International Journal of Innovative Research in Computer and Communication Engineering

ISSN Approved Journal | Impact factor: 8.771 | ESTD: 2013 | Follows UGC CARE Journal Norms and Guidelines

| Monthly, Peer-Reviewed, Refereed, Scholarly, Multidisciplinary and Open Access Journal | High Impact Factor 8.771 (Calculated by Google Scholar and Semantic Scholar | AI-Powered Research Tool | Indexing in all Major Database & Metadata, Citation Generator | Digital Object Identifier (DOI) |


TITLE Blockchain Enabled Vaccination Management for Transparent and Secure Immunization Tracking
ABSTRACT Due to the constraints of centralized data administration, assuring the confidentiality, dependability, and transparency of immunization records is a crucial concern in contemporary healthcare systems. The Blockchain-Enabled Vaccination Management System is a cutting-edge solution that improves the accessibility and integrity of immunization data by utilizing smart contracts and blockchain technology. The system, which was created with Node.js for the backend and React.js for the frontend, connects to the Ethereum Sepolia testnet to safely store immunization records in a decentralized ledger. Solidity-written smart contracts oversee essential functions including appointment scheduling, vaccination registration, and hospital verification. In order to boost efficiency and lower transaction costs, the platform also stores non-sensitive off-chain data in MongoDB.
AUTHOR PAUL SAMUEL A, MOHAMED THARIQ RAHUMAN S, MOHAN RAM K, M ALAMELU MANGAI UG Student, Dept. of CSE, Francis Xavier Engineering College, Tirunelveli, Tamil Nadu, India Assistant Professor, Dept. of CSE, Francis Xavier Engineering College, Tirunelveli, Tamil Nadu, India
VOLUME 183
DOI DOI: 10.15680/IJIRCCE.2026.1404039
PDF pdf/39_Blockchain Enabled Vaccination Management for Transparent and Secure Immunization Tracking.pdf
KEYWORDS
References 1. S. Nakamoto, “Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System,” 2008.
2. G. Wood, “Ethereum: A Secure Decentralised Generalised Transaction Ledger,” Ethereum Project Yellow Paper, 2014.
3. V. Buterin, “A Next-Generation Smart Contract and Decentralized Application Platform,” Ethereum White Paper, 2014.
4. M. Crosby, P. Pattanayak, S. Verma, and V. Kalyanaraman, “Blockchain Technology: Beyond Bitcoin,” Applied Innovation Review, no. 2, pp. 6–19, 2016.
5. K. Christidis and M. Devetsikiotis, “Blockchains and Smart Contracts for the Internet of Things,” IEEE Access, vol. 4, pp. 2292–2303, 2016.
6. A. Ekblaw, A. Azaria, J. Halamka, and A. Lippman, “A Case Study for Blockchain in Healthcare: ‘MedRec’ Prototype for Electronic Health Records and Medical Research Data,” IEEE Open & Big Data Conference, 2016.
7. H. H. Kuo, C. J. Kim, and L. Ohno-Machado, “Blockchain Distributed Ledger Technologies for Biomedical and Health Care Applications,” Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, vol. 24, no. 6, pp. 1211–1220, 2017.
8. X. Yue, H. Wang, D. Jin, M. Li, and W. Jiang, “Healthcare Data Gateways: Found Healthcare Intelligence on Blockchain with Novel Privacy Risk Control,” Journal of Medical Systems, vol. 40, no. 10, 2016.
9. Z. Zheng, S. Xie, H. Dai, X. Chen, and H. Wang, “An Overview of Blockchain Technology: Architecture, Consensus, and Future Trends,” IEEE International Congress on Big Data, 2017.
10. M. Swan, Blockchain: Blueprint for a New Economy, O’Reilly Media, 2015.
image
Copyright © IJIRCCE 2020.All right reserved