Migrate from Openevidence to Eclinicalworks.
1 documentation-derived translation pattern — what carries over and what to watch for. Cited to the Feature Parity Map; the audit tells you whether the move is worth it.
OpenEvidence is a standalone clinical search engine: clinicians type a natural-language question and get cited, evidence-based answers to act on at the point of care. eClinicalWorks surfaces evidence-based reference and decision support inside the chart, so a practice already on eClinicalWorks can stop subscribing to OpenEvidence as a separate destination and pull that lookup into the EHR. Move the workflow into eClinicalWorks' Clinical Decision Support program — built on DynaMed, the EBSCO evidence-based reference tool that answers clinical questions at the point of care from current evidence plus expert guidance — reached from inside the eClinicalWorks workflow so guidance sits next to the same encounter that holds the problem list, orders, coding, and note. The embedded eva assistant complements this by retrieving patient histories, comparing current vs. prior Progress Notes side by side, and surfacing flowsheet data without leaving the screen. Because the answer is reviewed alongside the live chart rather than in a disconnected app, the clinician acts in one place instead of carrying an OpenEvidence answer back. Keep eClinicalWorks as the system of record; cut OpenEvidence.
- Warning: eClinicalWorks' CDS is DynaMed plus the eva in-chart assistant — DynaMed is structured, expert-curated evidence-based reference content, not the generative, journal-cited literature synthesis OpenEvidence (and its DeepConsult agent) produces. If clinicians rely on OpenEvidence's narrative cited summaries, confirm DynaMed plus eva covers the need before cancelling.
- Warning: DynaMed is a partner/CDS add-on (EBSCO) and the exact DynaMed-to-eClinicalWorks integration depth (in-context launch vs. SSO link-out) is not fully documented publicly — verify the practice actually has the DynaMed CDS entitlement live and integrated, not just an eClinicalWorks license, before retiring OpenEvidence.
- Warning: OpenEvidence is free to verified U.S. clinicians, so cutting it removes a parallel login and the external-tool compliance surface rather than a per-seat fee — validate that the in-chart reference path meets clinicians' point-of-care habit before turning off the OpenEvidence pathway.