Healthcare organizations do not have a data shortage. They have a data accessibility, quality, and activation problem.
Healthcare data accessibility is the ability to make healthcare data available, usable, trusted, and actionable across the full data lifecycle. That includes extracting, moving, transforming, validating, storing, accessing, governing, and activating data across EHRs, legacy systems, labs, devices, payer platforms, research systems, and analytics environments. Innovacer reported through its 2026 State of Revenue Lifecycle in Healthcare that more than 62% of healthcare leaders say data fragmentation and access is the biggest barrier to scaling AI.
Hart helps healthcare organizations turn fragmented data into a unified, validated data foundation for care delivery, compliance, EHR migration, legacy system decommissioning, analytics, AI readiness, population health, and clinical research.
Healthcare data accessibility means the right people and systems can securely access the right healthcare data at the right time, in a format they can use and trust.
Accessible healthcare data is:
In healthcare, access alone is not enough. A record that is technically available but incomplete, poorly mapped, duplicated, or difficult to search is not truly accessible. Healthcare organizations need data that is connected, normalized, trusted, and ready for use.
That is why healthcare data accessibility has become a strategic priority for CIOs, CMIOs, compliance leaders, data teams, researchers, and executives responsible for digital transformation.
Healthcare data accessibility matters because nearly every major healthcare priority depends on complete, trusted, and usable data for patient care.
It supports:
Without accessible data, healthcare organizations are forced to work around their systems instead of using data as a strategic asset.
The healthcare data lifecycle is the complete journey of healthcare data from creation and extraction to movement, transformation, storage, access, governance, and activation.
Strong healthcare data management ensures data is not only preserved, but also usable, searchable, secure, and trusted.
The healthcare data lifecycle includes:
| Lifecycle Stage | What It Means | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Extract | Retrieve data from EHRs, legacy systems, databases, labs, devices, imaging systems, and third-party sources. | Data must be collected from all relevant systems, not only the primary EHR. |
| Move | Securely transfer data through APIs, HL7, FHIR, C-CDA, direct database connections, flat files, or other methods. | Data movement must support both one-time projects and continuous exchange. |
| Transform | Normalize, map, clean, deduplicate, and structure data for use. | Raw data is often inconsistent and must be made usable. |
| Validate | Check data for completeness, accuracy, fidelity, and auditability. | Data quality determines whether the data can be trusted. |
| Store | Preserve data in a secure, compliant, searchable environment. | Archived and historical data must remain available for care, compliance, and reporting. |
| Access | Make data available to authorized users, workflows, and systems. | Users need efficient access without relying on disconnected legacy applications. |
| Activate | Use data for analytics, AI, research, reporting, care coordination, and operational improvement. | The value of data is realized only when it can support action. |
This full-lifecycle view is critical. Healthcare organizations often rely on separate vendors for migration, archival, integration, analytics, research, and data governance. That creates more complexity, more contracts, more handoffs, and more risk. Today more than ever healthcare organizations are looking for vendors to simplify their daily operations by moving toward enterprise solutions and away from point-solutions.
Hart helps organizations simplify that model by supporting the full healthcare data lifecycle through one healthcare-specific data foundation.
Healthcare data accessibility depends on data quality. We've all heard about "dirty data". Every day organizations make the tough choice to leave legacy electronic health record data in old systems to leave the "dirty data" behind.
If data is incomplete, duplicated, poorly mapped, or stored without context, it can create more risk than value. A data feed is not useful if the receiving system cannot trust it. A legacy archive is not effective if users cannot find what they need. An AI model is not safe if it is trained on incomplete or inconsistent records.
Data quality affects:
This is why Hart’s approach focuses not only on moving data, but also on normalizing, validating, and making data actionable.
A healthcare data fabric is a modern data architecture that creates a unified layer for accessing, integrating, managing, and governing data across disparate healthcare systems.
A healthcare data fabric does not require organizations to replace their EHR, data lake, warehouse, or analytics tools. Instead, it connects and enhances existing infrastructure by making data easier to find, trust, and use.
