ECIN buy takes Allscripts into hospital market
Late last year, following changes to the federal Stark regulations which allowed hospitals to assist affiliated physicians in adopting EHRs and electronic prescribing systems, Allscripts saw a surge in business as hospitals sought out the company to help them connect to outlying physicians’ offices and clinics. In addition, the federal government and other stakeholders have proposed requiring the automation of Medicare patient information exchanged between hospitals and providers to whom discharged patients are referred – a step that recent studies indicate only 20 percent of all hospital systems has taken.
ECIN, which generated estimated revenues of approximately $19 million in 2007, offers a Web-based software-as-a-service product that helps automate and streamline the care management process in hospitals, from admission through discharge. It has a client base of more than 400 hospitals and nearly 5,000 post-acute care facilities. When combined with Allscripts’ Canopy care management solution, the company will have a footprint in nearly 700 hospitals nationwide, as well as a broad array of post-acute care facilities.
“Allscripts and ECIN provide a broad suite of solutions that will appeal to hospital executives, who are increasingly focused on creating a seamless connection to the ambulatory physicians who provide referrals, and to the post-acute care facilities that accept many of their patients,” said Jeff Surges, ECIN’s CEO, who will head Allscripts’ new Hospital Solutions Group.
According to Allscripts, a 2006 study by Investor Group Services estimated that the market for care management and discharge planning software in hospitals considering automating those functions would generate between $300 million and $400 million in recurring fees.