Migrate from Oracle Health to Glass Health.
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.
Glass Health and Oracle Health both capture the visit ambiently and draft the structured note. A practice on Oracle Health (Cerner Millennium) can retire the standalone Glass subscription and move ambient documentation into the EHR it already runs: enable the Oracle Health Clinical AI Agent, whose ambient listening with a multimodal voice interface converts the conversation into a draft note (in multiple languages) written straight into the same encounter used for results review, coding, and billing. Because it lives in the system of record, it also drafts clinical orders from the conversation (labs, imaging, new and refilled medications, follow-up appointments) into the live order workflow — output Glass can only hand back to paste in. Migrate by recreating the Glass note templates and per-note-type preferences as Clinical AI Agent note formats, turning the agent on for the clinicians, and validating a few specialties before cancelling Glass. Keep Oracle Health (the system of record); cut Glass.
- Warning: The Clinical AI Agent is licensed as part of the Oracle Health clinical suite the organization already runs (no separate public per-seat price), but confirm it is provisioned and enabled for your clinicians before cancelling Glass — availability and order-creation rolled out in stages across specialties.
- Warning: Glass overlays Oracle/Cerner-class EHRs via SMART on FHIR and only on its Max plan (listed at $200/month); cutting Glass removes that overlay everywhere it was used (Glass natively lists Epic, eClinicalWorks, athenahealth, Elation), so confirm no other site depends on the same Glass seat before cancelling.
- Warning: Glass does more than scribe — it surfaces a real-time evolving differential, suggested history questions, and exam-maneuver prompts during the visit. The Clinical AI Agent drafts notes and orders but does not reproduce Glass's literature-cited differential; cover the diagnostic-support workflow separately (see the clinical-reference-decision-support pattern) before retiring Glass.
- Warning: Re-validate that Glass's note-template sections map cleanly to the Clinical AI Agent draft structure and that auto-drafted orders (dosage/frequency/pharmacy it infers) are reviewed before signing, since they post to the live order workflow.
- Warning: Export or retain any historical Glass notes, transcripts, or templates you must keep before the subscription lapses; the standalone Glass record is separate from the Oracle Health chart.
Glass Health's clinical reasoning layer (a ranked three-tier differential — Most Likely / Expanded / Can't Miss — with cited evidence and next steps) and its Consult evidence-grounded Q&A overlap Oracle Health's point-of-care assistant. A practice on Oracle Health can drop the standalone Glass CDS and use the Oracle Clinical Digital Assistant — the conversational companion inside the Clinical AI Agent — to retrieve patient information and run clinical workflows by voice or text at the point of care (e.g. 'show me the patient's latest MRI results' returns the results and images in context, plus pre-visit patient insights). Because it answers against the live chart in the system of record, its responses are grounded in that patient's own record and can launch the next clinical action. Move by pointing clinicians to the in-chart assistant for the patient-data lookups and pre-visit review they ran in Glass, and retiring the external Glass tab. Keep Oracle Health; cut Glass.
- Warning: Not a like-for-like swap: Glass produces an open-ended, literature-cited differential (~5-10 diagnoses) grounded in physician-reviewed guidelines, whereas the Oracle Clinical Digital Assistant is oriented to retrieving the patient's own chart data and running workflows by voice — it is not documented as a generic medical-literature differential-diagnosis engine, so confirm your clinicians' reasoning use-cases are covered before cutting Glass.
- Warning: The Clinical Digital Assistant is licensed as part of the Oracle Health Clinical AI Agent / clinical suite the organization already runs (no separate public per-seat price); confirm it is provisioned and enabled for your clinicians before cancelling Glass.
- Warning: Glass's differential and Consult Q&A run during the encounter as a clinician-facing reasoning aid; cutting Glass removes that interactive 'consider these possibilities' prompt. Plan a change-management step so clinicians use the in-chart assistant rather than a retired external tool, and keep a literature-reference source if open-ended guideline Q&A is still needed.