Oracle Health has introduced a comprehensive Medical Device Validation Program aimed at streamlining the integration and validation of connected medical devices with its EHR and clinical platforms. The initiative provides manufacturers with clear testing frameworks, pre-certification support, and accelerated validation pathways to ensure seamless interoperability, data security, and clinical reliability ultimately boosting adoption of connected care technologies across hospitals and health systems.
Glimpse:
The Oracle Health Medical Device Validation Program offers device makers a structured, transparent process to validate compatibility with Oracle Health’s EHR ecosystem, including real-time data exchange, alarm management, device data visualization in workflows, and compliance with FDA, HIPAA, and emerging interoperability standards. Participants gain access to Oracle’s testing environments, technical guidance, and expedited certification, reducing integration timelines from months to weeks. The program targets infusion pumps, patient monitors, ventilators, smart beds, and other connected devices, with early partners already completing validation and moving toward live deployments.
Oracle Health has officially launched its Medical Device Validation Program, a major initiative designed to simplify and accelerate the integration of connected medical devices into its EHR and clinical workflows. The program, announced on February 27, 2026, during the HIMSS conference, addresses one of the most persistent barriers to connected care adoption: the time-consuming, costly, and technically complex process of validating device interoperability with enterprise health IT systems.
The validation program provides medical device manufacturers with a clear, standardized pathway to test and certify compatibility with Oracle Health’s platforms. Participants gain access to dedicated Oracle testing environments, detailed integration specifications, sample workflows, and direct technical support from Oracle engineers. The process covers critical areas such as secure bidirectional data exchange (HL7 FHIR and IHE standards), real-time vital signs and waveform streaming, alarm prioritization and notification routing, device association to patient records, and display of device data within Oracle’s clinical applications. Successful completion results in official Oracle Health validation status, which simplifies procurement decisions for hospitals and signals readiness for live deployments.
The program is initially focused on high-priority device categories infusion pumps, physiological monitors, ventilators, smart beds, dialysis machines, and anesthesia systems where accurate, timely data integration directly impacts patient safety and care efficiency. Oracle has already onboarded several leading device manufacturers as early participants, with multiple validations completed or in advanced stages. These partnerships are expected to yield live integrations in U.S. hospitals within 2026, significantly reducing the traditional 12–24 month integration timelines.
Oracle Health executives emphasized that the initiative responds to feedback from health systems struggling to connect the growing ecosystem of medical devices while maintaining cybersecurity, regulatory compliance, and clinician usability. The program includes strict requirements for data security (encryption, authentication, audit logging), FDA 510(k)-cleared device status, and adherence to the 21st Century Cures Act interoperability rules. Oracle also committed to publishing a public directory of validated devices to help providers quickly identify compatible solutions.
The launch has been welcomed by device manufacturers and health systems alike, who see it as a practical step toward a more connected, interoperable healthcare environment. Oracle plans to expand the program’s scope in future phases to include additional device types, emerging standards (like IEEE 11073 SDC), and international markets, further solidifying its role in advancing the digital transformation of clinical care.
“Connected devices hold immense promise for patient care but only if they integrate reliably and securely. Our validation program removes the guesswork and accelerates the path to truly connected care.”
By
HB Team
