Thursday, May 14, 2026

< + > eClinicalWorks Shares Artificial Intelligence, Agentic Ecosystem, and New healowIQ Product at Health Center Summit

Last week I had a chance to attend the eClinicalWorks Health Center Summit.  This event brings together the FQHC users of the eClinicalWorks product.  You may remember Colin reporting on the eClinicalWorks Enterprise Summit which brings together some of the largest eClinicalWorks customers.  Between the two events, you can see that eClinicalWorks is hard at work leveraging AI across all of their solutions along with launching their users into the agentic AI future.

Plus, at this year’s Health Center Summit, they announced a new product called healowIQ.  Below you’ll find some of the big announcements and perspectives eClinicalWorks shared at the event along with additional commentary.  Plus, we did a short video with eClinicalWorks to learn more about the healowIQ product launch.

Navani is one of the best showman when it comes to user conferences.  So, his keynotes are always enjoyable and interesting.  Kudos to him and the team for achieving such massive results.  Amazing to think that 380M+ visits annually go through eClinicalWorks.

I love that Navani pointed out that AI is happening now and also is going to be even more impactful in the future.  As we hear at a lot of events these days, the AI we have today is the worst it will ever be and it’s already making an impact.  I’m particularly interested in the agentic ecosystem idea which you’ll see later in this article.

One of the biggest announcements coming out of the eClinicalWorks Health Center Summit was a new product called healowIQ.  Watch the video above to learn more about this new product.  It’s a tool that provides peer reviewed evidence to clinicians at the point of care.  Clinicians can search the peer reviewed medical evidence or healowIQ will also leverage the data from the EHR to help clinicians access the best evidence possible for that patient.

As someone who loves a good pun, how can you not love the HackAIthon name?  It’s amazing to see them embracing AI and enabling their team to really learn how it can help in their product.  Reminds me a bit of the 20% Google program where their employees could work on whatever they want for 20% of their day.  It led to Gmail.  More importantly, you have to build the culture of your product and if you don’t give your team time to explore outside their day to day, then they can’t know what other AI solutions could improve the product.

Even more amazing was that Girish and his co-founder Sam participated in it as well.  That illustrates part of the shift that’s happening with software too.

As one FQHC at the event told me, the future of phone calls for medical practices is going to be the AI bot answering the call.  That’s happening in every industry and needs to happen in healthcare too.  It’s impressive what healow Genie can do with the deep integration with eClinicalWorks too.  The examples were fascinating to listen to as well when you see how patients truly interact with the bot and how it handles those challenges.

This share got some kickback from people on social media.  Just to be clear, AI has the potential to impact every area of healthcare.  However, it needs to be done thoughtfully and effectively.  And AI isn’t always the best solution.  However, done right I think it will impact every area of healthcare.

You all know how much I love the AI Medical Scribe/ambient clinical voice space.  No surprise that I was intrigued by all of the things that Sunoh.AI is adding.  Although, it still really feels like we’re just getting started with what will be possible.

The impact of AI medical scribes is so clear to me.  Study after study shows the difference.  Plus, you can just feel it when you talk to the users of it.

Fax and documents are still a reality in healthcare and I agree with Navani that they’re not leaving healthcare anytime soon.  Great to see eClinicalWorks automating this for users.

I’m not sure most people in the room processed what was being shared when Navani showcased their AI Workbench.  Essentially, it’s an agentic AI platform that can do a wide variety of things.  The demo of the AI workbench navigating the payer website for a prior auth is a good one.  It’s going to be really interesting to see what workflows are improved wtih AI workbench.  I expect it will take some time and learning for users to appreciate the possibilities.  Plus, I’m interested to see how resilient the tech will be long term.  For example, what happens when a payer’s website changes?  I’m sure that reliability will improve over time.  However, having a full agentic AI platform available in the EHR is a big deal.

We’ve heard about PRISMANet before, so that wasn’t much of a surprise.  It was impressive that eCW is getting that many users on it.  Navani noted that getting the rest on PRISMANet is about the users needed to choose to accept the agreement.  I like they’re goal of getting everyone on it by National Conference.  We’ll be back in the Fall with an update I’m sure.

As far as the FHIR based integrations, those are some big numbers.  I’d be interested to know more details about what FHIR apps are really shining.  And what they’re able to write back to eCW.

This announcement was slightly short on details, but I do think this is the next frontier for eCW.  The clinician’s inbox has become a challenge.  Sure, AI medical scribes are helping with note generation.  Now clinicians need help with their inbox (or jelly beans in eCW lingo).  I was glad to see this mentioned and hope there’s a lot more tangible examples and solutions at National Conference.

I’ve shared this chart before, but it still wows me how many value based care efforts there are out there.

Amazing to see eCW putting together an entire platform, CIPHR, to help with value based care.  I wonder if users find this helpful or overwhelming.

