A Guide to Healthcare Data Archiving Solutions: Basics and Best Practices
In the late 1980s, most healthcare records were stored physically as paper records. Since then, the exponential growth of data and increased digital transformation caused by federal initiatives, have caused the immense growth in the adoption of Electronic Health Records (EHRs) by healthcare organizations. Such an adoption growth had led to the emergence of about 3,600 complete EHR vendors and modular products in the market by the end of stage one of Medicare & Medicaid’s EHR Incentive Program. EPIC and Cerner have become the leading vendors in the EHR market. As of 2019, about three-quarters of office-based physicians (72%) and nearly all non-federal acute care hospitals (96%) had adopted a certified EHR. In a recent report by Vantage Market Research, titled, “Electronic Medical Record Market” the Electronic Medical Record industry generated USD 28,692.52 million in 2021 and is anticipated to generate USD 42,818.81 million by 2028, showing a CAGR of 6.9% from 2022 to 2028. The questions that naturally arise upon reading such staggering EHR adoption rates may include: •
What do organizations do with all the old data that resides in their obsolete, unused legacy EHRs?