United States EHealth Market Trends and Insights
Reimbursement and Federal Digital-Health Incentives
Federal reimbursement design is changing the operating base of the United States eHealth market because the current policy shift reaches beyond small pilot programs and into recurring care delivery economics. The CMS Innovation Center's ACCESS model became active on July 5, 2026, and it introduced outcome-aligned payments across hypertension, type 2 diabetes, chronic musculoskeletal pain, and depression for Original Medicare beneficiaries over a 10-year period. That payment structure matters because it ties revenue to measurable clinical outcomes instead of service volume, which raises the value of platforms that can document performance at the population level. The United States eHealth market also benefits when those platforms can connect data across settings, since enforcement against information blocking and TEFCA-backed exchange growth make measurable outcomes easier to document and transmit. This pushes vendors to build around auditability, interoperability, and payment performance instead of one-time software deployment. It also makes partnerships with providers and payers more durable because the commercial case now rests on reimbursed clinical value rather than on convenience alone in the United States eHealth market.Chronic Disease and Home-Monitoring Demand
Chronic disease remains one of the clearest demand anchors for the United States eHealth market because remote monitoring is directly tied to conditions that require continuous follow-up instead of occasional visits. A peer-reviewed, EHR-integrated remote patient monitoring program for hypertension and multiple chronic conditions delivered systolic blood pressure reductions of up to 16.01 mmHg, which supports continued provider investment in structured monitoring workflows. More than two-thirds of Medicare beneficiaries carry at least one condition targeted by the ACCESS model, so the United States eHealth market already has a built-in population base for home monitoring services. This demand is wider than device adoption alone because providers need workflows, escalation pathways, and reimbursement pathways that can sustain long-term use. As a result, monitoring is becoming less of an optional digital add-on and more of a core layer in chronic care management for health systems, payers, and patient-facing programs in the United States eHealth market. The strongest opportunity sits where provider demand already exists but payment stability has only recently improved, because those organizations can move faster than groups that still need to build operating processes from scratch.Cybersecurity and HIPAA Exposure
Cybersecurity is one of the clearest limiting factors for the United States eHealth market because the same connectivity that enables digital care also widens exposure to shared vendors, clearinghouses, and cloud-linked workflows. The Change Healthcare ransomware attack confirmed 192.7 million affected individuals, making it the largest healthcare data breach on record in the material provided. The same event hit a clearinghouse that processes nearly 15 billion transactions annually, which showed how concentration at a single infrastructure layer can disrupt much broader care and payment activity. The operational effect was severe because 74% of hospitals reported direct patient care disruptions and 94% reported economic strain after the incident. That experience raises diligence costs across vendor selection, supply chain oversight, and business continuity planning for participants in the United States eHealth market. It also keeps buyers focused on resilience and vendor dependency risk, even when a platform has strong clinical or workflow advantages.Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
- Cloud Migration of Virtual-Care Stacks
- Value-Based Care and Patient-Engagement Analytics
- Legacy Interoperability Bottlenecks
Segment Analysis
Health Information Systems retained 43.31% of 2025 revenue, which reflects the entrenched role of EHR and EMR platforms, health information exchange tools, population health systems, and patient engagement software across the United States eHealth market. The segment remained durable because replacement decisions still carry high disruption costs for providers, even when newer tools enter with stronger AI features. Oracle launched a new AI-driven EHR for ambulatory providers in August 2025 with voice-first and contextual AI functions, and the company stated that acute care expansion is planned in 2026. That move raises the competitive bar for vendors trying to win enterprise clinical workflow positions because core systems are now expected to add intelligence directly into the record environment rather than through bolt-on products. Population health management remains a meaningful spending pocket because organizations increasingly need broader risk visibility, including data that supports contract performance and coordinated care.Health Information Exchange is also gaining more strategic importance because TEFCA exchange volume climbed to nearly 500 million records by February 2026 from a far smaller base in January 2025, which supports the business case for interoperable data infrastructure as a long-term moat. Telemedicine & Virtual Care Platforms are the fastest-growing component segment and are projected at a 19.38% CAGR through 2031, reflecting their central role in access expansion across employer programs, mental health delivery, and chronic care support in the United States eHealth industry. Omada Health reported Q1 2026 revenue of USD 78 million and 1.02 million total members, with all 3 leading U.S. pharmacy benefit managers as partners, which shows how virtual platforms are scaling through payer and benefit channels rather than only through traditional provider contracts. mHealth applications and ambient AI documentation are also moving closer together, and Suki's ambient notes reached general availability across athenahealth's network in May 2025 after use in more than 60,000 encounters during beta. This pattern suggests the United States eHealth market is rewarding components that can fit naturally into existing provider and patient channels instead of remaining standalone tools.