A healthcare data fabric helps organizations:
For healthcare organizations, a data fabric is the foundation for moving from fragmented systems to unified data access.
Hart’s platform supports this approach by connecting fragmented healthcare data, normalizing it, validating it, and making it available for care, compliance, analytics, AI, and research.
Healthcare data accessibility is not only a technology issue. It is also shaped by federal regulation, interoperability standards, patient access requirements, and privacy obligations.
The 21st Century Cures Act strengthened the national push toward electronic health information access and exchange. ONC defines information blocking as practices that are likely to interfere with, prevent, or materially discourage access, exchange, or use of electronic health information, unless an exception applies.
For healthcare organizations, this means data access strategies must be designed around secure exchange, patient access, interoperability, and compliance.
Information blocking enforcement has moved healthcare data accessibility from a policy goal to an operational compliance requirement. Under the 21st Century Cures Act, information blocking includes practices that are likely to interfere with, prevent, or materially discourage the access, exchange, or use of electronic health information, unless an exception applies. ONC states that HHS has finalized penalties under federal programs for healthcare providers found by the HHS Office of Inspector General to have committed information blocking.
For health IT developers of certified health IT, health information exchanges, and health information networks, OIG may impose civil monetary penalties for information blocking. OIG notes that only certain entities are subject to these penalties, including certified health IT developers, entities offering certified health IT, HIEs, and HINs.
For healthcare organizations, the message is clear: data access can no longer be treated as a technical convenience or a future-state initiative. Organizations need policies, workflows, and technology that make electronic health information accessible, exchangeable, and usable while maintaining privacy, security, and appropriate governance.
The Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement, known as TEFCA, is a nationwide framework for health information sharing. ONC describes TEFCA as a framework designed to remove barriers to electronic health record sharing among providers, patients, public health agencies, and payers.
TEFCA reinforces the importance of scalable, standards-based data exchange across the healthcare ecosystem.
The United States Core Data for Interoperability, or USCDI, defines a standardized set of health data classes and data elements for nationwide interoperable health information exchange.
USCDI helps establish the baseline of data that must be consistently available for exchange, including categories such as demographics, problems, medications, allergies, clinical notes, laboratory data, and other core data elements.
HIPAA remains foundational to healthcare data privacy and security. HHS explains that the HIPAA Privacy Rule sets limits and conditions on uses and disclosures of protected health information and requires appropriate safeguards to protect that information.
For healthcare organizations, the goal is not simply to make data more available. The goal is to make data accessible in a secure, governed, auditable, and compliant way.
Healthcare data accessibility depends on a connected ecosystem of technologies that support data exchange, normalization, storage, governance, and activation.
EHRs remain the central system of record for many healthcare organizations. However, most health systems operate across multiple EHRs, acquired systems, specialty applications, and legacy platforms. That makes EHR data accessibility more complex than simply opening access to one system.
Modern data strategies must support data from active EHRs, inactive EHRs, and non-EHR source systems.
APIs and FHIR help enable structured data exchange between systems and applications. FHIR has become a major standard for modern healthcare interoperability, especially for patient access, app integration, and exchange of defined clinical data.
FHIR is important, but it does not solve every healthcare data challenge by itself. Many organizations still need to access data from legacy systems, proprietary databases, scanned documents, unstructured notes, device feeds, claims, and custom applications.
Healthcare data exists in many formats. HL7, C-CDA, X12, direct database extracts, flat files, XML, JSON, and other data structures all remain part of the healthcare environment.
A strong accessibility strategy must support multiple standards and source types, not only one preferred method.
Cloud platforms can support scalable storage, backup, disaster recovery, analytics, and enterprise access. But cloud storage alone does not guarantee accessibility. Data must still be organized, normalized, secured, and governed.
The goal is not only to store healthcare data in the cloud. The goal is to make healthcare data searchable, trustworthy, and usable.
