Software built for
the demands of healthcare.
Healthcare software carries a weight that most industries never encounter: it affects patient outcomes, regulatory standing, and clinical workflows simultaneously. We build healthcare and MedTech software with the compliance rigour, data security, and user-centred design that the sector demands.
Healthcare software development done with genuine domain knowledge
Building software for healthcare is fundamentally different from building software for other industries. The regulatory environment — HIPAA, GDPR, HL7, FHIR — is not optional background reading; it is the foundation every architectural decision must rest on. The user base includes clinicians under time pressure, patients navigating anxiety, and administrators managing compliance across complex systems.
At Softtech IT, we have delivered over 30 healthcare software projects — ranging from patient-facing telemedicine platforms to back-end clinical data pipelines. That experience has given us a practical understanding of what works in healthcare environments: audit trails that regulators can actually read, user interfaces that do not slow down a nurse mid-shift, and integrations with EHR systems that handle edge cases reliably rather than 95% of the time.
HIPAA compliance is not a feature — it’s an architecture
Many development teams treat HIPAA compliance as a checklist to tick at the end of a project. That approach consistently produces systems that pass an initial audit but create problems when real usage patterns diverge from the test environment. Our approach embeds HIPAA-compliant software architecture from the first line of code — role-based access controls, end-to-end encryption, audit logging, and data residency controls are designed in, not bolted on.
Interoperability from day one
Modern healthcare organisations do not operate in isolation. Your new platform will need to exchange data with existing EHRs, lab systems, billing platforms, and device feeds. We design systems that speak HL7 FHIR natively and integrate with major EHR vendors including Epic, Cerner, and Athenahealth — not through fragile custom connectors, but through standards-based APIs that remain maintainable as the landscape evolves.
Standards we build to:
Healthcare software solutions
across the care continuum
From primary care to life sciences research — we build the systems that connect clinicians, patients, and data across every point of care.
Custom EHR platforms designed around your clinical workflows — not a generic template retrofitted to your processes. Patient records, clinical notes, medication management, and care coordination built to HL7 FHIR standards.
HIPAA-compliant video consultation platforms, asynchronous messaging tools, and remote patient monitoring integrations that extend your clinical reach without compromising data security or patient experience.
Custom LIMS solutions for clinical, research, and pathology labs — sample tracking, workflow automation, QC management, and instrument integration with full audit trail and regulatory compliance built in.
Secure platforms for collecting, managing, and analysing clinical data — from trial data capture and EDC systems to real-world evidence platforms and patient registries with built-in data validation.
Patient-facing web and mobile applications for appointment booking, health record access, prescription management, care plan tracking, and secure messaging — designed for accessibility and trust.
Medication dispensing software, e-prescribing platforms, drug interaction checking engines, and pharmacy workflow systems built to the accuracy and reliability standards clinical operations demand.
The challenges that make healthcare
software engineering harder
Understanding these constraints is what separates a healthcare software specialist from a generalist who has read the HIPAA checklist.
Healthcare software must navigate HIPAA, HITECH, GDPR (for EU data), FDA regulations for software as a medical device (SaMD), and state-level health data laws simultaneously. Each regulation has specific technical requirements — audit trail formats, encryption standards, breach notification timelines — that must be reflected in the system’s architecture, not just its policies.
Most healthcare organisations run on EHR systems that have been in place for 10–20 years. Any new software must integrate with these systems reliably — often through HL7 v2 messages, proprietary APIs, or vendor-specific FHIR implementations that diverge from the standard. Experience with these integration patterns is not something you acquire on the first project.
Clinicians are expert users operating under cognitive load. Software that adds clicks, requires context-switching, or surfaces irrelevant information is not just inconvenient — it creates error risk. Healthcare UX demands the same evidence-based discipline as clinical practice: user research with actual clinicians, workflow mapping, usability testing, and iteration driven by real usage data.
In most industries, a system outage is a business disruption. In healthcare, it can delay time-sensitive treatment decisions. Clinical systems require 99.9%+ uptime SLAs, tested failover mechanisms, and incident response processes that meet clinical operations’ expectations — not standard SaaS support tier commitments.
Building a clinical platform that cannot afford to get compliance wrong?
Speak with our healthcare software team. We will review your requirements, identify the key regulatory considerations, and outline an approach that delivers on time — without compliance surprises.
What does genuinely compliant healthcare software development look like in practice?
The market for healthcare software development services is full of generalist agencies that have built one HIPAA-compliant system and now market themselves as healthcare specialists. The difference between genuine expertise and a compliance checklist becomes visible the moment your project encounters a real-world edge case: a lab result that arrives in a non-standard HL7 format, a state-specific data residency requirement, or a clinical workflow that does not fit the assumed happy path.
At Softtech IT, our medical software development practice has accumulated over thirty healthcare engagements across EHR systems, telemedicine platforms, clinical data management tools, and patient engagement applications. That volume of experience means we have already encountered and solved the problems that first-time healthcare builders encounter mid-project — and we design our systems to handle them from the start.
Our HIPAA compliant software development process begins with a dedicated compliance architecture review — before any UI design or backend code is written. We map the data flows, identify every point where PHI is created, transmitted, or stored, and establish the technical controls required at each point. This produces a compliance architecture document that serves as the reference point for every subsequent technical decision.
The technical decisions that determine whether healthcare software succeeds or fails at scale
Choosing the right architecture for a healthcare IT solution is not a matter of preference — it is a matter of regulatory and operational necessity. Systems that store Protected Health Information (PHI) require AES-256 encryption at rest, TLS 1.2+ for all data in transit, and field-level encryption for sensitive clinical data that may be accessed by different user roles with different authorisation levels.
Our EHR software development and clinical data management systems use a microservices architecture that isolates PHI-containing services behind dedicated access controls — ensuring that a security incident in one system component does not expose the entire patient data store. This architectural principle, borrowed from zero-trust security frameworks, is what allows us to deliver robust audit trails and access logs that regulators can meaningfully review.
For telemedicine platform development, we use WebRTC for video communications — ensuring that patient consultations are peer-to-peer encrypted and never routed through an unencrypted intermediary. Session metadata is stored separately from clinical content, with different retention policies applied to each category of data in accordance with HIPAA’s minimum necessary standard.
A HIPAA-compliant patient portal development project typically takes 12–20 weeks and costs $60,000–$150,000 depending on integration complexity. A full EHR software development engagement for a mid-sized healthcare organisation typically ranges from $250,000–$800,000 over 9–18 months. The higher cost relative to standard software reflects the additional compliance engineering, security architecture, clinical UX research, and penetration testing that responsible healthcare IT solutions require.
HL7 FHIR integration has become the standard for healthcare data exchange in the US and UK, replacing older HL7 v2 interfaces for most new implementations. FHIR R4 enables standardised access to patient records, clinical data, and administrative information through RESTful APIs — dramatically simplifying integrations between disparate healthcare systems. Our team has implemented FHIR-based integrations with Epic MyChart, Cerner SMART on FHIR, and Athenahealth’s proprietary FHIR variant — including the non-standard edge cases each vendor introduces.
Healthcare software that directly influences clinical decisions — diagnostic support tools, AI-driven triage systems, or software that controls medical devices — may fall under FDA SaMD regulations or equivalent EU MDR requirements. Building for SaMD compliance requires a quality management system (QMS), formal risk management documentation, and a software development lifecycle that produces the evidence regulators require. Softtech IT has experience building to these standards for both US and EU regulatory pathways.