Top 5 dermatology EHR software for small practices

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Top 5 Dermatology EHR Software for Small Practices in 2026: Ranked by AI, Price, and Workflow

Most dermatology EHR comparison guides rank ModMed first. That is the right answer for a 15-provider group with a six-figure IT budget and six months to implement. For a solo dermatologist or a two-provider hybrid practice, it is the wrong answer. 

The issue is not a shortage of platforms. Every major comparison site evaluates all practice sizes through the same lens. Small practices end up buried under enterprise recommendations that price them out, oversize their workflows, and take longer to go live than their patient schedule can absorb. 

This guide exists for solo practitioners, 1 to 3 provider clinics, and hybrid medical-cosmetic dermatology practices. We ranked five platforms on the four criteria that determine whether a dermatology EHR for small practice actually works day to day: total all-in monthly cost, AI documentation that recovers real chair-side time, native billing for both insurance and cash-pay cosmetic services, and go-live speed without a dedicated IT team. 

We evaluated Edvak alongside four competitors. Edvak is one of the five platforms reviewed here, and we applied identical criteria to all five. 

For the full six-platform breakdown that includes enterprise options, see our full dermatology EHR buyer’s guide for US clinics. 

WHY SMALL DERMATOLOGY PRACTICES NEED A DIFFERENT EHR EVALUATION LENS

Enterprise EHR criteria do not transfer to small practices. Four specific differences determine where that mismatch causes the most damage. 

Price compounds differently at small scale. At 20 to 30 patients per day, the difference between $299 per month and $700 per month per provider is $4,800 per year off the bottom line. Enterprise pricing does not scale down. A solo practice pays for capacity it will never use. 

Implementation downtime is disproportionately painful. A large group runs parallel systems for months with an IT department managing the transition. A solo practice cannot do that. A 4 to 5 week go-live versus a 5 month implementation is not a minor calendar difference. It is a quarter-year of disrupted patient flow with no IT buffer. 

Hybrid billing is the norm, not the exception. Most small dermatology practices bill insurance for medical visits and collect cash for cosmetic procedures in the same week, often on the same day. EHRs built around one billing model or the other create reconciliation work that lands on the front desk or the physician after hours. 

Bundled pricing changes the total cost math. A $199 per month base price with six separate module fees for inventory, two-way SMS, scheduling automations, and billing tools often costs more than a $299 per month all-in bundle. Ask every vendor to quote total monthly cost, not the entry-level tier. 

For a step-by-step framework to evaluate any platform, see our guide on how to choose a dermatology EHR in 2026

HOW WE RANKED THESE FIVE PLATFORMS

We applied four criteria to every platform in this list. Edvak is one of the five evaluated. We used the same standard across all five. 

Criterion 1: Total all-in monthly cost. Base subscription plus every module a solo dermatology practice actually needs to operate. Injectable tracking, scheduling automation, SMS communication, and billing tools all counted. 

Criterion 2: AI documentation architecture. Whether the system structures a complete SOAP note in real time as the clinician speaks (AI-native), or produces a raw transcript that someone reformats afterward (AI-assisted). That distinction determines how much time a provider recovers per day. 

Criterion 3: Hybrid billing support. Whether insurance-based medical billing and cash-pay cosmetic billing run natively inside one system, or require a workaround, a second tool, or manual reconciliation at end of day. 

Criterion 4: Implementation speed without IT staff. Weeks to full go-live for a practice where the physician and front desk handle every operational role.

Edvak AI-native dermatology EHR

THE 5 BEST DERMATOLOGY EHR PLATFORMS FOR SMALL PRACTICES IN 2026

1. Edvak: AI-Native EHR Built and Priced for Small Hybrid Dermatology Practices

Best for: Solo to 3-provider practices running both medical and cosmetic services Starting price: $299 per provider per month, fully bundled Implementation timeline: 4 to 5 weeks G2 rating: 5.0/5 Certifications: ONC certified, Drummond certified, Surescripts certified, HIPAA-compliant 

Edvak is the platform this guide ranks first for small hybrid dermatology practices in 2026. That position is based on four specific criteria: it is the only AI-native EHR at this price point, it handles medical and cosmetic billing in two separate lanes natively, it goes live in 4 to 5 weeks for a solo practice, and it bundles every module a small practice needs into one price with no add-on fees. 

