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Opinion: Epic’s call to block a proposed data rule is wrong for many reasons

Requiring electronic health record systems to talk to each other and third-party apps will benefit patients, improve outcomes, and reduce costs and waste by the health system.

Epic, the nation’s largest electronic health record (EHR) company and a major beneficiary of a $48 billion Obama-era federal program to promote the adoption of EHRs, has launched a full-scale effort to block the flow of data out of its software and into apps that benefit doctors and patients. That’s wrong for many reasons.

Epic is attempting to scuttle from the Department of Health and Human Services that would implement the interoperability and information blocking provisions of the . The thoughtfully crafted rule, proposed by the , and now under final review at the Office of Management and Budget, requires that EHRs operate seamlessly with third-party apps, and prevents EHR vendors and health care systems from blocking or inhibiting the flow of

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