Migrate from Epic Ehr to Ohmd.
2 documentation-derived translation patterns — what carries over and what to watch for. Cited to the Feature Parity Map; the audit tells you whether the move is worth it.
OhMD lets patients self-schedule through its AI (Nia) conversation, and Epic lets patients self-schedule through MyChart on top of the Cadence scheduling module — the same capability on both sides. A practice already on Epic can cut OhMD's scheduling automation and move booking into MyChart. Keep Epic (the system of record), cut OhMD. Operationally: enable MyChart Open/Direct Scheduling on Cadence so patients book, reschedule, and cancel against live, template-based provider availability; use the rules/decision-tree logic to route by specialty, visit type, and history, and turn on Fast Pass waitlisting for earlier-slot offers via automated SMS/email. Because it runs on Cadence, each booking writes straight to the patient record and maps to billing — no push-back step from a separate booking tool. Redirect OhMD's scheduling links and prompts to the MyChart scheduling entry points.
- Warning: MyChart self-scheduling requires patient portal enrollment, whereas OhMD books patients inside a no-login text/voice conversation; confirm portal adoption before retiring OhMD or a slice of patients loses self-serve booking.
- Warning: Open/Direct Scheduling depends on clean Cadence build — visit-type-to-provider decision trees, slot templates, and scheduling rules must be configured per department before patients can safely self-book.
- Warning: OhMD resolves scheduling conversationally over voice via Nia (callers who phone in); MyChart self-scheduling is screen-based, so practices relying on OhMD's phone-call deflection should pair MyChart with a separate call-handling plan.
- Warning: Validate that OhMD-originated future appointments and any pending scheduling requests are migrated or re-booked in Cadence before cancelling, so nothing is stranded in OhMD.
OhMD and Epic both run two-way secure patient messaging, so a practice already licensed for Epic/MyChart can retire the standalone OhMD contract and move patient texting into the chart. Keep Epic (the system of record), cut OhMD. Operationally: route patients to message the care team from the MyChart web/mobile app instead of OhMD; inbound messages land in the clinician's Epic In Basket on the same patient chart, so the reply, any resulting order, and the documentation all attach to the encounter rather than living in a separate communication app synced back in. Turn on MyChart In Basket Augmented Response Technology (ART) for AI-drafted replies, and use conversational/automated MyChart messaging for routine outreach (reminders, results) so staff keep a fast-text feel. Repoint the practice's published 'text us' number, website chat, and reminder flows to MyChart enrollment so patients converge on one inbox tied to their Epic ID.
- Warning: OhMD's core selling point is plain-SMS messaging with no app, login, or portal account on the patient side; MyChart requires patient portal enrollment and login. Expect to re-onboard the un-enrolled patient base and confirm MyChart adoption before cancelling OhMD, or keep a thin SMS front door for portal-averse patients.
- Warning: In Basket ART (AI draft) is a licensed Epic capability that must be enabled and configured per org/specialty; confirm it is live before promising OhMD-equivalent reply speed.
- Warning: OhMD can text-enable the practice's existing landline and turn inbound calls into text threads; MyChart has no native phone-to-text bridge, so phone-origin contacts return to the call queue unless a separate SMS tool is retained.
- Export and archive open OhMD conversation threads before closing the account — MyChart will not back-fill historical OhMD message history into the chart.