Many forget how important the contact center is in healthcare.  In many cases, it’s the first thing a patient experiences.  It’s great to see how the AI solution healow Genie is addressing many of the contact center challenges.  It’s no wonder that Colin was impressed by it at the Enterprise Summit.

This was a fascinating take from a CEO on stage.  I did a full video interview with him at the event, so watch for that.  As we see with a lot of AI solutions, it often doesn’t reduce staff.  Those staff have plenty of other things to do to help the organization.  However, it removes a lot of the mundane work they were doing before.

Lots of great experiences shared from having healow Genie answer the FQHCs phone.  I was particularly struck by the point that satisfaction improves if the call is answered quickly, even if it’s an AI agent.  And we all know that call or text from family about something not working in the healthcare organizations we work for.

I was surprised by the list of healow Genie capabilities.  It was interesting to hear how some organizations turned on all those capabilities and others just chose a few.  It’s nice they had the choice though.

These findings from Sunoh.ai aren’t surprising.  It’s great to see it quantified though.

A lot of these extra announcements were updates from last year’s national conference, but eClinicalWorks clearly has ambitious plans.

All in all, I enjoyed myself at the eClinicalWorks Health Center summit.  They continue to push forward with their AI efforts and it’s always enjoyable to learn what’s really happening from their customers.  We have a number of videos coming soon that share those customer insights.  More on that soon.



< + > When a Vendor Gets Breached, What Happens to Your Patient Data?

The following is a guest article by Kelly Goolsby from Nexcess

AT A GLANCE

  • Most specialty practices secured their patient records system years ago. The breach risk today lives in the systems built around it.
  • Scheduling platforms, intake forms, and billing integrations handle patient data every day. Most were never evaluated the way the core records system was.
  • Federal regulators are expected to finalize the first major update to healthcare data security rules in over 20 years. It targets exactly these overlooked systems.
  • When a vendor handling one of these systems is breached, the hosting environment determines how far the damage travels.
  • The practices that move through this with the least disruption are the ones that made deliberate infrastructure decisions before a review forced the conversation.

Eight months before the hard questions arrived, a specialty practice had a breach. Not in the patient records system. That had been secured and documented. The breach came through a different system. One that had been handling patient data for years, sitting on hosting that was never evaluated for compliance. Nobody had looked.

Remediation took months. A new business relationship they had been trying to close was delayed while they rebuilt trust. Nothing about the breach was surprising. The system sat on shared hosting. No Business Associate Agreement (BAA) was on file. Nobody had audited it because nobody had thought of it as a compliance surface.

That practice is not an outlier. In February 2026, Integrated Pain Associates, a specialty pain practice in Texas, confirmed unauthorized access to patient data after a breach that went undetected for weeks. The systems creating the most exposure in specialty healthcare are the ones added during a growth phase and never revisited.

Where the Risk Lives

The patient records system is not where most specialty practices are exposed.

Three systems come up repeatedly. In each case, the hosting decision was never made with compliance in mind.

The scheduling platform was not chosen by anyone in IT or compliance. It was chosen by whoever needed it to work that week. The hosting decision behind it was never a decision at all.

The intake forms and patient messaging tools arrived one at a time, each attached to a vendor contract that felt routine. No single one seemed significant enough to flag. Together, they form a patient data surface that nobody mapped and nobody owns. According to the Verizon 2025 Data Breach Investigations Report, third-party vendor involvement in confirmed breaches doubled in a single year, from 15 to 30 percent of all incidents. Vendor-hosted tools added without documented oversight are where that growth is coming from.

The billing integration is where the exposure concentrates. It went live when the practice needed it to, in an environment that was inherited rather than selected. In February 2026, a breach at QualDerm Partners, a management services provider to 158 specialty practices across 17 states, exposed the records of more than 8 million patients. Not because the practices were breached. Because the vendor handling their billing environment was.

Each system got in because it solved an immediate problem. None of them went through the evaluation the records system did. That is where the gap lives.

Why the Pressure Is Increasing

The core security standards governing how patient data must be protected have not been significantly updated since 2003. A federal update now under active regulatory review proposes the most substantial changes in over two decades.

Three proposed changes matter most for specialty practices.

  1. Encryption would become required. Every system storing patient data would need to encrypt it wherever it sits. The current option to document an alternative and move on would be eliminated.
  2. Every system would need to be inventoried. A documented list of every system that stores or moves patient data would be mandatory. Not just the records system. All of them.
  3. Every system must be accountable under a tighter response clock. The proposal would require organizations to restore critical systems within 72 hours of a security incident and notify relevant parties within 24 hours when access to patient data is changed or terminated.

The enforcement backdrop gives this weight. HHS has found organizations non-compliant in 67 percent of its investigations. That number reflects not negligence, but a set of requirements that outgrew the infrastructure decisions most practices made years ago. A final rule would make those gaps impossible to ignore.

