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Secretary Doug Collins told lawmakers last week that the agency is hoping to roll out the software to 20 to 25 sites in fiscal year 2027, after largely halting new deployments in 2023.
VA previously announced in December that it would be moving out of the operational pause and planned to roll out the new EHR software at a total of four Michigan-based medical sites in mid-2026.
EHR vendor Cerner — later acquired by technology giant Oracle — first received the contract to replace the VA’s aging medical record system in 2018.
The sign of the Veterans Affairs Department is hung on the podium during a news conference at the VA on September 8, 2014. The VA plans to roll out the Oracle EHR at nine additional sites next year.
The disruption affected six VA medical centers, 26 community clinics, and remote support sites. Oracle Health has launched an investigation to determine the root cause of the issue.
All claim forms sent by mail should be forwarded to the following address: Katz-Lacabe et al v. Oracle America, Inc.c/o Settlement Administrator1650 Arch Street, Suite 2210Philadelphia, PA 19103 ...
Under the class action settlement, Oracle will pay $115 million to establish a settlement fund, and anyone residing in the United States from August 19, 2018 to the present who was affected may be ...
Nexstar Media Wire News ‘Hundreds of millions’ could get piece of Oracle privacy settlement: Here’s how to file a claim by Alix Martichoux - 09/12/24 1:30 PM ET ...
Oracle has started taking pre-orders for 131,072 Nvidia Blackwell GPUs in the cloud via its Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) Supercluster to aid large language model (LLM) training and other use ...
Oracle Corp. plans to equip its public cloud with what it describes as the world’s first zettascale computing cluster.
On May 16, 2024—the date the first Oracle Health contract option year was set to expire—VA announced a one-month extension to support negotiations to ensure long-term success of the program ...
Dive Insight: Cerner — which was later acquired by technology giant Oracle for more than $28 billion — scored the contract to replace the VA’s legacy EHR, VistA, in 2018.