Banner Health will install Cerner for electronic health records software at two hospitals they recently acquired from the University of Arizona by 2018, the healthcare provider announced. The ...
Get the latest federal technology news delivered to your inbox. The Department of Veterans Affairs is planning to increase deployments of its new Oracle Cerner electronic health record system to 13 VA ...
On the eve of a major expansion, a multibillion-dollar project to upgrade the computer systems of all Department of Veterans Affairs hospitals is beset with problems, according to some medical staff ...
The department said it plans to deploy the modernized electronic health record at a total of 13 sites next year following a pause on most rollouts of the software that was instituted in April 2023.
The Department of Veterans Affairs announced plans last week to accelerate the rollout of its embattled electronic health records system. Lawmakers, meanwhile, continue to call for oversight despite ...
The Department of Veterans Affairs is taking tentative steps to restart deployments of its beleaguered Oracle Cerner Millennium electronic health record system, even as some lawmakers have continued ...
Lawmakers and Veterans Affairs Department officials expect the work to continue as planned, but internal communications indicate that Oracle Cerner laid off the clinical team that worked to implement ...
Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins said he hopes to speed up plans to get more VA medical centers onto the department's new electronic health records system this year. (Stock photo) EDITOR’S NOTE ...
Oracle unveiled a brand-new electronic health record on Tuesday, its most significant health-care product update since acquiring the medical records giant Cerner for $28 billion in 2022. An electronic ...
Health systems are not the only stakeholder to place heightened emphasis on population health management to lower costs and improve outcomes amid the shift to value-based care. Technology suppliers, ...
In 2018, the VA signed a $10 billion contract with Cerner Corp. for a new electronic health record system, which has caused problems for veterans and staff since launching in Spokane in October 2020.