Three hospitals recently selected Oracle Health CommunityWorks as their integrated EHR supporting hospital and ambulatory settings.
Kellogg, Idaho-based Shoshone Medical Center, a 25-bed critical access hospital, installed CommunityWorks to combine and organize patient and financial data. The hospital has been able to better coordinate care and improve the patient experience with the technology.
Eureka Springs (Ark.) Hospital, a seven-bed rural health emergency hospital, switched from its legacy system to CommunityWorks as the single unified EHR for updated patient records and improved efficiency.
Johnson Regional Medical Center in Clarksville, Ark., plans to replace its legacy EHR system with CommunityWorks. The 90-bed hospital will also add Oracle Health applications for team collaboration and communication over smart devices. The solutions focus on revenue cycle management and provide payer information supporting regulatory compliance.
The CommunityWorks EHR now includes Oracle's AI-powered digital assistant to draft notes within the EHR and an application to automate revenue cycle workflows.
"The momentum we've seen with hospitals selecting CommunityWorks is a testament to Oracle Health's ability to solve today's critical business and healthcare challenges for customers of all sizes," said Seema Verma, executive vice president and general manager of Oracle Health and Life Sciences. "Whether a doctor or nurse is providing emergency care in a rural community or focusing on specialty care like heart, rehabilitation, or outpatient surgery, Oracle delivers technology that helps reduce operational complexity and makes it easier to provide care."