Few buzzwords in healthcare generate as much confusion — or urgency — as interoperability. For years, the conversation centered around hospitals and EHR vendors. But a crucial stakeholder has often been left out: emergency medical services (EMS).
As EMS evolves into a more integrated part of the care continuum, the need for seamless data exchange between EMS and hospital systems has become impossible to ignore. What’s needed now is not just technical compatibility but clinical interoperability too: ensuring that patient data moves with patients, regardless of where care begins.
EMR, EHR, and ePCR: Understanding the differences
To understand what’s at stake, it helps to clarify a few key terms.
Electronic Medical Record (EMR): A digital chart used by a single organization (typically a hospital or physician group) to document and manage patient care. EMRs are often organization-bound.
Electronic Health Record (EHR): A broader, interoperable patient record that spans multiple providers, intended to follow the patient across the healthcare system.
Electronic Patient Care Report (ePCR): The first clinical record in many emergency episodes, completed by EMS providers in the field. It includes vital signs, medications administered, timestamps, and impressions of care.
True interoperability means EMS-generated data (ePCRs) can be accessed, interpreted, and used by hospital teams, and vice versa. This ensures a shared understanding of the patient’s condition from the moment of contact through discharge.
Why EMS-hospital interoperability matters
Too often, EMS and hospital data remain in disconnected systems. This not only delays care but introduces risk, redundancy, and administrative burden. The ability for prehospital teams and hospitals to share real-time clinical data improves:
Field decision-making – When EMS providers access a patient’s history — such as medications, allergies, or chronic conditions — they can make safer, more informed treatment choices.
Hospital handoffs – Seamless transfer of ePCR data into the emergency department record helps avoid data loss and ensures accurate continuity of care.
Compliance and documentation – Automated, time-stamped entries from EMS can support medical audits, quality improvement, and defensible legal documentation.
System-wide care coordination – In value-based care models, EMS is no longer a disconnected outpost — it’s a frontline data source for public health, chronic care, and population health management.
In fact, since 2022 the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) has been highlighting the need for broader inclusion of EMS and other first responders in nationwide interoperability goals.
Interoperability myths that still persist
Progress has been slowed by outdated beliefs about what’s possible. A few of the most common myths include:
“Interoperability is only a hospital IT issue.” Not anymore. EMS plays a vital role in care transitions and benefits directly from integrated systems.
“Hospital EMRs can’t connect with EMS platforms.” Many systems now support open standards like HL7 and FHIR, which enable bidirectional data exchange.
“ePCR data doesn’t belong in the hospital record.” On the contrary, EMS documentation often contains critical information about prehospital care — sometimes the only record of what happened before arrival.
The National EMS Information System (NEMSIS) has repeatedly emphasized the value of EMS data in the national health record and its interoperability potential through structured, standards-based design.
The role of open standards in closing the gap
Technological interoperability only works when built on open, national standards. The most effective solutions use the following.
HL7 (Health Level Seven): A messaging standard that allows different health systems to communicate clinical data.
FHIR (Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources): A modern web-based standard that supports real-time data exchange across platforms.
NEMSIS standards: Used in EMS documentation, these structures are increasingly being mapped into broader health IT networks.
By aligning on these standards, EMS and hospital systems can move beyond exchanging static PDFs and begin sharing real-time, structured data that is machine-readable and clinically actionable.
From technical to clinical interoperability
Interoperability is often talked about in terms of systems and APIs. But at its core, it’s about people — doctors, paramedics, nurses — accessing the information they need, when they need it.
When an emergency department team has access to prehospital vitals, medications, or observed symptoms, they’re not starting from scratch. When EMS teams can see patient history before administering care, they reduce risk and improve outcomes. And when both sides can share data fluidly, it strengthens the relationship between field and facility.
In short, interoperability turns fragmented encounters into a continuous patient journey that gives providers more time for patient care.
The path forward
EMR interoperability is no longer optional for EMS. As healthcare moves toward real-time coordination and data-driven performance, EMS must be part of the equation.
To move forward, EMS agencies and hospitals can:
Audit their existing systems for HL7/FHIR readiness
Establish shared documentation and data-sharing protocols
Include EMS in broader interoperability conversations and funding initiatives
Advocate for national policies that recognize EMS as a core part of the health IT infrastructure
The shift to connected care isn’t just about technology; it’s about building a system where no matter where a patient’s care begins, the data follows.
Photo credit: ipopba, Getty Images
Joe Graw is the Chief Growth Officer at ImageTrend. Joe’s passion to learn and explore new ideas in the industry is about more than managing the growth of ImageTrend – it’s forward thinking. Engaging in many facets of ImageTrend is part of what drives Joe. He is dedicated to our community, clients, and their use of data to drive results, implement change, and drive improvement in their industries.
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