Meditech is a vendor of electronic health record (EHR) systems and related clinical, administrative, and analytics software for hospitals and health systems. The company provides modular suites that cover inpatient acute care, ambulatory clinics, revenue cycle management, revenue integrity, patient engagement, and population health management. Meditech's platforms can be deployed as cloud-hosted SaaS or on-premises installations and are used by community hospitals, tertiary medical centers, and multi-site health systems.
Meditech's product family is organized to support clinical documentation, computerized provider order entry (CPOE), medication administration (BCMA), lab and radiology integration, and revenue cycle workflows. The company has focused on interoperability stacks (HL7, FHIR), patient safety features, and specialty modules for areas such as behavioral health, acute rehab, long-term care, and ambulatory clinics. Meditech positions its solutions for organizations seeking an integrated platform that reduces reliance on multiple disconnected point solutions.
As with other enterprise EHR vendors, Meditech offers implementation services, clinical transformation consulting, training programs, and ongoing client support. Many clients select Meditech for a single-vendor approach that centralizes clinical, financial, and operational data, enabling hospital leaders to manage care delivery and compliance from a consolidated platform. For details on products and modules, see Meditech's solutions overview at the company's site: Meditech's EHR platforms (https://www.meditech.com/solutions).
Meditech provides a comprehensive set of features across clinical, administrative, and interoperability domains. Core clinical capabilities include electronic charting, CPOE (computerized provider order entry), medication administration and reconciliation, clinical decision support, diagnostic order management, and structured documentation templates. The system supports specialty workflows for surgery, ICU, emergency department, obstetrics, behavioral health, and ambulatory clinics.
On the administrative side, Meditech includes revenue cycle management, scheduling, registration, billing, claims management, and analytics for financial performance. The platform supports coding workflows, claims scrubbing, denial management, and interfaces to clearinghouses. Meditech also offers patient engagement tools such as patient portals, secure messaging, appointment reminders, and online bill pay.
Interoperability and data exchange are central features: the platform supports HL7 v2 messaging, FHIR-based APIs for modern integrations, Direct Secure Messaging for clinical messaging, and IHE profiles for imaging and document exchange. Meditech provides lab, pharmacy, and radiology interfaces and supports integration with third-party devices, PACS, and LIMS.
Key horizontal and value-add features include:
For a breakdown of specific modules and clinical capabilities, review Meditech's product pages describing acute care and ambulatory suites: Meditech clinical and ambulatory modules (https://www.meditech.com/products).
Meditech offers these pricing plans:
These example figures reflect typical enterprise and SaaS pricing structures for hospital EHR deployments and are representative ranges used by health systems evaluating EHR vendors. Actual costs are heavily dependent on scope, number of licensed providers and clinicians, modules selected, integrations, training, and implementation services. Check Meditech's client engagement resources and solutions pages for vendor-provided contracting information at Meditech's client procurement resources (https://www.meditech.com/contact).
Meditech starts at $500/month per provider when billed as a cloud-hosted SaaS subscription in smaller ambulatory or single-hospital deployments. For larger hospitals or full inpatient+ambulatory suites, monthly subscription or hosting fees typically scale with the number of licensed users and modules; enterprise SaaS agreements often run into multiple thousands of dollars per month through the initial implementation and steady-state support.
Implementation fees, data migration, and professional services are billed separately and can add significant upfront monthly-equivalent costs during the first 6–18 months of deployment. Organizations often finance adoption via multi-year subscription contracts or capital expenditures for on-premises licenses.
Meditech costs $6,000/year per provider based on an illustrative $500/month starting SaaS price for cloud-hosted ambulatory deployments billed annually. For on-premises license purchases, yearly costs include maintenance and support typically equal to a percentage of the license fee (commonly 15–20%), which can translate to $12,000/year or more for smaller hospital license packages.
Total cost of ownership for a year should include hosting fees or infrastructure costs, annual maintenance, ongoing integration and interface upkeep, and staffing for clinical informatics and support. Expect enterprise-yearly contracts for larger organizations to range from $100,000/year to several million dollars depending on scale and services included.
