Practice Fusion is a
web-based electronic health record
An electronic health record (EHR) is the systematized collection of patient and population electronically stored health information in a digital format. These records can be shared across different health care settings. Records are shared throu ...
(EHR) company based in San Francisco, CA. The company was founded in 2005 by Ryan Howard and acquired by
Allscripts in 2018.
In 2013 the company was said to be valued at $700M and in 2014, Practice Fusion was the largest cloud-based electronic health record (EHR) platform for doctors and patients,
. Practice Fusion is used by more than 112,000 monthly active healthcare professionals with over 100 million patient records under management. In 2014, Practice Fusion’s EHR facilitated over 56 million patient visits (approximately 6% of all ambulatory visits in the US) and was the fastest growing EHR in the US.
In 2015, Howard left the company
and Tom Langan became interim CEO.
Under Langan's leadership, the company contributed to the
opioid epidemic in the United States by engaging in a kickback scheme to increase the volume of opioid prescriptions amidst its clients and their respective patients.
The company has been charged a $145 million fine, the largest criminal fine in Vermont’s history.
According to Bloomberg: "Practice Fusion admitted to the scheme with an unnamed opioid maker, though the details of the government case closely match a public research partnership between Practice Fusion and
Purdue Pharma Inc., which makes OxyContin". In June 2018 the company transitioned over to a paid subscription based system.
Practice Fusion is available to users in the USA only.
History
Practice Fusion is an
electronic health record
An electronic health record (EHR) is the systematized collection of patient and population electronically stored health information in a digital format. These records can be shared across different health care settings. Records are shared throu ...
(EHR) company, founded in 2005 by Ryan Howard, Alan Wong, Jonathan Malek, and Matthew Douglass.
The first version of the product was launched in 2007 and initially gained little traction in the tough economy.
The company began to grow in 2009, when the EHR and customer support were made free of charge.
In May 2009,
Band of Angels and Felicis Ventures became the first major investors in the company, followed by
Salesforce.com in June,
Morgenthaler Ventures in December 2010,
and
Founders Fund in April 2011.
The company closed a $70 million Series D round of financing led by
Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers in September 2013, followed by a $15 million Series D extension in December 2013 led by Qualcomm Ventures, bringing total funding to date to $149 million.
In June 2011, the product achieved
Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology Meaningful Use Certification.
From 2011 to 2013, it was named the No. 1 EMR for customer satisfaction among primary care providers in addition to being named No. 1 for e-prescribing client satisfaction and helping doctors achieve Meaningful Use by Brown-Wilson's Black Book Rankings. In September 2013, KLAS Reports named it the No. 1 EHR system for value among ambulatory professionals.
In 2013, a State of the Small Practice survey conducted by Practice Fusion indicated that 36 percent of providers were using three- to six-year-old computers. In response, the company launched a "Free EHR + Free Laptop" campaign in 2014. The campaign supplied a complimentary Google
Chromebook to new physician users of Practice Fusion's EHR platform to increase incentive.
In 2015, Howard left the company
and Practice Fusion was starting to look for a buyer. In 2016, an IPO valued the company at up to $1.5 billion.
In the fall of 2016, under Tom Langan's leadership,
the company accepted remuneration from a "major" manufacturer of opioids, referred to as "Pharma Co. X" in exchange for clinical decision support, to prompt doctors to take certain clinical actions in order to increase prescriptions of extended-release opioids.
However, in 2018 Practice Fusion was sold to Allscripts for only $100 million. While its ordinary 200 employees and common stockholders made no profit or lost money, managers, including Tom Langan, Jonathan Malek, Matthew Douglass, Rich Loomis, Stephen Byrnes, Riyad Omar, Stacey Rubin, Derek Tan, and Eric Weis, made millions in profit from a pre-arranged carve-out.
In January 2020, the company (as a subsidiary of Allscripts) admitted in court to have accepted $1 million in kickbacks by "Pharma Co. X" in return for a deferred prosecution agreement.
Practice Fusion was fined $145 million for the misconduct by the Department of Justice for the District of Vermont. In the DOJ investigation, Langan and Loomis are identified as the primary operates in the scheme.
Subsequently, Howard published, "How to Prevent Your Company from Being Used for Evil From a Founder Who's Been There," and has become an advocate to other founders to help them prevent their companies from being corrupted and being used for evil.
Services
The
Software as a service startup has been providing physicians and medical professionals with advertising-supported electronic health records and medical practice management technology which included charting, scheduling,
e-prescribing (eRx),
medical billing,
laboratory and imaging center integrations, referral letters,
Meaningful Use certification,
training, support and a
personal health record for patients.
Products (2013)
* Practice Fusion: Web-based electronic health record (EHR) software for physicians and medical professionals. The EHR system includes medical charting, e-prescribing, clinical decision support advisories, online booking and scheduling, online referrals and messaging. Its lab, imaging, and billing modules integrate with a network of third-party laboratories, medical imaging centers and medical billing services. Free support is available for EHR setup and usage; Meaningful Use, PQRS, and ICD-10 incentives; and technical issues. All offerings are
HIPAA
The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA or the Kennedy– Kassebaum Act) is a United States Act of Congress enacted by the 104th United States Congress and signed into law by President Bill Clinton on August 21, 19 ...
-compliant.
* Patient Fusion: Personal health record (PHR) system that gives patients access to their prescriptions, diagnoses and test results. Records update as physicians adds information to their patients’ charts. Consumers can search physicians by location and specialty, and request an appointment online.
* Insight by Practice Fusion: An analytic product based on the Practice Fusion dataset of 81 million patient records. Real-time data provides perspective on clinical trends
and helps with population health management and clinical decision support.
Notes
{{health software
Companies based in San Francisco
Electronic health record software companies
Internet properties established in 2005
Health care companies based in California