The practices that will feel this first are the ones running patient data through hosting environments that were never chosen with compliance in mind.

What the Right Cloud Partner Does When a Vendor Is Attacked

A cloud partner that supports HIPAA-regulated workloads does not prevent a vendor’s software from being compromised. What it does is limit how far the damage travels from that entry point.

An isolated environment bounds the blast radius. In a shared hosting environment, a breach in one vendor’s access credentials can expose every tenant on that infrastructure. In a dedicated environment built for regulated workloads, your data is the only data there. An attacker who compromises a vendor’s access cannot move laterally to other organizations.

A signed Business Associate Agreement (BAA) answers the question before it gets asked. When something goes wrong in a vendor-hosted system, the first question from a reviewer is who owns what. A cloud partner who executes a BAA has documented that answer in advance. A shared generic hosting environment does not do that.

Encryption at rest limits the value of what gets taken. If a vendor’s credentials are compromised but the data sitting in the environment is encrypted, the attacker gets scrambled data they cannot read, not patient records.

The hosting environment determines whether a breach at the vendor level becomes a catastrophic exposure at the practice level.

Where to Start

Three actions. None of them require a major initiative.

  1. Build the list. Write down every system outside the core records platform that stores or moves patient data. Scheduling, intake, billing, messaging, reporting.
  2. Pull the agreements. For each system on the list, confirm whether a Business Associate Agreement exists and whether it specifies what the vendor owns when something goes wrong.
  3. Ask where the data lives. For each vendor on the list, confirm whether patient data is stored in a shared environment or a dedicated one, and whether it is encrypted at rest.

The practices that move through the next round of reviews and compliance requirements with the least friction are the ones that already know their answers.

For teams working through these questions, Nexcess has built a set of resources specifically for healthcare organizations navigating infrastructure and compliance decisions.



< + > XCaliber Health Raises $6.5M | Photon Raises $16M Series A

Check out today’s featured companies who have recently raised a round of funding, and be sure to check out the full list of past healthcare IT fundings.


XCaliber Health Raises $6.5M to Replace Healthcare’s Point Solutions with an Agentic Operating System

One Platform, Smarter Workflows, Better Care

XCaliber Health, the agentic operating system purpose-built to reduce administrative burden, cut millions in operational waste, and improve the quality of clinical care delivered to patients, today announced $6.5 million in seed funding. Led by ManchesterStory with participation from Benhamou Global Ventures (BGV) and Arka Venture Labs, the capital will be used to accelerate product development and scale the platform across organizations nationwide. Health systems, provider groups, and digital health partners use XCaliber to replace manual, fragmented workflows, from prescription refill and referral coordination to lab notifications and care gap management, with autonomous execution and humans in control of every critical decision.

For two decades, health systems have accumulated tools such as electronic health records (EHRs), billing platforms, and scheduling systems without ever acquiring the operating system to coordinate them. Artificial intelligence (AI) arrived and added recommendations on top of the same fragmented infrastructure. The underlying problem remained: no system could take action across silos, automate workflows end-to-end, or operate with meaningful autonomy. Staff spend an average of 15.5 hours per physician, per week on record retrieval, prior authorization, referral coordination, scheduling, and clinical documentation. At a 20-provider practice, that translates to $1.4 million in annual costs from manual workflows, scheduling gaps, prior authorization delays, and reactive patient outreach, a burden that persists whether or not the organization has quantified it.

XCaliber addresses this gap with a single, seamless agentic operating system, where data, workflows, and autonomous action converge. XCaliber was built around a single conviction that healthcare organizations can operate as semi-autonomous enterprises, where agents handle routine administrative and operational workflows, clinical and operational teams oversee every decision, and care teams have the information and time to make every patient interaction count. Unlike point solutions that automate in isolation, XCaliber connects every system a provider touches and orchestrates work across all of them in real time. Clinical and operational teams get a unified view of their practice and patients, semi-autonomous workflows that execute without manual handoffs, and the time to focus on the work they were trained to do. Key differentiators include:

  1. Data Rich Insights: Quality decision-making grounded in the individual healthcare system or enterprise’s own data, resulting in highly-personalized outcomes
  2. Human-in-the-Loop Structure: Agents automate clinical workflows and coordination with human oversight and decision-making
  3. Autonomous Spectrum: Semi-autonomous in nature, with different levels of autonomy and human interaction based on agent function (i.e., operational vs. clinical use cases)

Before XCaliber, scheduling a follow-up appointment meant staff manually reviewing patient records, calling or messaging patients, waiting for responses, and updating the EHR, a process that could take days and often resulted in missed appointments and lost revenue. With XCaliber, that same process runs automatically. Patients are contacted through their preferred channel, appointments are confirmed, and the EHR is updated in minutes, with staff notified only when intervention is needed.