Meditech pricing ranges from $500/month per provider to multi-thousand-dollar enterprise contracts and six-figure annual totals. Entry-level cloud deployments for ambulatory clinics are priced per provider, while full acute-care hospital suites involve larger one-time license or subscription fees plus implementation. Costs also depend on add-ons such as revenue cycle outsourcing, advanced analytics, telehealth, and third-party integrations.
When comparing vendors, procurement teams should model five-year total cost of ownership including license or subscription fees, implementation professional services, interface and integration costs, training, hardware or hosting, and ongoing maintenance and upgrades. For specific contract quotes and negotiated enterprise pricing, contact Meditech's sales and client services at Meditech's sales and contracting information (https://www.meditech.com/contact).
Meditech is used primarily to manage clinical workflows, patient records, and administrative operations across hospitals and ambulatory clinics. Clinicians use the system to document encounters, place and track orders, review results, and manage medication administration. Nursing staff rely on charting tools, care plans, and acuity scoring to coordinate bedside care and handoffs.
Administrators and revenue cycle teams use Meditech for scheduling, registration, billing, claims processing, and financial reporting. The system's revenue integrity and coding support help reduce denials and improve claims accuracy. Health system leaders also use embedded analytics to monitor quality metrics, resource utilization, and operational performance.
Meditech is frequently used in multi-site rollouts where hospitals and physician practices want a consistent patient record and single source of truth for clinical and financial data. Typical use cases include acute-care EHR deployment, ambulatory clinic management, hospital mergers and system consolidation, population health management across a network, and revenue cycle modernization projects.
Pros:
Cons:
Meditech does not publish a self-service free trial for its hospital-class EHR suite in the same way consumer SaaS vendors do. EHR deployments typically require environment provisioning, data migration, and training, which are delivered through formal pilot programs or staged implementations rather than open free trials.
Meditech does run proof-of-concept (POC) projects, sandbox environments, and pilot deployments with prospective customers as part of sales engagements. These pilots allow clinical teams to validate workflows, interoperability, and reporting in controlled settings before committing to full production deployments. To explore pilot opportunities, view Meditech's customer engagement and solutions pages: Meditech pilot and implementation resources (https://www.meditech.com/contact).
No, Meditech is not free. As an enterprise EHR vendor, Meditech sells licensed software and subscription services with fees for implementation, hosting, maintenance, and optional managed services. Cost structures vary by deployment model and customer size.
Meditech provides modern API capabilities centered on FHIR (Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources) for exchanging clinical data with third-party applications and health information exchanges. The API surface includes resources for patients, encounters, observations (lab results, vitals), medications, allergies, and clinical notes. The availability of specific endpoints and data access levels are governed by deployment configuration and security policies.
In addition to FHIR, Meditech supports HL7 v2 messaging for legacy interfaces, CDA for document exchange, and IHE profiles to enable imaging and document workflows. The platform also supports Direct Secure Messaging for point-to-point clinical message exchange and integrates with common identity providers via SAML/SSO for secure authentication.
Developers can use Meditech's integration framework and interface engine to connect lab systems, radiology PACS, pharmacy systems, and third-party analytics tools. Typical integration patterns include real-time event-driven messages (orders, results), bulk data export for analytics, and RESTful API calls for app-level interactions such as patient-facing portals. For developer and integration guidance, Meditech publishes implementation specifications and partner program details on its interoperability pages: Meditech interoperability and developer resources (https://www.meditech.com/interoperability).
Epic: Enterprise-grade EHR for large health systems, known for deep functionality, robust interoperability, and high implementation costs. Epic is a common alternative for large academic medical centers and integrated delivery networks.
Cerner: Offers modular EHR suites for hospitals and ambulatory practices, strong population health tools, and a large install base. Cerner caters to both mid-size and large hospitals with customizable modules.
Allscripts: Provides ambulatory EHR, practice management, and revenue cycle tools with options for cloud hosting and managed services; suited for multi-site physician groups.
