Ever feel like building healthcare software means you’re shipping two products: the one users see, and the compliance-heavy infrastructure underneath?
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Only 8% of physicians report “ideal interoperability” for test results from outside health systems, according to the Jama Network. And even for encounter documents, it tops out at 19%.

About 190 million people were affected by the Change Healthcare cyberattack in February 2024, according to an updated estimate from its parent company, UnitedHealth.

An EHR switch can either fix daily friction or quietly create new risks. In 2025, fewer than four in ten healthcare organizations report that their recent EHR implementations actually met clinicians’ needs, even as digital records are nearly universal.

In the U.S., the HHS Office for Civil Rights documented 725 large healthcare data breaches in a single year, each affecting 500+ people, the HIPAA Journal reported.

Healthcare remains the most expensive industry for data breach recovery, averaging $9.77 million per breach, according to IBM. That number lands hard because it often means operational disruption, delayed care, and months of cleanup for teams that were already stretched.

Custom healthcare software development started to gain momentum during the COVID-19 season and will continue to improve, changing the future of medicine.

Software is now prescribed alongside pills and therapy. However, most digital health products never make it that far. They stall at regulatory review, fail to prove clinical value, or get rejected by clinicians who cannot fit them into daily practice.

Healthcare systems are under constant pressure to stay available, connected, and secure. Yet attacks are becoming more frequent and harder to contain. Healthcare data breaches increased by about 20% in the first half of 2025 compared with the same period in 2024.

Clinicians spend up to 16 minutes per patient encounter inside the EHR, according to JAMA Internal Medicine. Much of this time is tied to searching for, correcting, or re-entering information that should already flow between systems.

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