“Healthcare does not need more disconnected point solutions. It needs a system that can coordinate work across all of them and take the administrative burden off clinical and operational teams,” said Prakash Khot, Co-Founder and CEO at XCaliber…

Full release here, originally announced May 5th, 2026.


Photon Raises $16M Series A to Give Patients Control Over Their Prescriptions and Bring Transparency to Pharmacy

Led by Healthier Capital, the Funding will Accelerate Photon’s Mission to Modernize the Prescription Experience, Putting Patients in the Driver’s Seat at the Moment that Matters Most

Electronic prescribing transformed how doctors write prescriptions, but created a new problem for patients. At the moment a prescription is written, patients are asked to choose a pharmacy on the spot with no pricing, no inventory information, and no sense of what’s convenient or covered. The prescription is sent, the moment passes, and a choice has been made without the information needed to make it well. The result: transfers, phone calls, and delays that create unnecessary burden for patients, pharmacies, and practitioners alike. Photon was built to solve this at the source.

Photon today announced a $16M Series A round led by Healthier Capital, with participation from Notation, Flare Capital, and Evidenced. The funding will be used to expand the engineering and commercial teams, drive expanded health system and platform integrations, and accelerate the company’s mission to become the default infrastructure for modern prescribing and medication access.

The problem runs deeper than consumer inconvenience. It’s an infrastructure problem rooted in an era before smartphones, the cloud, or AI. Electronic prescribing was designed in the early 2000s to move prescriptions from point A to point B — and it does. But it was never designed to inform patients, serve the expectations of modern prescribers, or keep pace with how pharmacies actually operate today. In virtually every other aspect of their lives, consumers expect real-time transparency: they can see pricing, availability, and delivery windows before they buy anything. The prescription experience offers none of that. When a prescription is sent electronically, the patient is effectively removed from the equation — no visibility into which pharmacy has it in stock, what it will cost out of pocket, or which option is most convenient. That information vacuum sets off a downstream chain of friction: unnecessary transfers, unanswered phone calls, abandoned fills, and administrative burden that ripples across the entire healthcare ecosystem.

Photon is rebuilding the prescription experience from the ground up, not as a pricing widget or a single-point fix, but as a full end-to-end platform. That means:

  • Modern prescribing and routing infrastructure
  • A network of pharmacy partners across retail and home delivery
  • A consumer-facing marketplace that surfaces real-time price and stock information
  • A full suite of capabilities including prior authorization, clinical decision support, and beyond

By integrating at the point of prescribing, Photon gives patients the ability to make an informed choice before the prescription is ever sent. The kind of transparency consumers take for granted everywhere else, finally applied to one of the most consequential moments in their healthcare journey. For health systems…

Full release here, originally announced April 30th, 2026.



Wednesday, May 13, 2026

< + > How Corewell Health Integrated Epic and Illumia’s NetMenu to Cut Waste and Improve Patient Safety

When three hospital systems merged to form Corewell Health, leaders faced a choice: stitch together legacy databases or start fresh. They chose the latter, consolidating onto a single instance of Epic’s EHR and implementing a new centralized foodservice platform Illumia’s NetMenu. They used the unique opportunity of the Epic “reset” to establish a shared foundation that would allow them to operate as one organization.

Healthcare IT Today sat down with Anthony (Tony) Boggs, Senior Director of Support Services at Corewell Health. He shared how standardizing on NetMenu, timed with their move to a single Epic instance, created an opportunity to rethink and modernize adjacent systems like foodservice. This drove operational efficiencies, improved visibility, and enhanced patient safety across their 24 hospitals.

Key Takeaways

  • Standardization drives efficiency. Moving to Illumia’s unified platform allowed Corewell Health to slash food SKUs by 70%, reducing waste and generating the ROI needed to fund the project.
  • Epic integration supports patient safety and dietary accuracy. Connecting NetMenu directly to Epic automates dietary compliance, ensuring patients only receive meals that match their clinical requirements and allergy profiles.
  • Hospital food service is a retail business. With 80% of meals going to staff and visitors, integrating point-of-sale data with back-end inventory is critical for financial performance.

Cutting SKUs to Reduce Waste and Fund Innovation

After the merger, Corewell Health wanted to operate as a single, unified organization. To do that, they needed a singular technology foundation. Unifying their foodservice operations on Illumia’s NetMenu allowed them to evaluate their purchasing at scale and eliminate redundancies.

The financial impact became clear over time. “When we look at SKUs or the number of products that we have, I mean, we’ve already reduced about 70% of our SKUs that we had when we started,” Boggs shared.

Dropping from a dozen different chicken tenders down to just two gave Corewell Health massive buying power. This consolidation reduced food waste, simplified operations, and delivered the hard ROI required to justify the technology investment to the C-suite.

Just as important, the system gave the Corewell team operational visibility they did not have before (ie: across purchasing, ordering patterns, and performance). That visibility allows them to make more informed decisions.

