Your current EHR has reached end of life, now what about the data in it?
Electronic health record (EHR) vendors are increasingly merging or acquiring other vendors creating obsolete EHR systems. Headlines of EHR retirement due to acquisition have been trending since 2015. Greenway created Success EHS, a legacy system of earlier versions. CPSI acquired Healthland Classic to obtain a subsidiary back-office revenue platform. Now there’s a huge dilemma: What to do with the data housed in your old EHR? This legacy data includes information necessary for healthcare providers, patients, insurance and legal entities. State laws and the federal Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) require data retention for six to 10 years. Plus, the information housed in the old EHR belongs to your organization, not the software company. Whenever an EHR vendor announces a sunset, hospitals and clinics should strongly consider using an EHR archival product, such as Triyam’s Fovea. Let’s look at some of the dangers hidden in your legacy data and why storing the data in a cloud-based archival system is your best option financially, legally and for your patients and providers.
Avoid these costly mistakes The U.S. government has paid incentive payments of $35 billion to EHR development companies to update their software to meet HIPAA demands. The problem with these updated systems is that they do not import all your historical patient information.