Athenahealth: Cloud-first ambulatory EHR with outsourced revenue cycle options and a marketplace of connected applications for patient engagement and telehealth.
eClinicalWorks: Targets ambulatory practices with integrated telehealth, analytics, and patient engagement features; commonly chosen by medium-sized practices.
OpenEMR: Fully open source ambulatory EHR and practice management system with a broad set of features and an active community. It requires in-house or contracted support for production deployments.
GNU Health: Open source health and hospital information system with modules for clinical care and public health; more common in research and public sector settings.
VistA (OpenVistA variants): Veteran's Administration–originated EHR codebase with community-supported forks used by some public hospitals; requires significant technical expertise to deploy and maintain.
OpenEHR (implementations): A standards-based open architecture for storing and exchanging clinical data; often paired with open source implementations that require system integration.
Meditech is used to run electronic health records and clinical/administrative workflows for hospitals and ambulatory clinics. Hospitals use it for inpatient charting, order entry, medication management, and revenue cycle operations, while ambulatory clinics use the ambulatory modules for scheduling, e-prescribing, and patient encounters.
Yes, Meditech supports FHIR-based APIs for interoperability. The platform exposes resources such as Patient, Encounter, Observation, and Medication to enable modern integrations with third-party apps, patient portals, and health information exchanges.
Meditech starts at $500/month per provider for illustrative cloud-hosted ambulatory deployments in smaller settings. Actual per-provider monthly pricing varies based on modules, contract term, and scope of services purchased.
No, Meditech does not offer a free tier. It is an enterprise EHR requiring licensed software or subscriptions, along with implementation and support agreements tailored to each customer.
Yes, Meditech integrates with PACS, LIMS, and other clinical systems using HL7, DICOM, and FHIR interfaces. The platform supports standard messaging, IHE profiles, and vendor-specific interfaces for diagnostic system integration and results flow.
Meditech provides enterprise-grade security controls including role-based access, audit logging, and encryption. The vendor supports HIPAA compliance efforts, secure authentication methods, and configurable access controls, though specific certifications and controls depend on the deployed solution and contractual security commitments.
Yes, Meditech offers cloud-hosted (SaaS) deployment options. Cloud hosting includes managed infrastructure, patching, and optional managed services to reduce local IT overhead, with contract details varying by customer size and service levels.
Yes, Meditech supports revenue cycle management and outsourced RCM services. The platform includes coding, claims scrubbing, denial management features, and can be paired with managed services to handle billing and collections.
Meditech provides structured training, documentation, and implementation support. Customers typically receive role-based training, online materials, and access to Meditech's client services; enterprise contracts often include onsite training and dedicated project management.
Meditech delivers scheduled updates and version releases with optional managed upgrade services. For cloud-hosted customers, Meditech coordinates upgrades as part of the SaaS service, while on-premises customers receive version packages and support for planning and testing before go-live.
Meditech maintains roles in software engineering, clinical product management, implementation and client services, and sales. Career opportunities typically include positions for clinical informaticists, implementation consultants, integration engineers, and cybersecurity professionals. Meditech also hires customer success and training staff to support onboarding and long-term client relationships. For current job postings and application information, check Meditech's careers page: Meditech careers and job openings (https://www.meditech.com/careers).
Meditech supports a partner and reseller program that includes integration partners, implementation consultancies, and technology partners that extend functionality with third-party modules. Affiliates commonly provide services such as data migration, custom interfaces, revenue cycle outsourcing, and specialized clinical configuration. Prospective partners can apply for partnership information through Meditech's partner program pages: Meditech partner and affiliate information (https://www.meditech.com/partners).
Independent reviews and peer feedback for Meditech can be found on healthcare IT analyst sites, peer review platforms, and user community forums. Sources include KLAS Research for vendor performance analysis, user reviews on healthcare IT forums, and case studies published by hospitals that have implemented Meditech. Meditech's customer success stories and reference clients are available on the vendor site for deeper, vendor-curated perspectives: Meditech customer case studies (https://www.meditech.com/case-studies).