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市場調查報告書
商品編碼
2082066
電子健康記錄 (EHR) 市場:2026-2032 年全球市場預測(按組件、產品類型、功能、授權、應用、最終用戶和部署模式分類)Electronic Health Record Market by Component, Product Type, Functionality, Licensing, Application, End User, Deployment Mode - Global Forecast 2026-2032 |
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預計到 2032 年,電子健康記錄 (EHR) 市場將成長至 799.6 億美元,複合年成長率為 7.46%。
| 主要市場統計數據 | |
|---|---|
| 基準年 2025 | 482.9億美元 |
| 預計年份:2026年 | 514.6億美元 |
| 預測年份 2032 | 799.6億美元 |
| 複合年成長率 (%) | 7.46% |
電子健康記錄(EHR)系統已從單純的行政資料儲存發展成為現代醫療服務系統中的數位化營運層。在成熟市場,其應用已成為主流。
電子健康記錄 (EHR) 格局正因互通性、雲端遷移以及消費者對數位化存取的期望而發生重塑。在美國,《21 世紀治癒法案》中的「不銷毀條款」以及「可信任交換框架和通用協議」正在加速基於標準化 API 和 FHIR 標準的資訊交流共用模式的發展。
人工智慧 (AI) 正透過改進文件記錄、編碼輔助、臨床總結、分診、病人參與和營運規劃等方式,對整個電子病歷 (EHR) 生命週期產生累積累積影響。美國食品藥物管理局 (FDA) 關於人工智慧驅動的醫療技術的趨勢,包括批准數百種人工智慧/機器學習 (AI/ML)醫療設備,凸顯了演算法工具與受監管的臨床工作流程日益融合的趨勢。
北美地區電子健康記錄 (EHR) 的普及率仍然很高,這得益於《健康資訊科技促進經濟和臨床健康法案》(HITECH Act) 的實施、醫療資訊科技認證要求、保險公司與醫療服務提供者之間的資料交換,以及《治癒法案》(Cures Act) 下應用程式介面 (API) 的廣泛應用程式。在加拿大,省級數位健康記錄的推進和全國範圍內的互通性提升正透過一項全國協調的數位健康計劃持續進行。
東南亞國協正優先發展國家健康識別碼、公共部門數位健康平台和醫院現代化,其中新加坡的國家電子健康記錄和印尼的SATUSEHAT是向共用健康數據基礎設施過渡的典範。海灣合作理事會(GCC)市場是數位健康領域投資最活躍的市場之一,沙烏地阿拉伯、阿拉伯聯合大公國和卡達正將電子健康記錄現代化與國家轉型計畫、智慧醫院計畫和擴大健康資訊交流相結合。
美國擁有政策主導最強的電子健康記錄 (EHR) 環境,這得益於認證 EHR 的採用、TEFCA、USCDI、HIPAA 以及基於價值觀的醫療保健。加拿大正透過省級系統和國家協調的數位健康計畫推動互通性,而墨西哥在公共和私營醫療機構中對數位健康的採用則不均衡。巴西憑藉「Conecte SUS」和「國家健康資料網路」在拉丁美洲處於領先地位。
產業領導者應優先考慮互通架構、雲端部署和API優先整合,以降低供應商鎖定風險並滿足未來的資料交換需求。投資重點不應僅在於技術更新換代,而應放在工作流程的重新設計、提升臨床醫師的工作便利性、網路安全、病患身分管理以及可衡量的臨床結果等面向。
本執行摘要基於調查方法,該方法結合了來自檢驗資訊來源的二手研究、監管分析、政策審查、市場製圖和專家解釋。資訊來源包括國家醫療資訊科技機構、政府數位健康計畫、標準化機構、隱私監管機構和國際公認的醫療組織。
電子健康記錄 (EHR) 市場正進入一個以互通性、人工智慧驅動的工作流程、網路安全韌性和以患者為中心的資料存取為特徵的新階段。成熟市場正從部署階段過渡到最佳化階段,而新興市場則在建立數位醫療的基礎架構。
The Electronic Health Record Market is projected to grow by USD 79.96 billion at a CAGR of 7.46% by 2032.
| KEY MARKET STATISTICS | |
|---|---|
| Base Year [2025] | USD 48.29 billion |
| Estimated Year [2026] | USD 51.46 billion |
| Forecast Year [2032] | USD 79.96 billion |
| CAGR (%) | 7.46% |
Electronic Health Record (EHR) systems have moved from administrative repositories to the digital operating layer of modern healthcare delivery. Adoption is now mainstream in mature markets.
For provider organizations, the strategic priority has shifted from digitizing charts to improving interoperability, clinical workflow, patient safety, cybersecurity, and measurable care outcomes. Demand is being shaped by value-based care, patient access rules, telehealth integration, clinical decision support, and the need for structured healthcare data that can support analytics and artificial intelligence.
The EHR landscape is being reshaped by interoperability mandates, cloud migration, and consumer expectations for digital access. In the United States, the 21st Century Cures Act information-blocking provisions and the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement are accelerating data-sharing models built around standardized APIs and the FHIR standard.
