Report ID: SQMIG35G2171
Report ID:
SQMIG35G2171 |
Region:
Global |
Published Date: July, 2025
Pages:
193
|
Tables:
88 |
Figures:
74
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The Healthcare IT sector is expected to grow at a rate of 23.6% CAGR from 2025 to 2032 driven by increased demand for digital healthcare delivery, cost reduction, and government support.
Solutions are the fastest growing component in the Healthcare IT sector driven by demand for integrated platforms in healthcare settings to improve clinical outcomes and return on investment (ROI), improve administration and operational workflows, and automate the administrative/office workflows inherent in healthcare settings.
AI is changing the Healthcare IT sector through improved diagnostics, automation of clinical workflows, and delivered real-time decision support. AI improves accuracy and reducing costs. An example of this is measured diagnostic accuracy of MAI-DxO at 85.5%, and physician accuracy at 20%.
Cloud-based deployments in healthcare systems offer data portability and interoperability and large-scale scalability in pricing and product purchases. Governments like the EU with its EHDS, and the UK with its G Cloud government solutions strategy, continue to push leveraged adoption of cloud-based systems which will truly become a central aspect of the health systems of the future digital health infrastructure.
EHR's generally centrality lies in the theory that they are the mandated platform for not only digitization but care coordination and interoperability. In the U.S. 96.9% of hospitals use certified EHR's. Europe and India have similar adoption rates for electronic health records. EHR's are foundational to an ecosystem for digital health.
North America is the lead region because it has strong regulations being enforced, early adoption of EHR, and substantial federal funding. The U.S. committed $1.3 billion to digital health in 2024, supported by the HITECH Act and covering reimbursement for telehealth visits through CMS.
Telehealth platforms are providing patients with expanded access to care and greater ability for remote populations to overcome barriers to achieving care access in their communities. With CMS support, along with similar engagements from EU4Health and India's eSanjeevani (with 200M consultations in 2024), telehealth platforms are generally becoming the platform for patients to engage with chronic care and for primary health services.
Wearable devices allow individuals to track their vital signs in real-time. They provide real-time information for chronic management and can transmit data directly into digital health systems. Their utilization is the perfect complement for clinical decision-making, facilitating a move to value-based patient and family-centered care models.
Predictive analytics allows for time-sensitive interventions by quickly identifying disease risk, directing treatment plans for patients, and potentially reducing hospital readmissions. When combined with AI and big data, it also provides usable, patient-specific actionable insights for the provider.
Small hospitals have challenges with expense, available IT workforce, and the culture of accepting new technology and systems. There are also integration challenges when combining new software with legacy systems and concerns about data privacy to consider with rapidly moving into full-scale adoption of Healthcare IT products.
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Report ID: SQMIG35G2171