Cloud-based Solutions accounted for 52.24% of revenue in 2025, which reflects how strongly the United States eHealth market has shifted toward scalable infrastructure for storage, analytics, interoperability, and AI processing. The lead is tied to practical operating needs because systems that want to run virtual care, ambient documentation, and multi-site analytics at scale need infrastructure that can expand without constant hardware refresh cycles. WellSpan Health's January 2026 decision to migrate its full technology portfolio to AWS shows that cloud transition is now being treated as institutional strategy rather than a narrow IT upgrade. That decision also reflects how cloud environments support broader AI adoption, since organizations can pair data movement with new clinical and administrative tools instead of managing those efforts separately. For the United States eHealth market, this keeps cloud at the center of delivery strategy even when providers still retain some sensitive or deeply embedded systems on site.
Hybrid Solutions are projected to grow at a 20.52% CAGR through 2031, which makes them the fastest-growing delivery mode because mixed architectures are becoming the normal operating state rather than a short temporary bridge. Health systems still need to connect regulated clinical applications, legacy interfaces, and newer AI layers, so full migration rarely occurs in one cycle. On-premise Solutions continue to hold a smaller but persistent role in federal systems and organizations with tighter deployment constraints, which prevents a simple cloud-only transition path. The ONC's HTI-5 proposed rule published in December 2025 proposed removal of 34 certification criteria and estimated USD 1.53 billion in compliance cost savings for certified developers, which could reduce transition burdens for smaller health IT vendors over time. Taken together, these conditions mean the United States eHealth industry is likely to keep favoring cloud-led models, while hybrid deployment remains the fastest route for real-world scaling.
Complete Report Scope:
- By Component
- Health Information Systems
- Electronic Health Records / Electronic Medical Records
- Health Information Exchange
- Population Health Management
- Patient Engagement Solutions
- Telemedicine & Virtual Care Platforms
- mHealth Applications
- Clinical Decision Support & Ambient AI
- e-Prescribing & e-Pharmacy
- Other Components
- Health Information Systems
- By Delivery Mode
- Cloud-based Solutions
- Hybrid Solutions
- On-premise Solutions
- By Service Type
- Monitoring Services
- Remote Patient Monitoring
- Chronic Disease Management
- Wellness Monitoring
- Diagnostic Services
- Tele-radiology
- Tele-pathology
- AI-enabled Triage & Decision Support
- Therapeutic Services
- Teleconsultation
- Digital Therapeutics
- Virtual Rehabilitation
- Telepsychiatry & Behavioral Therapy
- Administrative & Workflow Services
- e-Prescribing
- e-Prior Authorization
- Patient Scheduling & Intake
- Patient Engagement & Messaging
- Monitoring Services
- By End User
- Healthcare Providers
- Payers
- Patients & Individual Consumers
- Other End Users
List of Companies Covered in this Report:
- Amazon One Medical
- Amwell
- Athenahealth
- CVS Health
- Doximity Inc.
- DrChrono Inc.
- eClinicalWorks
- Epic Systems
- GE Healthcare
- Google Cloud
- Hims & Hers Health
- Koninklijke Philips
- Mckesson
- Meditech
- Microsoft
- NextGen Healthcare
- Omada Health
- Optum
- Oracle Health
- Salesforce
- Teladoc Health
- Veradigm
Additional Benefits:
- The market estimate (ME) sheet in Excel format
- 3 months of analyst support
Table of Contents
Companies Mentioned (Partial List)
A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:
- Amazon One Medical
- Amwell
- athenahealth Inc.
- CVS Health
- Doximity Inc.
- DrChrono Inc.
- eClinicalWorks
- Epic Systems Corporation
- GE HealthCare
- Google Cloud
- Hims & Hers Health
- Koninklijke Philips N.V.
- McKesson Corporation
- MEDITECH
- Microsoft
- NextGen Healthcare
- Omada Health
- Optum
- Oracle Health
- Salesforce
- Teladoc Health
- Veradigm LLC

