The age of computers brought many opportunities for improving multiple facets of medical care, including diagnostic imaging, patient billing, and diligent record keeping. Electronic medical record (EMR) systems have been developed and integrated into the healthcare sector to facilitate proper patient record keeping that can be shared between healthcare practitioners and their patients. This provides all parties involved access to a patient’s diagnostic results from third-party facilities. Furthermore, the data can be extracted by billing software to decrease administration work for doctors. Lastly, EMR systems contain details on demographics, test results, medical history, history of present illness, and medications, which can be transferred to new care providers. There are over 600 EMR system companies, with new additions each year.
Scope
- EMR systems have grown in popularity over recent years.
- EMR systems are an essential piece to the evolving healthcare process.
- EMR systems have evolved to provide deep AI-driven analysis that provides clinical decision support (CDS), software that prompts physicians to reach out to patients and vice versa.
Reasons to Buy
- Understand the EMR systems market.
- Understand the future of EMR systems.
- Understand the current trends impacting EMR systems.
Table of Contents
- Executive Summary
- Players
- Technology Briefing
- Trends
- Industry Analysis
- Signals
- Value Chain
- Companies
- Sector Scorecards
- Glossary
- Further Reading
- Thematic Research Methodology
- About the Analyst
- Contact the Publisher
Companies Mentioned (Partial List)
A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:
- Oracle (Cerner)
- CompuGroup Medical
- Veradigm
- athenahealth
- Epic Systems
- Philips
- Meditech
- NextGen Healthcare
- CureMD
- McKesson
- Wolters Kluwer Health
- Zynx Health
- IBM
- Veradigm
- Cisco
- Gen Digital
- Intel
- Checkpoint
- Forcepoint
- Vormetric