EpicCare vs Tebra
March 09, 2025 | Author: Sandeep Sharma
12★
EpicCare is a health recording solution with robust features and functionalities, intricate workflow design, user-friendly interface, a combination of chart review, documentation, and order management.
9★
The only healthcare software your independent practice needs. Patient acquisition and retention through marketing automation, certified cloud-based EHR, automated patient communication, and rapid billing/payment solutions.
EpicCare and Tebra, despite their wildly different personalities, share an uncanny ability to make doctors' lives both easier and more complicated at the same time. Both offer Electronic Health Records (EHR) that promise to store everything from a patient’s blood pressure to their secret aversion to Brussels sprouts. They both have scheduling systems designed to make appointments happen at precisely the wrong time, billing functions that attempt to translate medical services into financial distress, and, of course, the all-important compliance with HIPAA—a mysterious entity that governs all things health-related with the benevolence of an omniscient bureaucracy.
EpicCare, in particular, seems to have been designed by an advanced species that assumed human doctors would one day evolve additional arms and an extra brain to process all the data it provides. Built for vast, sprawling hospital empires, it boasts interoperability with every other system in the known universe (except the one you actually need), a clinical decision support tool that tries to outthink the doctor and an interface that requires a month-long retreat in a data monastery to fully comprehend. EpicCare was created by Epic Systems, a company based in the United States that has, for reasons unknown, not yet taken over the world.
Tebra, on the other hand, believes that medical software should be as friendly as a Labrador retriever and just as easy to operate. It’s made for smaller practices that don’t have time for labyrinthine training modules or epic (pun intended) system integrations. Instead, it focuses on being simple, engaging, and—gasp—useful, with built-in patient interaction tools and transparent pricing that doesn’t require a PhD in finance to understand. Formed from the unholy but ultimately beneficial union of Kareo and PatientPop, two U.S.-based companies, Tebra is what happens when medical software decides it would rather be helpful than omnipotent.
See also: Top 10 Medical Practice software
EpicCare, in particular, seems to have been designed by an advanced species that assumed human doctors would one day evolve additional arms and an extra brain to process all the data it provides. Built for vast, sprawling hospital empires, it boasts interoperability with every other system in the known universe (except the one you actually need), a clinical decision support tool that tries to outthink the doctor and an interface that requires a month-long retreat in a data monastery to fully comprehend. EpicCare was created by Epic Systems, a company based in the United States that has, for reasons unknown, not yet taken over the world.
Tebra, on the other hand, believes that medical software should be as friendly as a Labrador retriever and just as easy to operate. It’s made for smaller practices that don’t have time for labyrinthine training modules or epic (pun intended) system integrations. Instead, it focuses on being simple, engaging, and—gasp—useful, with built-in patient interaction tools and transparent pricing that doesn’t require a PhD in finance to understand. Formed from the unholy but ultimately beneficial union of Kareo and PatientPop, two U.S.-based companies, Tebra is what happens when medical software decides it would rather be helpful than omnipotent.
See also: Top 10 Medical Practice software