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by ch4s3
4246 days ago
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Well, Epic is the #1 EHR in the country (and several others), with something like 30-40% of the market. They will absolutely crush anyone that tries to go head to head with them. One of their top competitors did abour $1.2bn in revenue last year and lost over $300m trying to compete with Epic. Their EHR works well enough, but doctors hate it, and it costs a literal fortune to install and maintain. So who know what will happen in 10 years. However, my personal opinion as a healthcare software developer is that SalesForce has gravely miscalculated if the intend to produce an EHR/EMR system. Product lock in is on the order of a decade. |
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Kaiser permanente is a big customer of Epic. At one point, Kaiser wanted equity in privately held Epic systems, because Kaiser thought it is the market maker for Epic systms. Epic systems did not budge to Kaiser's demands.
Unless salesforce comes with a solid product to compete with Epic, no big hospital would buyt Salesforce product. If I were the decision maker, I would rather go with a product that can be successfully implemented; otherwise, I would end up loosing the job like those bad $1B SAP implementations.
What is the impact of cloud in healthcare EHR. Not much, healthcare is like banks, finance. Lots of regulations like HIPAA, audits, etc.
Yes, Epic and non-epic systems can be interfaces via HL7, which is like XML.
When banks move to cloud, thats when we expect healthcare IT to move to clound. Until then, it is gonna be in the datacenters managed by hospitals.