What Darwin AI does that other platforms do not. Edvak is built on Darwin AI, an AI documentation engine developed specifically for clinical workflows. Darwin AI structures a complete SOAP note in real time as the clinician speaks during the encounter. By the time the patient leaves the room, the note is structured, the ICD-10 code is suggested, and the billing event is ready for review. This is not ambient transcription that produces a raw text file for staff to reformat. It is real-time clinical structuring. That distinction is the difference between a provider recovering 30 to 45 minutes of post-visit charting time per day and a provider who still spends time cleaning up transcripts after each shift. 

For the full breakdown of how AI documentation architecture works in a dermatology workflow, see our guide on AI documentation workflow for dermatology. 

What the $299 bundle includes. The base tier covers AI-Powered DocumentationIntegrated Speech-to-TextConversation Capture to Structured NotesSchedulingPatient Intake with Auto Charting2-way SMS Chat and Phone CallsAutomated Care RemindersClaims ManagementPayment ProcessingAuto Capture of ICD and CPT CodesReal-Time Insurance Eligibility Checks, injectable inventory management, and Analytics and Reporting. All of this is included at $299 per provider per month. A solo practice that needs all of these to operate pays $299 per month. No module decisions required. 

How hybrid billing works in practice. Medical encounters route through Claims Management and insurance clearinghouses. Cosmetic encounters route through Payment Processing for cash-pay and card-on-file collection. Both write back to the same patient record. A shave biopsy (CPT 11102) and a Botox injection in the same patient visit produce one complete clinical record and two correctly routed billing events, without switching tools or reconciling at the end of the day. For the full coding and billing workflow detail, see our guide on the dermatology AI EHR coding and billing workflow. 

A real practice scenario. A two-provider hybrid practice in California running 40 patients per day uses Edvak to dictate a biopsy note via Integrated Speech-to-Text during the procedure. Darwin AI structures the SOAP note and suggests the CPT and ICD-10 codes before the patient leaves the room. Botox units auto-deduct from lot-tracked inventory at the moment of documentation. Automated Care Reminders send a follow-up message three days later without any front desk action. For state-specific detail, see our guides on the best AI scribe for California dermatologists and the best AI scribe for Florida dermatologists. 

Additional included features: E-Prescribing and Medication ManagementPatient PortalOnline SchedulingTelehealth with AI ScribeClinical Decision SupportElectronic Labs and ImagingDocument ManagementReferral Management, and Autofill Document Parser. Data migration from ModMed, EZDERM, and other systems is supported. 

Best for small practices because: Every module a solo practice needs is included at $299 per month. No decisions about which add-ons to afford. No contract lock-in beyond the agreed term. 

Honest limitation: Edvak may not the right fit for large enterprise groups needing Epic or Athena integration. Practices with very high Mohs surgery volume that require the deepest 3D anatomical body mapping should evaluate EZDERM alongside Edvak. EZDERM’s surgical mapping depth is greater. 

For a direct head-to-head, see Edvak vs ModMed for small practices. 

2. EZDERM: Deepest Dermatology-Specific Charting for Medical and Surgical Practices

Best for: Medical dermatology and Mohs-heavy practices with minimal cosmetic volume Starting price: $250 to $500 per provider per month (estimated from publicly available data; verify directly with vendor) Implementation timeline: 6 to 10 weeks G2 rating: 5.0/5 | Capterra: 4.3/5 

EZDERM was built by a practicing dermatologist. The platform’s 3D Anatomical Body Map covers more than 3,000 anatomical locations and 2,500 dermatologic conditions. When a clinician documents a lesion on the body map, the system automatically pulls ICD-10 and CPT codes from the SNOMED database based on location and condition. For a Mohs surgery practice or a clinic with heavy biopsy volume, that automated link from anatomical location to billing code saves measurable time that no other platform on this list replicates at the same depth. For a head-to-head feature breakdown, see the EZDERM vs Edvak full comparison. 

EZDERM operates as a full integrated suite: ezehr for clinical documentation, ezpm for practice management, ezrcm for revenue cycle management, ezpay for payment processing, ezengage for patient communication, and ezportal for patient access. The AI module, called Eve, handles task automation across the platform. For a small practice where the physician does not want to manage five separate vendor relationships, that integration is a genuine operational advantage. 

