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Real-Time Protocol Verification Browser Extension & Mobile Plugin

A lightweight browser extension and mobile app plugin that intercepts Wikipedia medical article links and displays a certified protocol overlay showing current best-practice procedures alongside the article. When a paramedic or first responder searches for 'hemorrhage control' or 'airway management' on Wikipedia during training or in the field, they see a flagged notification and a verified protocol from current ACEP/AHA guidelines. The plugin works offline and integrates with popular emergency medicine reference apps (Medscape, UpToDate).

PLUGIN

29 weeks • 70% confidence

Value Proposition

Solves the real problem at point-of-use: when someone searches for medical information in an emergency or training scenario, they get current protocols immediately without having to verify sources. Costs $2-5/month per individual vs. $200+/month organizational subscriptions. Works with existing free resources (Wikipedia, Google) rather than requiring purchase of expensive medical databases.

Target Audience

Individual paramedics, EMTs, first aid instructors, nursing students, military medics, and volunteer first responders who use Wikipedia or free medical references during training and emergency situations. Secondary: training coordinators who want to ensure their personnel aren't accidentally referencing outdated information.

Key Features

  • Automatic detection of outdated medical articles (Wikipedia, older textbooks, archived medical sites)
  • Overlay showing current protocol with source (ACEP 2024, AHA 2023, etc.) and change summary
  • Offline mode: protocols cached locally for use in areas without connectivity
  • And more, with full implementation detail...

Tech Stack

React or Vue.js for browser extension UI React Native or Flutter for mobile app IndexedDB and Service Workers for offline functionality Supabase or Firebase for real-time protocol database and updates
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Original Problem

Medical professionals and first responders rely on outdated emergency protocols from Wikipedia that haven't been updated in 20 years

Emergency medical personnel, paramedics, and first aid instructors are unknowingly teaching and applying outdated bleeding control techniques because Wikipedia's medical articles aren't regularly reviewed by current medical experts. This creates a critical gap where life-saving procedures taught in 2006 are still being referenced in 2026, potentially compromising patient outcomes. Current solutions like medical textbooks and official training programs exist but aren't accessible in real-time during emergencies when people search for quick reference information.

Score: 17.5%