Migrate from Openevidence to Oracle Health.
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. Oracle Health offers the same kind of natural-language, ask-a-question retrieval inside the chart, so a practice already on Oracle Health (Cerner Millennium) can drop OpenEvidence as a separate destination and use the EHR's own assistant. Move the workflow into the Oracle Clinical Digital Assistant — the conversational companion within the Oracle Health Clinical AI Agent — which lets clinicians use multimodal voice or text to pull up patient information and run frequent workflows (e.g. 'show me the patient's latest MRI results' returns the results and images in context) and surfaces pre-visit patient insights. Because it answers against the live chart inside the system of record and can launch the next clinical action (draft a referral or order, schedule a follow-up), the clinician gets a patient-grounded answer in one place rather than a generic literature answer in OpenEvidence to carry back. Keep Oracle Health as the system of record; cut OpenEvidence.
- Warning: The Oracle Clinical Digital Assistant is a patient-data retrieval and workflow assistant grounded in the chart — it is not a generative synthesis of the published literature with journal citations the way OpenEvidence (and its DeepConsult agent) is. If clinicians depend on OpenEvidence's cited evidence summaries, confirm Oracle's assistant plus any licensed reference content covers that need before cancelling.
- Warning: The Clinical Digital Assistant is licensed as part of the Oracle Health Clinical AI Agent / clinical suite and is rolling out (initially highlighted for ambulatory clinics) — confirm it is provisioned, live, and available to the relevant clinicians for the org before retiring OpenEvidence.
- Warning: OpenEvidence is free to verified U.S. clinicians, so the gain from cutting it is removing a parallel login and the external-tool compliance surface, not a per-seat fee — validate that the in-chart assistant meets the point-of-care reference habit before turning off the OpenEvidence pathway.