Embracing the Cloud-based LIS is the Next Big Move for Clinical Labs
The US healthcare landscape is experiencing a seismic shift towards digital health with clinical laboratories standing at the forefront of the transformation. The question is no longer if labs should prioritize updating their IT infrastructure, but rather, which solutions are best-suited for the future of healthcare, and which labs will succeed in implementing them first.
How Healthcare Fell Behind the Cloud Curve
Most clinical labs still utilize on-premise legacy systems from vendors that have served the industry for decades. This is due, in part, to historically low demand for innovative cloud-based LIS solutions up until recent years. Furthermore, misconceptions about data security risks, poor standardization of data protocols, and a lack of incentives for EHR vendors to coordinate with labs led to a situation where legacy systems and homegrown solutions continued to dominate. While every other industry from education, to entertainment, to financial services moved to the cloud, healthcare lagged far behind.
But finally, we’re seeing a paradigm shift driven by regulatory mandates and massive investments made by industry leaders, which has raised the urgency to phase out outdated systems. This article reveals why the clinical diagnostics industry is now choosing to adopt the cloud, while dispelling the myths and misconceptions, highlighting the advantages of cloud-based systems, and clarifying the nuances between different systems.
Survey reveals 61% of healthcare organizations have invested effort and resources into meeting the requirements of the Cures Act, but only 36% are prepared meet its requirements.
US Healthcare’s Priority #1: Modernize Health IT
Healthcare organizations took notice when the 21st Century Cures Act was signed into law in 2016. Enhancements to the program by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology made in 2020 and again in 2023 added more obligations for health IT developers to further the advancement of interoperability, promote health equity, and support the expansion of appropriate access, exchange, and use of electronic health information.
The COVID-19 pandemic also exposed the limitations of outdated laboratory IT infrastructure. On-prem systems simply were not designed for the needs of the modern world of healthcare: accessibility to electronic health information, capability to interface with EHRs using modern data transfer protocols, and integrations with external systems like public health or precision medicine reporting tools.
Aligning with Industry Leaders: The Case for Cloud Interoperability
Signaling that the health IT cloud transformation is a big deal, we witnessed the blockbuster $28b acquisition of Cerner by Oracle in 2021. Meditech announced a collaboration with Google Cloud Platform to bring their EHR to the cloud. Then in 2022, Epic began leveraging Microsoft Azure for EHR cloud migrations for large organizations such as Mount Sinai Health System, the largest academic medical system in New York City. This trend among EHR software giants is a testament to the cloud's viability and security for healthcare data management.
With the major EHR and EMR systems now fully transitioned to the cloud, it’s inevitable that other healthcare systems are soon to follow. For labs, this means that it’s more crucial than ever to be able to interface with cloud-based systems effectively in order to stay relevant and competitive. On-prem LIS vendors see the writing on the wall as well. It’s why they all have plans to bring cloud-based versions of their software online and are urging their customers to switch over.
Labs failing to comply with Cures Act interoperability requirements will be replaced by more agile players. LIS vendors failing to effectively re-architect their systems to take advantage of the cloud will also be phased out in favor of newer cloud-native solutions. It’s a critical race towards the finish in terms of achieving successful healthcare interoperability.
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Debunking Myths about the Cloud - Not Just Someone Else’s Computer
Healthcare's hesitancy to embrace the cloud stems from long-standing concerns about data security and accessibility. It's time to move past the misconception that on-premise systems are inherently safer.
Modern cloud services include advanced security features and compliance with regulatory standards that are actually more secure for healthcare data storage and management versus legacy systems. A combination of encryption, rigorous authentication, automated backups, and integrity verification provides a comprehensive security framework that addresses the unique needs of the healthcare sector. Dispelling these myths is essential for understanding the potential of cloud technology in revolutionizing healthcare IT.
The Advantages of Cloud-Based LIS
The Shortcomings of Legacy On-Prem Systems:?
The transition to cloud-native LIS is not just a technological upgrade but a strategic alignment with the broader healthcare industry's objectives. Embracing cloud technology enables labs to benefit from enhanced interoperability, robust security, and the scalability essential in today's digital healthcare landscape.??
With Dendi, a cloud-native LIS solution, clinical labs can embrace the latest technology advancements that are pivotal to improving healthcare services, ensuring patient data security, and enhancing the quality of care. The future of healthcare is unequivocally in the cloud, and the time to make this critical move is now. Find out more at www.dendisoftware.com