Health information exchanges help aggregate data across providers and networks typically with FHIR or HL7 data connections. They play an important role in regional and national interoperability, but many organizations still need an internal data foundation that can support enterprise migration, archival, analytics, reporting, and research needs.
Data migration and clinical archival tools help organizations transition from one system to another, decommission legacy applications, and retain historical patient records.
The most effective solutions do more than preserve data. They make historical and migrated data accessible, searchable, validated, and useful for ongoing operations.
Analytics, dashboards, machine learning, and AI tools require high-quality data. Without normalized and validated data, these platforms may produce incomplete or misleading insights.
Healthcare organizations should treat data accessibility and data quality as prerequisites for analytics and AI readiness.
EHR migration is one of the clearest examples of why healthcare data accessibility matters.
When a hospital or health system moves from one EHR vendor to another, leaders must decide which data should move into the new system, which data should remain accessible in an archive, and how users will retrieve historical information after go-live.
The decision is especially important for patients who are still actively cared for by the organization. Active patients often require relevant historical information in the destination EHR so clinicians can make safe and informed decisions. That may include medications, allergies, problems, procedures, labs, notes, imaging references, immunizations, and other clinically meaningful data.
A strong EHR migration strategy should address:
EHR migration is not simply a technical data conversion. It is a clinical, operational, compliance, and change management initiative.
Hart supports EHR migration by helping organizations extract, normalize, validate, and move data while preserving access to historical records that should remain available outside the destination system.
Legacy EHR archiving should not be treated as static storage.
Healthcare organizations often keep old systems running because clinicians, HIM teams, compliance teams, and legal teams still need access to historical records. But maintaining inactive systems can be costly, risky, and inefficient.
A modern healthcare archive should provide:
The value of an archive depends on whether the data can be found, trusted, and used.
Hart’s approach helps turn legacy data from a static cost center into an accessible, normalized, and compliant asset.
Healthcare AI and analytics are only as strong as the data foundation beneath them.
AI models, population health dashboards, quality reporting tools, and operational analytics all require data that is complete, consistent, and representative. Fragmented data creates blind spots. Poor data quality creates risk. Inconsistent mapping creates unreliable outputs.
Healthcare data accessibility supports analytics and AI by:
For many healthcare organizations, the next stage of digital transformation will not come from buying another analytics tool. It will come from improving the accessibility and quality of the data feeding those tools.
Clinical research depends on the ability to identify the right patients, understand their clinical history, and match them to the right study opportunities.
But many research programs still rely on manual chart review, disconnected data sources, and incomplete patient records. This slows recruitment, limits diversity, and delays study timelines.
Healthcare data accessibility can support research by:
When healthcare data is accessible and validated, research teams can move from manual searching to faster, more scalable discovery.
Hart’s HealthMatch™ solution supports this future by helping organizations use trusted, de-identified data for cohort discovery, patient matching, and research activation.
Payers, ACOs, and value-based care organizations need timely, accurate data to manage risk, measure quality, coordinate care, and improve outcomes.
Fragmented provider data creates challenges for:
Healthcare data accessibility helps payers and ACOs work from a more complete view of the patient or member. It supports better coordination between providers, payers, and care management teams.
For value-based care, data accessibility is not optional. It is the infrastructure required to manage performance.
Healthcare organizations should evaluate data accessibility partners based on their ability to support the full data lifecycle, not just one isolated function.
Key questions to ask include:
The strongest partner is not simply a vendor that can move data or store data. It is a partner that can help make all your healthcare data accessible, trusted, and actionable across its full lifecycle.
Hart helps healthcare organizations manage clinical and financial data across the full lifecycle: extract, move, transform, validate, store, access, and activate.
Hart is not just an interoperability vendor, archive vendor, migration vendor, or analytics vendor. Hart is the data accessibility company built for healthcare.
Hart’s platform and solutions support healthcare organizations across the complete data journey:
HealthMigrate™ supports EHR data migration, data conversion, and patient record consolidation. It helps organizations move the right data into the right system with quality, validation, and clinical context.
