“It’s a great year for Oracle Health and Life Sciences,” explains Seema Verma, executive vice-president and managing director of the company, while he is about to launch Himss25 in Las Vegas.
At the Oracle Health stand (# 3221), visitors can see why. They will learn more about his new electronic health file, Oracle Health Data Intelligence, Oracle Health Clinical AI Agent, Oracle Fusion Application Suite and much more, says Verma.
“Most DSEs were built in the 1990s and developed around payments management, without helping patients and providers,” she adds. “The industry has simply exceeded them and needs new solutions to new problems such as incessant supplier burnout.”
This is why Oracle Health focuses on “completely reinventure of our electronic health file in an intelligence system that helps health systems stimulate efficiency, improve clinical care, speed up innovation and reduce costs”.
The DSE based on Oracle Cloud infrastructure – currently in beta version with customers – integrates AI “in the entire clinical workflow to automate processes, provide information to the care point,” explains Verma. It also helps to simplify the preparation, documentation and monitoring of meetings for doctors and staff.
“We are proud to present our new DSE in Himss,” explains Verma.
At HIMSS25, the company will also be focused on the agent of the Oracle Health Clinique, which has been extremely beneficial for its customers in their daily work, she says.
“Instead of spending time navigating drop-down menus or scrolling the screens to find information, practitioners can access the critical elements of the medical history before, during and after an appointment by using the clinical AI agent. Integrated with the practitioners of the Seh Oracle Health, (IT) provides very specific project notes and the next-stage actions to examine and Approve in a few minutes. “
Visitors to the Oracle Health stand will also hear more about how the company helps create a more integrated health care ecosystem, explains Verma, the company aimed at filling the gap between suppliers and payers with new tools that support complaints, previous authorizations and payments.
“We are planning to expand this portfolio in 2025 – limiting today’s laborious manual transmission of medical records and helping to reduce administrative time and costs, speed approval of the necessary clinical services and accelerate complaints and processing of payments”, she says, in order to allow “an evaluation and treatment of complaints in real time and treatment and support for improved clinical decision -making”.
Like so many other health care organizations, Oracle is strongly interested in integrating the “AI and AI agents in our portfolio to make our products easier to use, to reduce the burden while bringing intelligence to the workflow process”, explains VERMA.
“An example is to help health organizations get more information to guide clinical and operational decisions,” she explains. “They are overwhelmed by the growing volume of data at their disposal, and they find it difficult to collect it and organize it so that it can be used effectively. Oracle Health Data Intelligence allows a wide range of health care and government stakeholders to use data from the health care ecosystem without the cost and the complexity of trying to integrate their own data and systems.” “”
What about patients? Ensuring that they have “access and a loan of their data is another key development area,” explains Verma. “We continue to prioritize interoperability by making the data more available, useful and secure.
“This includes Submit our request to become a network of qualified health information“She adds.” If it is designated, it will provide a ramp to the ramp to the framework of exchange of confidence and a common agreement to allow providers and patients to access the information necessary for processing and care. “”
The Oracle network is “designed to support data types that are generally not available in other exchanges, such as X -rays and MRI,” explains Verma. “The acceleration of exchanges and the secure widening of the variety and volume of the data available through the health care ecosystem is increasingly important to feed the advanced AI capabilities which can help to clarify care decisions, optimize processing paths and rationalize payment processes.”
In Himss25, Verma will also participate in a conversation by the fire with the CEO of Himss, Hal Wolf, during a view of the first session on March 5 at 12:45 p.m. at level 2, Venetian F.
“We will discuss a number of subjects such as Oracle Health and Stargate, as well as the symbiotic relationship between health care and life sciences and how they should be more closely linked to the overall well-being of our world population,” she said.
“Imagine that if DSE disidentified data could be used to identify the first disease alert panels so that public health managers can respond quickly and contain epidemics? And if clinical trials were faster and easier to conduct because we actively use DSE to identify patients and facilitate the closure of closure of all providers and search for gaps and search for gaps and search for Clinical care.
Oracle Health will be in stand 3221 at Himss25.