The competition was won by a group of four – Ane Laande and Helen Bender from the Digital Product Design Department of the Estonian Academy of Arts and Karl-Martin Voovere and Markus Marandi from the Computer Science Institute of the University of Tartu.
A few months ago, the Finnish law firm Dilaw Attorney-at-Law Ltd announced a pan-European student competition – the task was to create a prototype of a European register of rare diseases. To create a user-friendly environment where patients can manage their data, share it, participate in clinical trials and have a controlled source of information about their health problems, and for the system to take into account the various European regulations, GDPR and architectural features to run this type of registry.