legal
As DAOs cannot directly hold legal status, the eHealth Consulting GmbH in Zurich, Switzerland serves as the legal interface to allocate funds and manage operations. It oversees the development of dHealth Intelligence and is leading the formation of a dedicated corporate entity.
Governance
The DAO is governed by holders of DHP Protocol token, the protocol’s participation and accountability asset. DHP is locked to back identities, issuance rights, and attestations, with controlled 2% annual inflation directed to active contributors. Stable-value assets handle commerce; DHP secures meaning, authority, and governance.
Governance Principles
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Privacy by architecture: no raw health data on-chain.
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Authority by design: every action is tied to a verifiable credential and explicit mandate.
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Human-first: AI agents and devices act only under traceable human authority.
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Open: built for verification by anyone, without vendor lock-in.
Get Involved
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Individuals: lock DHP to participate and earn rewards for verifiable contributions.
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Organisations: issue credentials, sponsor onboarding, and integrate verifiable workflows.
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Developers: build applications, AI agents, and devices on a privacy-preserving foundation.