Oracle Health Embeds AI Across EHR and Enterprise Applications to Improve Care Delivery
The company will demonstrate several AI-powered capabilities at the 2026 HIMSS Global Health Conference & Exhibition in Las Vegas.
Oracle Health is expanding the use of artificial intelligence across its electronic health record (EHR), reimbursement systems, and enterprise cloud applications to address operational and clinical inefficiencies in healthcare.
The company will demonstrate several AI-powered capabilities at the 2026 HIMSS Global Health Conference & Exhibition in Las Vegas.
Seema Verma, executive vice president and general manager of Oracle Health and Life Sciences, said the company is embedding AI directly into clinical and administrative workflows to help providers reduce documentation burdens and streamline operations.
Among the solutions being highlighted is the Oracle Health Clinical AI Agent, which supports automated clinical documentation. The tool generates clinical notes and has seen rapid adoption since its launch in the United States last year. According to the company, more than 300 organizations currently use the agent, which has collectively saved clinicians over 200,000 hours of documentation time. The solution is also available for physicians in Canada and the United Kingdom.
Oracle Health is also introducing AI agents designed to improve reimbursement and claims management processes. These tools aim to automate tasks such as prior authorization, medical coding, and claims documentation by embedding payer rules directly into provider workflows.
Administrative and insurance-related costs in the healthcare sector are estimated at approximately $200 billion annually. Verma said the new AI agents are intended to reduce manual work, accelerate approvals, and improve coordination between payers and providers.
The company will also showcase its Oracle Fusion Cloud Applications, which include AI-enabled enterprise tools supporting finance, human capital management, supply chain operations, and customer experience for healthcare organizations. The applications are designed to integrate with clinical systems to help hospitals manage staffing, streamline supply chains, and improve revenue cycle operations.
Oracle Health is also advancing its next-generation EHR platform, which integrates AI directly into clinician workflows to provide real-time insights and reduce time spent on administrative tasks. The system is currently used by ambulatory care providers in the United States, with availability in acute care settings expected later in 2026.
Additionally, the company is developing a new Oracle Health Patient Portal that allows patients to access and manage their medical records through a single digital platform. Planned AI capabilities will enable patients to receive plain-language explanations of diagnoses, test results and treatment plans.
Oracle Health said its AI framework is designed to support open integration, allowing healthcare organizations to build or integrate additional AI tools while maintaining secure clinical workflows.
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