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Free electronic medical record software exists, works, and is used by clinics in over 70 countries. For solo practitioners, small practices, community health clinics, and NGOs evaluating their first EMR, starting with an open source...
The global EMR market was valued at approximately $34.5 billion in 2025 and is projected to reach $56 billion by 2033, growing at a CAGR of 6.3%. With 96%...
The price of an electronic medical record system varies more than most vendors let on. A solo practitioner evaluating their first EMR is looking at a completely different cost structure than a 50-physician...
Electronic medical records deliver real, measurable benefits. They also introduce real problems that paper records did not have. Most articles on this topic either oversell the advantages or treat the disadvantages as minor footnotes. This...
Most hospital information system implementations do not fail because of bad software. They fail because of poor planning: unclear requirements, underestimated timelines, inadequate training, and change management that starts too late.
This guide covers the full...
Most articles about hospital information system benefits read like a vendor brochure: improved efficiency, better patient care, cost savings. These are real, but they are not useful for the people who actually have to justify...
Many software projects finish on time and within budget and still fail to deliver any real value to the business. The code works. The vendor delivered what was asked. But six months later, users are...
Most hospital administrators know the big names in hospital information system software. What they are less sure about is how to tell a good vendor from a bad one before signing a multi-year contract. A...
There is no single "best" hospital information system. The right answer for a 600-bed academic medical center is completely different from what works for a 40-bed community hospital or a multi-location specialty clinic....