Download the New Zealand Acute Care EMR And Digital Health 2026 Report

New Zealand’s acute care EMR environment is moving into a consolidation phase—driven by health system reform, national platform programmes, and sharper expectations for interoperability, cyber resilience, medicines safety, and clinician productivity. This companion report is built to support decision-grade planning and procurement scoping in Aotearoa New Zealand—without vendor rankings or market-share claims.

Download this independent Black Book report to understand:

  • The seven trends shaping EMR decisions to 2030— including platform consolidation, SDHR-driven interoperability expectations, FHIR/API requirements, and cloud adoption under NZ security and sovereignty constraints.

  • National “non-negotiables” for EMR fit— NHI/HPI identity, SDHR alignment, NZULM/NZePS/MDR medicines infrastructure, HealthLink secure messaging, and My Health Record implications for the consumer digital front door.

  • A practical strategic-fit checklist— an 18-dimension framework to define requirements, weight trade-offs, and structure clinical validation (built for NZ realities and multi-vendor ecosystems).

  • Procurement-ready NZ baseline requirements— privacy-by-design (Privacy Act / HIPC), NZISM-aligned assurance, API security expectations, downtime readiness, and mandatory national-service integration requirements.

  • Vendor landscape and platform patterns in New Zealand— how common “layered” digital hospital stacks are evolving and what to test when assessing PAS, shared records/portals, medicines platforms, and global enterprise suites.

Who should read it: Boards, executives, clinical leaders, digital health teams, and procurement/architecture stakeholders shaping acute-care EMR, medicines, interoperability, and digital hospital roadmaps in New Zealand.

Get the complimentary download — and use it to pressure-test your EMR roadmap against New Zealand’s national services, standards, and assurance expectations before you lock scope, vendors, or architecture.