EHR Connectivity Automates Dietary Safety

The true power of the new foodservice platform was unlocked when it was connected to Corewell Health’s single instance of Epic EHR. Instead of relying on manual checks or duplicate data entry, the NetMenu system automatically cross-references a patient’s clinical requirements with available food options.

This creates an accurate, safe experience tailored to each patient’s clinical requirements. Boggs described the workflow: “We are getting our patient diet from Epic, and then our nutrition technology NetMenu actually says, is this chicken breast compliant to this diet that the clinical team has prescribed?” The system immediately flags allergens and nutritional content, preventing potential errors before a tray ever leaves the kitchen.

Retail Infrastructure for a Retail Operation

It is easy to assume hospital nutrition software focuses strictly on patient trays. The reality is quite different. Most meals served in a hospital are purchased by staff and visitors, meaning the underlying technology must function like a high-volume restaurant.

“What people don’t know is that a lot of healthcare systems actually serve a lot more retail meals than they do patient meals,” Boggs noted. “At Corewell, we’re at 80% retail and only 20% patient. It’s a whole lot more than just patient trays.”

To manage this, Corewell Health is implementing an Illumia point-of-sale system called Quick-Charge to integrate directly with NetMenu. This allows operations teams to accurately track sales data, monitor food costs, and manage inventory in real time based on actual consumption. That retail demand helps inform purchasing decisions, cost control, and inventory management.

The Bottom Line for Health IT Leaders

Technology consolidations following a merger are inherently difficult. Many opt to try to make old systems talk to one another – a productivity mirage. Corewell Health shows that building a completely new foundation pays dividends. By establishing a shared technology foundation and aligning/integrating systems early (Illumia’s NetMenu + Epic), they created a system that improves safety, reduces waste, and drives operational efficiency.

What Healthcare IT Leaders Are Asking

Why is a single EHR instance critical for auxiliary department software? Operating on a single EHR instance simplifies the integration architecture for all downstream systems. Instead of building and maintaining multiple interfaces to route patient data to a department like nutrition services, IT only has to manage one connection. This reduces technical debt and ensures data consistency across the organization.

How does point of sale data improve hospital food service operations? Point of sale systems provide real-time visibility into what items are selling in hospital cafeterias and retail spaces. This data allows operations teams to accurately track inventory, calculate exact food costs, and automate reordering processes. It prevents waste and helps the organization negotiate better pricing based on actual consumption metrics.

How does an EHR migration create an opportunity to modernize foodservice technology? When a health system commits to an EHR migration, they have a massive IT project ahead of them. Organizations that use the go-live as a forcing function to modernize both systems simultaneously find that building one clean integration is far less work than doing it twice. When both launch together, diet data flows correctly from day one, eliminating the patient safety risk of a temporary integration.

Learn more about Corewell Health at https://corewellhealth.org/

Learn more about Illumia at https://illumiatech.com/

Listen and subscribe to the Healthcare IT Today Interviews Podcast to hear all the latest insights from experts in healthcare IT.

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< + > One in a Hundred: The Incidental Finding Problem Emergency Medicine Can’t Ignore

The following is a guest article by Justin Schrager, MD, Co-Founder and CMO at Vital

Picture a typical day in a busy emergency department, where about 100 patients come through the door. Statistically, one of these patients will leave the ED with an unaddressed but clinically urgent incidental finding — something found by the radiologist on an imaging study – that no one told them about. 

An example might be a lung nodule found on an X-ray taken to evaluate a shoulder injury. And, because a lung nodule is not typically an emergency, but a shoulder dislocation almost always is, the nodule can “fly under the radar.” There are a variety of reasons why a patient might not be told about their lung nodule; these include everything from timing and complexity to pain level, mental and psychological readiness, or a simple oversight. In my clinical experience, this communication gap isn’t due to carelessness; it stems from the relentless pace of emergency medicine and a system that isn’t designed to catch everything.

Incidental findings are a routine byproduct of modern imaging, as are the frequent instances in which doctors in the hospital do not communicate these new findings to their patients. However, unlike other patient safety and care quality challenges (for example, preventing hospital acquired infections or falls), the disclosure of incidental findings and the subsequent care planning that needs to happen after the disclosure, span the inpatient-outpatient world and are therefore more vulnerable to the relatively archaic communication systems we use in healthcare: patient portals that not everyone uses, fax machines, delayed letters in the mail. 

Unfortunately, incidental findings are not rare. In trauma patients receiving CT scans, incidental findings appear in roughly 30–35% of studies. Among all ER patients, approximately 1 in 12 will have a new finding they’ve never been told about. Of that group, a further one in twelve will go on to experience a clinically meaningful outcome — cancer within five years, a procedure they needed, a condition that could have been managed earlier. 

The issue isn’t a lack of effort or intentionality — it’s infrastructure.

