Here鈥檚 what happens in a health care utopia: You, the patient, have one health record documenting every allergy, vaccine and family history of disease since you were born. Instead of filling out new patient intake forms whenever you see a specialist or switch primary care physicians, your doctor can access your health record, add to it, and send it to the necessary health professionals in your life.
Building such a platform isn’t a particularly difficult technological task. And yet, most people can鈥檛 access their childhood vaccination records. 附近上门 data shows funding around health record startups is at $367 million, the highest it鈥檚 been since 2021, and 2022 isn鈥檛 over yet.聽
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But despite rapid innovation in the space, electronic health records continue to be a thorn in the sides of physicians, , which slows their adoption and prevents us from reaching that health care utopia.聽
The problem, it seems, is not one startups can solve, at least not without mass cooperation between the many doctors, labs clinics and other health startups the technology tethers.聽
鈥淲hen you hear clinicians constantly complaining about the increasing administrative burden and complexity; it became burdensome and complex because the technology allowed it to,鈥 said Paul Chung, a physician and health policy professor.聽
The story of the electronic health record is a perfect example of why technology adoption in health care lags behind every other industry. Such records are often trapped in a tangled web of siloed, disparate organizations that don鈥檛 work well together, leaving innovation behind.
Unraveling that tangled EHR web
The quality of care movement in U.S. medicine started in the 1960s to , and picked up in the 鈥80s and 鈥90s with the advent of data-storing computers.聽
Hospitals adopted complex enterprise-focused platforms to deal with a high influx of patients, and doctors鈥 offices began adopting similar technology in 2009 after the HITECH Act. HITECH was an Obama-era push to move patient data to the computer as part of a goal to connect the health institutions a patient has to navigate. But the shift to computers quickly proved challenging for health care workers.
鈥淚f you talk to most clinicians, I think that has sapped a lot of the joy of the practice of clinical practice from them,鈥 Chung said. 鈥淏ut there’s also a general acknowledgment that there’s some need for oversight that you probably can only do with technology.鈥
The interoperability problem
Individual doctors and groups adopted expensive EHR systems that came with high learning curves. But none of them talked to each other. HITECH promised an easy and cost-saving future, but doctors still needed to fax patient information or enter it in multiple systems to update patient records.聽
鈥淭he first wave of healthtech said, ‘Well, if the doctor just entered more data into this record, we would get so much more,鈥欌 said , principal investor at who is focused on health care investments. 鈥But doctors are so busy. It’s not realistic.鈥
Others blamed the EHR systems鈥 design. Epic Systems, one of the oldest and most well-known systems for hospitals, . Receiving a digital medical record from companies like Epic came with steep fees. Epic fought back by pointing out medical institutions that used its technology had great interoperability. That didn鈥檛 help.
鈥淚t’s like the 800-pound-gorilla problem,鈥澛 said , health care-focused partner at . 鈥淭he incumbent EHR vendors are pretty nefarious with how they’ve locked up the market. It’s basically created IT systems that [makes] hospitals extremely challenging to integrate into.鈥
Plus, hospitals themselves have an incentive to maintain independent EHR systems. Epic customizes specific functionalities for different hospital systems to build exactly what they need. That means the platform in one health organization looks drastically different from another. If you were a hospital that paid Epic to do this, you might want to make it easier for patients to go back to you instead of taking your records and visiting another.聽
One step closer
The pandemic brought another wave of innovation to the space. As health centers began adopting telehealth and virtual visits, it suddenly became important to put everything that happens at a doctor鈥檚 office 鈥 scheduling appointments, filling out intake forms, billing 鈥 online. Doctors turned to their EHR.聽
Funding for EHR tech startups rose from $98 million in 2020 to a whopping $751 million the following year, a 666% increase, according to 附近上门 data. Meanwhile, a second wave of companies is looking to better integrate with existing electronic health records thanks to the adoption of FHIR standards in 2020. FHIR, or Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources, is a set of standards meant to make it easier for companies to share data.
One of them, , has raised $95 million since it started in 2014, according to 附近上门. The platform connects providers with a slew of different billing platforms, remote patient monitoring systems and telehealth startups to custom-build an administrative solution for doctors. Another, , raised $50 million in March to improve flow of patient information between providers and payers.
While several of these new companies are promising and intuitive, they鈥檙e not that useful to the largest hospital systems in the country without buy-in from the big EHR players.聽
鈥淓ven if you got the buy-in from the [hospital] CFO or business leadership, that integration work into the hospital is a nightmare and pretty bespoke every time. So that’s why it’s so tricky,鈥 Zhang said. 鈥淎nd they have low margins to begin with so they can’t take on giant projects all the time.鈥
This is, ultimately, the crux of all health care investments: The markets in health revolve around patients, providers or insurance. Without buy-in from those markets, regardless of how good the technology is, startups are doomed.聽
鈥淭hat’s the fun of health care investing,鈥 Effron said. 鈥淲hat can make it so complex is it needs to work for a lot of different people in the system.鈥
Illustration: Dom Guzman
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