Healthcare Interoperability That Makes Systems Actually Talk.
Healthcare's hardest IT problem isn't building systems — it's getting them to talk to each other. Fragmented EHRs and health systems that can't share data mean care happens without the full picture. We build interoperability solutions — HL7, FHIR, EHR integration — that get health data flowing where care needs it, solving the problem healthcare struggles with most.
Why Getting Health Systems to Exchange Data Is So Hard
Healthcare's most persistent IT problem is interoperability — getting its many systems to exchange data so that information flows where care needs it. Healthcare runs on a fragmented landscape of EHRs, departmental systems, lab systems, imaging systems and more, often from different vendors, frequently unable to share data cleanly. The result is that a patient's information is scattered across systems that don't talk, so care is too often delivered without the full picture, and the data that should follow the patient instead gets stuck in silos. Solving this is harder and more valuable than building any single system.
The difficulty is real and specific. Healthcare data exchange involves complex standards like HL7 and FHIR, a diversity of systems with different implementations and quirks, sensitive data that must be exchanged securely and compliantly, and the messy reality of systems never designed to talk to each other being made to. Interoperability isn't a matter of a simple integration; it's a genuinely hard technical problem, which is exactly why healthcare has struggled with it for so long despite its obvious importance. Getting systems to exchange data correctly, securely and reliably is specialized, demanding work.
We build healthcare interoperability solutions that solve this problem — making systems actually talk. We build the HL7 and FHIR integrations and the EHR and health-system connections that get data flowing where care needs it, navigating the standards, the system diversity, and the security and compliance requirements that make healthcare interoperability hard. The goal is connected care: a healthcare environment where the patient's information follows them across systems rather than getting stuck in silos, which requires solving the interoperability problem that healthcare finds hardest, and which is exactly what we focus on.
What Our HL7 and FHIR Integrations Deliver
Our Health Data Exchange Process
1. Map the Systems & Data
We map the systems that need to exchange data and what has to flow between them, so the interoperability solution addresses the real fragmentation rather than a simplified picture of it.
2. Navigate the Standards
We work with the HL7 and FHIR standards and the systems' specific implementations, navigating the complexity that makes healthcare interoperability genuinely hard.
3. Build the Integration
We build the integrations that connect the systems and get data exchanging correctly, handling the diversity and quirks of systems never designed to talk to each other.
4. Secure the Exchange
We ensure the data exchange is secure and compliant, because the sensitive health data crossing between systems must be protected throughout, not just at rest.
5. Enable Connected Care
We deliver interoperability that gets information flowing where care needs it, so the clinical goal — the full picture following the patient — is actually achieved.
Breaking the Silos That Fragment Care
The real cost of poor interoperability is fragmented care, and that's what makes solving it so valuable. When a patient's information is scattered across systems that don't share data, care happens without the full picture: a clinician may not have access to results from another system, a history recorded elsewhere, a medication list maintained in a different silo. This fragmentation leads to inefficiency, repeated tests, gaps in information at the point of care, and a patient experience of having to repeat themselves across a system that should already know. The silos aren't just an IT inconvenience; they degrade care itself.
Interoperability breaks those silos, which is why it's so much more than a technical nicety. When systems exchange data and information flows where care needs it, the patient's full picture becomes available wherever they're being cared for — care is better-informed, more efficient, and less fragmented. The value of interoperability is clinical, not just technical: it's about care delivered with the full information rather than partial, which is why healthcare has long recognized interoperability as critical even as it has struggled to achieve it. The prize is connected care, and the silos are exactly what stands in the way.
We focus on breaking those silos and achieving connected care. By building the HL7 and FHIR integrations and EHR connections that get data flowing, we make fragmented systems share information so care can be delivered with the full picture rather than partial. We treat interoperability as the clinically valuable goal it is — information following the patient — and solve the genuinely hard technical problem of getting healthcare's diverse, siloed systems to exchange data correctly, securely and reliably. Breaking the silos is the point, because that's what turns fragmented care into connected care.
Get Health Data Flowing Where Care Needs It
Interoperability is the problem healthcare most needs solved and finds hardest to solve, which makes it exactly the kind of problem worth specialized focus. The fragmentation of healthcare's systems is a persistent, costly reality, and getting them to exchange data — across the standards, the system diversity, the security requirements — is genuinely difficult work that many struggle with. But the payoff is large: data flowing where care needs it, silos broken, care delivered with the full picture. Solving healthcare's hardest IT problem delivers value precisely because it's hard and because the fragmentation it ends is so costly.
We bring that specialized focus. By building healthcare interoperability solutions — HL7 and FHIR integrations, EHR and health-system connections, secure compliant data exchange — we solve the problem of getting healthcare's systems to talk, navigating the difficulty that makes interoperability hard. The result is health data flowing where care needs it, which is the connected care that fragmented systems prevent and that interoperability, done well, delivers.
If your healthcare organization struggles with systems that can't share data — fragmented EHRs, siloed information, care delivered without the full picture — interoperability is the answer, and solving that hard problem is what we do. We build healthcare interoperability solutions using HL7, FHIR and EHR integration to get your systems exchanging data and your patients' information flowing where care needs it, breaking the silos that fragment care and delivering the connected care that solving healthcare's hardest IT problem makes possible.
Frequently Asked Questions
It's getting healthcare's many systems — EHRs, lab, imaging, departmental systems, often from different vendors — to exchange data so information flows where care needs it. Healthcare runs on a fragmented landscape of systems that frequently can't share data cleanly, leaving patient information siloed. Interoperability solutions, built on standards like HL7 and FHIR, connect these systems so the patient's full picture follows them across care.
Because it involves complex standards (HL7, FHIR), a diversity of systems with different implementations and quirks, sensitive data that must be exchanged securely and compliantly, and the messy reality of making systems never designed to talk to each other do so. It's not a simple integration but a genuinely hard technical problem, which is why healthcare has struggled with it for so long despite its obvious importance.
They're the standards healthcare interoperability runs on. HL7 is a long-established set of standards for exchanging health information; FHIR (Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources) is a more modern standard designed to make health data exchange easier and more web-friendly. Building interoperability means working with these standards and the specific ways different systems implement them, which is part of what makes it complex.
Fragmented care. When patient information is scattered across systems that don't share data, care happens without the full picture — clinicians lacking results or history recorded elsewhere, repeated tests, gaps at the point of care, patients repeating themselves. The cost isn't just IT inconvenience; it degrades care itself, which is why breaking the silos through interoperability is so clinically valuable, not just technically.
Yes — connecting EHRs and health systems so they exchange data is core to what we do. We build the integrations using HL7, FHIR and the systems' specific implementations to get your existing systems sharing information, breaking the silos that leave data stuck where it was created. The goal is your patients' information flowing across your systems where care needs it, from the systems you already run.
Yes — security and compliance are essential, because the health data crossing between systems is sensitive and must be protected throughout the exchange, not just at rest. We build the data exchange to be secure and compliant, so interoperability connects systems without compromising the patient privacy and regulatory requirements that healthcare data demands at every point, including in transit between systems.
By making the patient's full picture available wherever they're being cared for. When systems exchange data and information follows the patient, care is better-informed, more efficient, and less fragmented — clinicians have the results, history and medications they need rather than a partial view. The value is clinical: care delivered with full information rather than the partial information that siloed systems force.
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