India's well-renowned pharmaceutical company, Cadila, was founded by Mr. Ramanbhai Patel in 1952, and this healthcare company evolved over the years. It should be noted that this MNC healthcare company was listed in the Fortune 500 list in 2020. The company has done wonders with its innovations and acquisitions in the medical field. Speaking of which, it has also done some innovations in the technological field through a mobile app named Zydus Verify. The demand for medicine and injections is rising, and fraudsters take advantage of this situation to sell counterfeit drugs for a higher price. To resolve this issue, we created Zydus Verify to help people identify fake medicines and injections with a unique scratch code to prevent fraud. This app enables you to authenticate the medicine by scanning its scratch code from your smartphone. This tech will be applied to the company's products Remdac (Remdesivir) and Virafin Injection for now and later be extended to the company's other products as well.
Our professional team pitched Zydus Cadila, an India-based MNC pharmaceutical company, to build an app that helps people to verify their medicines or injections with a unique code to prevent from counterfeit drugs. Considering that India has a huge market for fake medication, i.e., around 30%, we pitched this concept to our client to solve this issue by creating an innovative app using the latest technologies. Our client was pretty impressed with this concept and agreed to develop an app with us called 'Zydus Verify.' This app authenticates your app with a scratch code on the medicine packaging in a few simple steps. This app helps people get rid of fake medicines and consume genuine ones.
This is the first step to sign up or log into your app. Here, the user must provide their valid contact number, where they will receive an OTP. It should be noted that this app is valid in India only, so the users must provide an Indian number only.
The next step is to enter the OTP number that the users will receive on their mobile once they enter their phone number. The OPT will expire within 3 minutes, so the users must enter the OTP within that time frame.
This is the final step. Here, the user must enter the scratch code placed on the medicine packaging to authenticate the medicine. This will tell them if the medicine is genuine or fake. It will also inform them if they already used that code or it's used by someone else.
If the entered code is valid, a success pop-up will appear. And if it's not valid, a failure pop-up will appear. It aims to inform you if the medicine or injection is genuine or not.