In the ER, physicians are necessarily focused on the acute problem that brought the patient in. Radiologists who identify incidental findings aren’t at the bedside. Hospitalists and other inpatient clinicians may be treating entirely different issues days or weeks later. Primary care physicians often lack an efficient way to review and act on results immediately after a hospitalization. And the patient—the most important stakeholder—is often too ill or not in the right frame of mind to track something that requires follow-up months later.

The result is a fragmented system with no reliable, scalable way to identify, track, and close the loop on these findings.

AI-powered tools are now changing that calculus. Purpose-built systems can continuously scan clinical notes, discharge paperwork, and radiology reports to identify findings that appear to have gone uncommunicated. When a gap is detected, it’s flagged for clinical review — surfacing the relevant context and making it easy to act quickly. A single clinician in a care coordination role can monitor findings across an entire facility, turning what would otherwise be a logistical nightmare into a manageable, auditable daily workflow.

When outreach is warranted, these systems give clinicians the flexibility to call patients directly or send a secure, personalized message — including plain-language educational content tailored to the specific finding. Every interaction is tracked, every touchpoint logged, and the status of each outreach is visible in real time.

Beyond the patient harm that goes unaddressed, the medico-legal exposure is significant. Missed incidental findings are among the most common sources of diagnostic error claims in emergency medicine. 

Because of recent technological advancements, the infrastructure to close this care gap exists today. We no longer need to force clinical staff to sit on the phone for hours on end or pay third-party services exorbitant prices to do this for us. For health systems ready to take this step, the question is no longer whether to act — the ability to solve this problem (and many similar ones) is now more approachable, affordable, and actionable than ever. I also suspect that for health systems that take this initiative, there will be a true windfall manifested by improvements in system loyalty, market share, and patient experience.

About Justin Schrager, MD

Justin Schrager is an Emergency Medicine physician, Co-Founder, and Chief Medical Officer at Vital. He practices medicine while leading the development of AI-powered technology solutions to improve acute patient care. He is the author of 20+ papers on advancing AI in healthcare. His mission: use technology to improve the acute care experience for patients, families, and clinicians.



< + > This Week’s Health IT Jobs – May 13, 2026

It can be very overwhelming scrolling through job board after job board in search of a position that fits your wants and needs. Let us take that stress away by finding a mix of great health IT jobs for you! We hope you enjoy this look at some of the health IT jobs we saw healthcare organizations trying to fill this week.

Here’s a quick look at some of the health IT jobs we found:

If none of these jobs fit your needs, be sure to check out our previous health IT job listings.

Do you have an open health IT position that you are looking to fill? Contact us here with a link to the open position and we’ll be happy to feature it in next week’s article at no charge!

*Note: These jobs are listed by Healthcare IT Today as a free service to the community. Healthcare IT Today does not endorse or vouch for the company or the job posting. We encourage anyone applying to these jobs to do their own due diligence.



Tuesday, May 12, 2026

< + > The Role of Technology in Aligning Payer and Provider Goals Around Value-Based Care and Quality Measurement

Technology is a vast umbrella term that covers so many aspects in healthcare, ranging from the smaller side, like healthcare apps and personal wearable devices, to the larger side, like artificial intelligence and precision medications. This makes it very difficult to be aware of all the technology in healthcare and how it’s useful in all of the many aspects of healthcare. So today, we are going to narrow this wide field down by focusing our attention on the technologies that are helpful in aligning payer and provider goals.

We reached out to our incredible Healthcare IT Today Community to ask — what role does technology play in aligning payer and provider goals around value-based care and quality measurement? Below are their responses.

Kempton Presley, CEO at AdhereHealth
Facilitating shared visibility, decision support, and interpretation, technology is essential to aligning payer and provider goals in value-based care. Data integration with advanced analytics flags members who are nonadherent, overdue for screenings, or trending toward higher utilization—allowing teams to prioritize outreach and close multiple quality gaps in a single interaction. That precision improves efficiency and strengthens shared accountability.

But technology isn’t the strategy. It’s the tool. AI can flag that a prescription wasn’t picked up; without proper training, the model can’t reliably uncover why. Human insights regarding transportation barriers, cost-driven refill delays, or a patient’s choice of groceries over medications require an emotional quotient that a generative model cannot emulate. Those insights require conversation, trust, and personal judgment. In value-based care, analytics surface shared risks to each stakeholder, but empathy and behavioral expertise from payor and provider constituents alike turn data into adherence, quality improvement, and lasting outcomes.

Lindsay Porter, VP of Coding and Clinical Solutions at AGS Health
Technology doesn’t just support VBC; it is the instrumental link between payers and providers to make alignment scalable and sustainable. Interoperable platforms, EHR integrations, FHIR standards, and advanced analytics create a unified “single source of truth” from clinical, claims, social determinants, and other data sets. This interoperability builds trust, reduces silos, and enables real-time tracking of key metrics like HEDIS scores, STAR ratings, and care gaps.