HealthArc™ supports legacy EHR archival, searchable record access, and legacy system decommissioning. It helps organizations reduce the cost and risk of maintaining inactive systems while preserving compliant access to historical records.
HealthSync™ supports continuous data streaming and interoperability across systems, partners, and platforms. It helps organizations move trusted data where it needs to go.
HealthInsight™ supports analytics readiness, reporting, dashboards, and AI preparation by helping organizations work from normalized and validated data.
HealthMatch™ supports cohort discovery, de-identified data sharing, patient matching, and clinical research activation.
HealthSecure™ supports secure healthcare data backup, governance, disaster recovery, and compliance readiness.
Together, Hart’s solutions help healthcare organizations reduce fragmentation, improve data quality, lower legacy system costs, support active EHR transitions, and activate data for better care, operations, and research.
Healthcare data accessibility will become even more important as healthcare organizations invest in AI, value-based care, consumer engagement, and research partnerships.
Key trends include:
Healthcare AI will require validated, longitudinal, governed data. The 2026 Chief Data Officer Insights Study found 86% of CDOs are planning to increase investment in data management to support growth in AI initiatives. Organizations will need to focus less on isolated AI pilots and more on the data foundation and governance required to support safe and scalable AI adoption.
Care teams, payers, researchers, and patients will increasingly need a complete view of the patient journey across systems and settings. Take this from a patient perspective: A cancer patient needs more than the last two encounters available for their treatment plan.
Static reporting will give way to continuous data streams to support clinical operations, care management, quality performance, and research.
As data becomes more accessible, organizations will need stronger controls for privacy, consent, de-identification, auditability, and responsible data use.
More health systems will look for ways to use de-identified, validated data to support AI initiatives, clinical trials, real-world evidence, and partnerships with life sciences organizations.
Healthcare data accessibility is the ability for authorized users and systems to securely access, use, and trust healthcare data when and where it is needed. It includes data availability, interoperability, quality, governance, and activation.
Interoperability focuses on the exchange of data between systems. Healthcare data accessibility is broader. It includes more than pass through data exchange, but also data quality, usability, searchability, governance, storage, and activation.
Data must be accurate, complete, normalized, and validated before it can support clinical care, analytics, AI, compliance, or research. Poor-quality data can create clinical, operational, and compliance risk.
The healthcare data lifecycle includes extracting, moving, transforming, validating, storing, streaming, governing and activating healthcare data.
A healthcare data fabric is a connected architecture that creates a unified layer for accessing, integrating, managing, and governing healthcare data across disparate systems and environments.
It helps organizations determine which data should move into the new EHR, which data should remain accessible in an archive, and how data should be validated for clinical and operational use.
No. Legacy EHR archiving should provide secure, searchable, auditable access to historical records. Storage alone does not ensure a provider can access the records or compliance and reporting readiness.
AI requires high-quality, representative, longitudinal data. Healthcare data accessibility helps ensure data is normalized, validated, governed, and ready for analytics or AI use cases.
Health systems, hospitals, payers, ACOs, research organizations, life sciences partners, compliance teams, clinicians, and patients all benefit from accessible healthcare data.
Hart helps healthcare organizations extract, move, transform, validate, store, access, and activate data across the full healthcare data lifecycle through a healthcare-specific platform and solution suite.
Healthcare data accessibility is no longer optional. It is the foundation for modern care delivery, regulatory compliance, EHR modernization, AI readiness, value-based care, and clinical research.
But accessibility requires more than data movement. It requires a full-lifecycle strategy for healthcare data management.
Hart helps healthcare organizations turn fragmented data into a unified, validated, and actionable foundation. Whether your organization is preparing for an EHR migration, decommissioning legacy systems, improving interoperability, building analytics capabilities, or enabling research, Hart can help make your data accessible, trusted, and ready for what comes next.
Ready to make your healthcare data accessible, trusted, and actionable?
Schedule a data management assessment with Hart to identify where fragmented data is creating cost, risk, or missed opportunity.