Oracle Health (Cerner)
Oracle Health (formerly Cerner) - enterprise EHR with AI clinical decision support, ambient documentation, and revenue cycle intelligence.
What it does
Oracle Health (acquired Cerner in 2022) is the second largest EHR system in the US - serving hospitals, health systems, and outpatient organizations with clinical documentation, order management, revenue cycle, and population health. AI capabilities include AI-powered sepsis and deterioration early warning systems, clinical decision support alerts for medication safety and care gaps, ambient documentation capabilities through partnerships, AI-powered patient matching that accurately links patient records across systems, intelligent revenue cycle analytics identifying coding optimization opportunities, Oracle AI-enhanced regulatory compliance monitoring, and population health predictive analytics for at-risk patient identification.
Strengths
- Community hospitals and regional health systems use Cerner/Oracle Health for clinical operations - AI decision support improving care quality and revenue cycle intelligence maximizing reimbursement.
- Large academic medical centers and health systems use Oracle Health for enterprise clinical operations - AI analytics supporting population health management and clinical intelligence across complex multi-entity environments.
- Oracle Health (acquired Cerner in 2022) is the second largest EHR system in the US - serving hospitals, health systems, and outpatient organizations with clinical documentation, order management, revenue cycle, and population health.
Watch-outs
- Epic has stronger hospital EHR market position: Epic holds approximately 40% of US hospital EHR market versus Oracle Health's approximately 25% — many health systems in competitive markets prefer Epic's clinical workflow depth and patient engagement capabilities.
- Oracle acquisition creates strategic transition uncertainty: Oracle's acquisition of Cerner is still integrating — health systems evaluating Oracle Health should assess product roadmap clarity and how Oracle's enterprise software priorities align with healthcare-specific clinical needs.
- AI ambient documentation requires Nuance DAX partnership: Oracle Health's ambient documentation capabilities depend on Nuance DAX integration — this adds complexity and vendor dependency compared to Epic's more native ambient documentation approach.
Pricing
Oracle Health (Cerner) pricing based on bed count and modules. Not published. Community hospital implementations from $5M to $30M+. Enterprise contracts negotiated. Annual maintenance contracts.