AI and predictive tools further support this alignment by automating gap closure, risk stratification, clinical decision support, and administrative tasks (e.g., prior authorizations), which shifts the focus to high-value care. Intentional integration will lead to the ultimate shared goal: better population health, lower costs, improved patient experience, and provider satisfaction.

Carol Skenes, Chief of Staff & Principal Regulatory Strategist at Turquoise Health
VBC and quality measurements are often tied to longer episodes of care that involve multiple appointments, providers, and types of care. For example, an orthopedic surgery episode may involve multiple consults, imaging, pre-op, the actual surgery, and a series of post-op appointments. Technology allows for a comprehensive view of those appointments to help ensure patients are getting the right level of treatment and minimize the risk of complications or readmissions.

As far as reimbursing these episodes of care, I also view technology as the solution to simplifying care bundles. Right now, VBC care and quality are tracked across each of the services and appointments using proprietary codes; however, an open source singular code for the entire episode of care can help simplify tracking, payment, and goals alignment to encourage more VBC and episodic-based contracts between payer and providers.

Kengo Takishima, Chairman and CEO at Baylor Genetics
Genomic sequencing technology, such as rapid whole genome and whole exome sequencing, can play a pivotal role in aligning payer and provider goals because of its ability to deliver timely genetic insights that can be vital to support accurate diagnoses and more personalized patient care.

For patients with rare or undiagnosed diseases, their genes often hold the key to getting the answers they need. Access to genomic sequencing from the beginning can provide insights that inform a clearer diagnosis earlier in the care journey – ultimately supporting more targeted medical management decisions, connecting families to the right specialists, guiding long-term care planning, and improving quality of patient care and outcomes.

For value-based care, that speed and accuracy can translate directly into measurable impact: accelerated time-to-diagnosis and improved outcomes, fewer unnecessary appointments and procedures, avoidance of ineffective treatments, and reduced long-term costs across the system. In that way, genomic sequencing technology serves as a powerful bridge between providers focused on clinical excellence and payers focused on sustainable, outcomes-driven care.

Theo Koury, MD, President at Vituity
Technology plays a critical role in aligning payer and provider goals because it creates shared visibility into both clinical outcomes and the operational drivers of cost. In value-based care, alignment depends on transparency, efficiency, and trust across the ecosystem. Payers and providers ultimately want the same outcome: high-quality care delivered sustainably.

One of the greatest barriers to achieving that goal is administrative complexity. Healthcare bureaucracy is estimated to account for 15%–30% of total national health expenditures, meaning hundreds of billions of dollars tied to manual processes, redundant workflows, and fragmented or inaccurate information. Thoughtfully deployed technology can help address this challenge. Automation, interoperable data systems, and real-time analytics reduce administrative friction, improve data accuracy, and streamline processes like quality reporting, authorization workflows, and performance measurement. When both payers and providers are working from the same reliable data, quality metrics become clearer and incentives align.

Technology also enables proactive care through decision support and predictive insights that help clinicians intervene earlier and reduce unnecessary utilization. Real progress requires collaboration, and technology alone cannot solve misalignment. It must be implemented through shared accountability between payers, providers, and technology partners working toward better outcomes and a more efficient healthcare system.

Carney Taylor, MD, MBA, Chief Medical Officer at Interwell Health
Technology is critical to aligning payer and provider goals in value-based care because it creates a shared, longitudinal view of the patient and embeds quality into everyday practice. In kidney care, data is fragmented across specialties and venues of care. If we can’t connect that information, we can’t proactively manage risk or consistently perform against quality measures. That’s why we collaborate with payers to aggregate and analyze data across the continuum and present it in a way that follows the patient—so providers can intervene earlier to improve outcomes and reduce total costs of care.

Just as important, technology has to fit the workflow. We can’t expect clinicians to log into another platform. Quality insights must be embedded directly in the EHR at the point of care to surface care gaps, recent hospitalizations, and next-best actions in the moment decisions are made. When predictive analytics and population health tools are integrated into a nephrology-focused system, quality measurement becomes part of care delivery, not a separate reporting exercise.

Payer and provider alignment is also built on trust and transparency. Our technology is built to address the needs of our payer and provider partners, and our AI tools operate in secure environments with full traceability following human-in-the-loop principles. The goal is to augment clinical judgment, not replace it, to enable exactly the kind of personalized, proactive, and efficient care that value-based models are designed to reward.

Jeff Bennett, Chief Strategy and Innovation Officer at Modivcare
Technology plays a central role in aligning provider and payer goals in today’s healthcare environment. Interoperable remote monitoring solutions give clinical teams a clear and consistent view of members’ health journeys, while equipping payers with data and insights to measure care plan effectiveness that happens outside of the traditional clinical setting. With a data-driven foundation, both parties can clearly define and track care quality and ensure measurable health outcomes are aligned with value-based care.