Healthcare providers are also rethinking EHR value. The leading differentiators are no longer only documentation and billing functions; they now include usability, ambient documentation, population health analytics, cybersecurity resilience, and integration with remote patient monitoring, imaging, pharmacy, laboratory, and revenue cycle platforms.
Artificial intelligence is creating a cumulative impact across the EHR lifecycle by improving documentation, coding support, clinical summarization, triage, patient engagement, and operational planning. FDA activity around AI-enabled medical technologies, including hundreds of listed AI/ML-enabled devices, confirms that algorithmic tools are moving into regulated clinical workflows.
The strongest near-term provider use cases are administrative and workflow-oriented, including ambient clinical notes, prior authorization support, inbox management, and chart summarization. Clinical AI adoption remains dependent on governance, bias monitoring, explainability, cybersecurity, and compliance with privacy frameworks such as HIPAA and GDPR.
North America remains a high-adoption EHR region, supported by the HITECH Act legacy, certified health IT requirements, payer-provider data exchange, and rising use of APIs under the Cures Act. Canada continues to advance provincial digital health records and pan-Canadian interoperability through nationally coordinated digital health programs.
Europe is defined by strong privacy governance under GDPR and the emerging European Health Data Space, which is designed to improve cross-border access, secondary data use, and patient control. Asia-Pacific is expanding as India scales the Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission, China advances digital health infrastructure, Japan promotes data-driven care for an aging population, and Australia continues to build on national shared health record capabilities.
Latin America is progressing through national platforms such as Brazil's National Health Data Network, while Mexico and other markets continue addressing fragmentation across public and private care settings. The Middle East is investing through Saudi Vision 2030, UAE health information exchanges such as Malaffi and Nabidh, and national digital health strategies. Africa is advancing through public health platforms, DHIS2 deployments, and mobile-first digital health programs, although infrastructure, connectivity, financing, and workforce constraints remain material barriers.
ASEAN countries are prioritizing national health identifiers, public-sector digital health platforms, and hospital modernization, with Singapore's National Electronic Health Record and Indonesia's SATUSEHAT illustrating the move toward shared health data infrastructure. GCC markets are among the most aggressive digital health investors, with Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Qatar linking EHR modernization to national transformation programs, smart hospital initiatives, and health information exchange expansion.
The European Union is setting the regulatory benchmark through GDPR, cross-border ePrescription services, and the European Health Data Space. BRICS countries are important digital health growth engines because China, India, and Brazil combine large patient populations with active public digital health initiatives, while South Africa and Russia maintain significant modernization needs across interoperability, infrastructure, and clinical workflow digitization.
G7 markets lead in mature EHR adoption, cybersecurity expectations, standards development, and AI governance. NATO countries increasingly treat healthcare data infrastructure as part of national resilience because cyberattacks against hospitals, claims systems, and public health agencies can disrupt essential services and continuity of care.
The United States is the most policy-driven EHR environment, shaped by certified EHR adoption, TEFCA, USCDI, HIPAA, and value-based care. Canada is advancing interoperability through provincial systems and nationally coordinated digital health programs, while Mexico is expanding digital health unevenly across public and private care settings. Brazil is a Latin American leader through Conecte SUS and the National Health Data Network.
In Europe, the United Kingdom continues to invest in NHS digital transformation and shared care records, Germany is scaling electronic patient records and ePrescriptions, France is expanding Mon espace sante, Italy and Spain are modernizing regional health information systems, and Russia maintains state-led digital health initiatives. China is building large-scale hospital information and internet hospital infrastructure, India is scaling ABHA IDs under the Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission, Japan is linking health data reform with aging-population needs, Australia has nationwide My Health Record infrastructure, and South Korea is advancing hospital digitalization and health data initiatives.
Industry leaders should prioritize interoperable architecture, cloud-ready deployment, and API-first integration to reduce vendor lock-in and support future data exchange requirements. Investments should focus on workflow redesign, clinician usability, cybersecurity, patient identity management, and measurable outcomes rather than technology replacement alone.
Provider executives should establish AI governance before scaling algorithmic tools, including model validation, privacy review, human oversight, and bias monitoring. Organizations should also build enterprise data strategies that align EHR, claims, imaging, pharmacy, laboratory, and patient-generated data into secure, analytics-ready environments.
This executive summary is developed using a research methodology that combines secondary research from verified public sources, regulatory analysis, policy review, market mapping, and expert interpretation. Sources include national health IT agencies, government digital health programs, standards bodies, privacy regulators, and internationally recognized healthcare organizations.
The analysis triangulates adoption patterns, interoperability mandates, AI regulation, cybersecurity events, and regional digital health strategies. Findings are structured to support decision-making for EHR buyers, technology vendors, investors, and healthcare policymakers without relying on market sizing, market share, or forecasting assumptions.
The Electronic Health Record market is entering a new phase defined by interoperability, AI-assisted workflows, cybersecurity resilience, and patient-centered data access. Mature markets are optimizing beyond adoption, while emerging markets are building foundational digital health infrastructure.
Organizations that combine standards-based architecture, strong governance, clinical workflow alignment, and secure data strategies will be best positioned to capture value from the next generation of EHR innovation.