One continuous public structure
The patient journey, sources, claims, institutional responses, disagreements, and updates remain connected in one accessible record.
One continuous patient-centered structure can connect records held by hospitals, universities, agencies, researchers, advocates, and other institutions without forcing the patient to rebuild the story at every boundary.
The patient journey, sources, claims, institutional responses, disagreements, and updates remain connected in one accessible record.
Each university, hospital, agency, or research group can receive its own page identifying exactly what it is being asked to verify.
Name, department, role in the record, and dates covered.
The specific note, diagnosis, test, timeline entry, correspondence, or claim under review.
The underlying document, de-identified excerpt, provenance link, and version identifier.
Verify, partially verify, correct, dispute, decline, state lack of authority, or provide no response.
Who reviewed the item, in what role, and on what date.
Later corrections are added without erasing the earlier record.
These labels keep a patient statement, an official record, an institutional verification, and an unresolved dispute from being confused with one another.
The Internet is the continuity layer. A record created in one hospital can be linked to a university review, an NIH source, a state-agency response, a federal claim, and the patient’s chronology without forcing every institution to use the same internal system. Project Fionigan supplies the public structure connecting those separate systems.