Data and care insight accessibility within a coordinated care ecosystem allows providers to deliver more proactive care while fostering better alignment around quality improvement across the industry. Ultimately, this translates to quantifiable improvements in both member outcomes and total cost of care, and ensures that value-based care benefits providers, payers, and members alike.

Suhas Ramachandra, VP Product Strategy & Innovation at ZeOmega
Technology has become the execution layer of value-based care. It must translate contract terms, quality measures, and utilization policies into real-time, actionable workflows that connect clinical activity to financial performance. When payers and providers operate from a shared, normalized data model, alignment improves, and accountability becomes measurable, not theoretical.

Stephen Vaccaro, President at HHAeXchange
In home care, technology is essential to aligning payer and provider goals around value-based care and quality measurement. Because care is delivered in the home rather than a facility, consistently measuring quality depends on real-time documentation. When caregivers record point-of-care observations using interoperable systems that are connected to payers and state Medicaid programs, they ensure everyone is operating from the same central data set. That shared visibility makes it easier to track outcomes, monitor adherence to care plans, and reflect reimbursement for the quality of care delivered.

Technology also strengthens the operational processes behind value-based reimbursement. When documentation, authorizations, quality reporting, and billing are connected instead of managed separately, agencies can reduce administrative workloads and better align their operations with payer requirements. Timely, accurate data improves billing reliability and helps prevent reimbursement delays. Integrated technology syncs care delivery and payments by making quality tracking a part of everyday operations rather than an added reporting requirement.

Elevsis Delgadillo, SVP, Customer Success at KeenStack
Technology is foundational for enabling true value-based alignment. Predictive analytics help forecast patient health risks, utilization, and cost trends so both payers and providers can act proactively. AI-powered decision support reduces variability at the point of care, while risk stratification and care gap identification directly connect quality outcomes to financial performance.

Monte Sandler, Chief Operating Officer at WebPT
Technology allows providers to automate the complexity that historically required heavy manual oversight. AI can manage thousands of payer-specific rules, coding combinations, and exceptions simultaneously, which reduces friction in the revenue cycle. When administrative waste goes down, and payment becomes more predictable, both providers and payers benefit operationally. That alignment supports broader goals around efficiency and value.

Kevin Ruane, Practice Leader, Analytic Advisory at Truven
Healthcare organizations increasingly recognize that effective claims management, utilization review, and care coordination require a truly holistic analytics strategy. Members are more than a single metric—clinical, behavioral, social, and financial health all intersect to shape outcomes. That’s why leading payer–provider ecosystems are moving beyond siloed datasets and embracing diverse sources, from clinical records and social risk indicators to financial data and program participation.

To unlock member insights, it is now essential to use an analytics platform that integrates all data sources. These integrated, multiple perspectives power advanced machine learning models, as organizations gain a clearer, more actionable view of cost drivers, care needs, and member engagement in healthcare. The result is more accurate interventions, utilization decisions, and care pathways that improve both affordability and the member experience.

Dan McDonald, Co-Founder and CEO at 86Borders
Technology plays a critical and supportive role in aligning payers and providers around value-based care and quality metrics like Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Star Ratings and the Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS). Data platforms can identify care gaps, stratify risk, and flag members who are overdue for screenings, or managing complex chronic conditions, behavioral health, and/or social determinants of health (SDOH) barriers.

It is important to note that the real alignment happens when those insights are paired with human-centered outreach. Simply sending automated reminders often leads to message fatigue and disengagement. When care coordinators use technology to prioritize outreach — establish a “human-to-human” conversation, then build trust, address immediate barriers, and coordinate with providers — quality scores improve, unnecessary utilization declines, and both payer and provider performance goals are met more effectively.

Derek Plansky, SVP Governance & Solutions at Health Gorilla
Technology plays a critical role in aligning payer and provider goals under value-based care. It makes quality measurement and utilization insights more efficient, transparent, and actionable. Interoperable data infrastructure enables clinical, quality, and administrative data to be used consistently across organizations. This shifts the focus from collection to outcomes and enables more confident performance measurement.

Julie Scherer, President and Chief Solutions Officer at Motive Medical Intelligence
Evidence-based clinical analytics focused on waste, appropriateness, and quality of care are a key technology for aligning payer and provider goals in value-based care, a holy grail we are trying to universally achieve in the U.S. health system. Clinical analytics systems that measure individual physician performance deliver expert insights that align payers’ cost-reduction priorities with providers’ commitment to appropriate, high-quality care. By analyzing settled claims data against established standards-of-care guidelines, these systems identify unnecessary, inappropriate, and wasteful care — a critical component of value-based alignment and success.

So many great points to consider here! Huge thank you to everyone who took the time out of their day to submit a quote to us! And thank you to all of you for taking the time out of your day to read this article! We could not do this without all of your support.

What role do you think technology plays in aligning payer and provider goals around value-based care and quality measurement? Let us know over on social media, we’d love to hear from all of you!



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