Epic Systems has introduced a new Health Alerts feature that monitors de-identified patient data across the United States and sends timely alerts when unusual increases in illnesses or symptoms are detected at the county level. The system analyses millions of clinical records in near real time to help public health officials, hospitals, and researchers respond faster to emerging health threats.
Glimpse:
The tool tracks a wide range of health indicators including infectious diseases, respiratory illnesses, gastrointestinal symptoms, mental health trends, and unusual symptom clusters. It provides early warnings at the county level, enabling quicker public health interventions and more targeted resource allocation. Health Alerts complements traditional surveillance systems by leveraging actual clinical encounter data from Epic’s extensive EHR network.
Epic Systems, one of the largest electronic health record providers in the US, has launched Health Alerts, a powerful new capability designed to detect rising health trends at the county level across the country. The system continuously analyses de-identified clinical data from millions of patient encounters and automatically flags statistically significant increases in specific conditions or symptoms.
By monitoring real world data from actual clinical visits, Health Alerts can identify emerging outbreaks, unusual spikes in respiratory or gastrointestinal illnesses, mental health trends, or other concerning patterns much earlier than conventional reporting methods. Public health departments, hospital systems, and researchers can receive these alerts to support faster investigation, resource planning, and targeted interventions.
The feature is part of Epic’s broader effort to turn vast amounts of clinical data into actionable public health intelligence. It is expected to be particularly useful during seasonal illness surges, potential outbreaks, or when monitoring the impact of environmental factors on community health.
This launch comes at a time when public health agencies are increasingly looking for more agile, data driven tools to improve preparedness and response capabilities.
“Our goal is to turn the enormous amount of clinical data generated every day into timely, actionable insights that can help protect public health at the local level.”
By
HB Team
