OpenEMR


OpenEMR is a medical practice management software which also supports Electronic Medical Records. It is ONC Complete Ambulatory EHR certified and it features fully integrated electronic medical records, practice management for a medical practice, scheduling, and electronic billing.
The server side is written in PHP and can be employed in conjunction with a LAMP "stack", though any operating system with PHP support is supported.
OpenEMR is free and open-source software subject to the terms of the GNU General Public License. OpenEMR is subject to ongoing efforts of internationalization and localization in multiple languages, and there is free support available in various forums over the world. At the time of writing, commercial support is offered by more than 30 vendors in more than 10 countries.
OpenEMR is one of the most popular free electronic medical records in use today with over 7000 downloads per month.

Features

The market share of a software can be estimated based on sales numbers, but since most free and open-source software is not sold but installed via the package management system of the Linux distribution of choice, the term "installed base" seems rather popular. It is very difficult to estimate the number of practitioners that are using this software.
In the US, it has been estimated that there are more than 5,000 installations of OpenEMR in physician offices and other small healthcare facilities serving more than 30 million patients. Internationally, it has been estimated that OpenEMR is installed in over 15,000 healthcare facilities, translating into more than 45,000 practitioners using the system which are serving greater than 90 million patients. The Peace Corps plan to incorporate OpenEMR into their EHR system. Siaya District Hospital, a 220-bed hospital in rural Kenya, is using OpenEMR. HP India is planning to utilize OpenEMR for their Mobile Health Centre Project. There are also articles describing single clinician deployments and a free clinic deployment. Internationally, it is known that there are practitioners in Pakistan, Puerto Rico, Australia, Sweden, the Netherlands, Israel, India, Malaysia, Nepal, Indonesia, Bermuda, Armenia, Kenya, and Greece that are either testing or actively using OpenEMR for use as a free electronic medical records program in the respective languages.

Awards

OpenEMR has received a Bossie Award in the "Best Open Source Applications" category in both 2012 and 2013.

Development

The official OpenEMR code repository was migrated from CVS to git on. The project's main code repository is on GitHub. There are also official mirrored code repositories on Sourceforge, Google Code, Gitorious, Bitbucket, Assembla, CodePlex and Repo.or.cz.
OpenEMR has a vibrant open-source development community with over 133 developers having contributed to the project. There are 485 developers with personal OpenEMR code repositories on Github. Open Hub says OpenEMR has "one of the largest open-source teams in the world, and is in the top 2% of all project teams on Open Hub".

OEMR

OEMR is a nonprofit entity that was organized in July, 2010 to support the OpenEMR project. OEMR is the entity that holds the ONC EHR Certifications with ICSA and InfoGard Labs.

Certification

OpenEMR versions 4.1.0, 4.1.1 and 4.1.2 have 2011 ONC Complete Ambulatory EHR Certification by ICSA Labs.
OpenEMR version 4.2.0, 4.2.1 and 4.2.2 have 2014 ONC Modular Ambulatory EHR Certification by InfoGard Laboratories.
OpenEMR version 5.0.0, 5.0.1, 5.0.2 has 2014 ONC Complete Ambulatory EHR Certification by InfoGard Laboratories.
The OEMR organization is a non-profit entity that manages/provides the ONC certifications.

History

OpenEMR was originally developed by Synitech and version 1.0 was released in June 2001 as MP Pro. Much of the code was then reworked to comply with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act and to improve security, and the product was reintroduced as OpenEMR version 1.3 a year later, in July 2002. On OpenEMR was released to the public under the GNU General Public License, i.e. it became a free and open-source project and was registered on SourceForge. The project evolved through version 2.0 and the Pennington Firm took over as its primary maintainer in 2003. Walt Pennington transferred the OpenEMR software repository to SourceForge in March 2005. Mr. Pennington also established Rod Roark, Andres Paglayan and James Perry, Jr. as administrators of the project. Walt Pennington, Andres Paglayan and James Perry eventually took other directions and were replaced by Brady Miller in August 2009. Robert Down became an administrator of the project in March 2017. Matthew Vita was an administrator of the project from July 2017 until February 2020. Jerry Padgett became an administrator of the project in June 2019. Stephen Waite became an administrator of the project in February 2020. So at this time Rod Roark, Brady Miller, Robert Down, Jerry Padgett, and Stephen Waite are the project's co-administrators.
In 2018 Project Insecurity found almost 30 security flaws in the system, which were all responsibly addressed.