The commitment question. EZDERM requires a 24-month minimum contract. At $250 to $500 per provider per month with a two-year lock-in, a solo dermatologist commits to $6,000 to $12,000 per year before implementation or add-on fees. Third-party sources note that implementation and template customization can add $3,000 to $15,000 upfront. Factor those numbers into any comparison (all pricing estimated from publicly available data as of April 2026; verify directly with EZDERM before committing). 

A real practice scenario. A solo Mohs surgeon in Texas uses EZDERM’s 3D body map to document staged excisions with precise anatomical mapping, auto-generate CPT codes 17311 through 17315, and track pathology submissions directly in the encounter record. No other platform on this list delivers that workflow with the same depth. For Texas-specific EHR context, see our guide on EMR documentation for Texas dermatology. 

Best for small practices because: The deepest dermatology-specific documentation library available. Worth the premium for surgical and Mohs-heavy practices. 

Honest limitation: The 24-month contract is a significant commitment for a practice that has not yet validated the workflow fit. Cosmetic and MedSpa workflows are less developed than Edvak or Nextech. Several user reviews note that the billing section requires more configuration than the clinical side. 

3. DrChrono: Lowest Entry Price; Significant Configuration Required for Dermatology Workflows

Best for: Budget-constrained small practices where dermatology is one of several specialties Starting price: $199 to $299 per provider per month (estimated from publicly available data; verify directly with vendor) Implementation timeline: 2 to 6 weeks depending on data migration complexity G2 rating: 3.6/5 | Capterra: 4.0/5 

DrChrono launched in 2009 as one of the first iPad-native EHR platforms. That mobile-first design is still its strongest differentiator. A clinician can chart a full dermatology encounter on an iPad at the patient’s side, send an e-prescription, and close the note without returning to a desktop. The Electronic Health Records workflow integrates with lab ordering for biopsy submissions to over 40,000 labs, with results routed directly to the patient chart. 

Dermatology is not DrChrono’s primary specialty. The platform serves primary care, chiropractic, podiatry, urgent care, and dozens of other disciplines. Template configuration for dermatology-specific workflows such as lesion documentation, biopsy procedure notes, and injectable unit tracking requires significant upfront setup. A practice that wants dermatology-specific depth from day one will spend weeks configuring before the system works the way a purpose-built dermatology EHR works on day one. 

The total cost question. The entry price at $199 per provider per month covers basic EHR and scheduling. Billing, RCM, e-prescribing, and advanced features sit in higher tiers. A solo practice that needs billing, RCM, e-prescribing, and practice management lands closer to $300 to $600 per month depending on tier and negotiated contract. Annual contracts are standard. The product is owned by EverCommerce’s EverHealth division following a 2022 acquisition. Some user reviews since the acquisition cite slower support response times. Verify current support standards directly with DrChrono. 

A real practice scenario. A small multi-specialty practice in California offering dermatology alongside primary care and aesthetics uses DrChrono for all three specialties on one platform. A practice focused exclusively on dermatology and needing lot-level injectable tracking and cosmetic billing lanes would spend more time working around DrChrono’s limitations than using the platform as a foundation. For California-specific EHR detail, see our guide on the best dermatology EMR for California clinics. 

Best for small practices because: The lowest realistic entry price point and iPad-native charting make it accessible for budget-constrained, mobile-first practices where dermatology is not the exclusive specialty. 

Honest limitation: The lowest G2 rating on this list at 3.6/5. Template configuration for dermatology workflows requires significant upfront time. No native lot-level injectable tracking linked to patient encounters at documentation.

4. ModMed: Market Leader for Growing Practices; Wrong Scale for Most Solo Clinics Today

Best for: 2 to 3 provider practices with firm plans to scale to 10 or more providers within 3 years Starting price: $600 to $900 or more per provider per month (estimated from publicly available data; verify directly with vendor) Implementation timeline: 3 to 6 months Capterra rating: 4.2/5 

ModMed’s Electronic Medical Assistant, known as EMA, is the most widely used dermatology EHR in the US by provider count. The adaptive learning architecture is its defining feature. EMA observes each physician’s documentation patterns and adjusts its suggestions over time to match their clinical preferences. A provider who documents psoriasis visits the same way 300 times will find that EMA begins pre-populating those notes with decreasing manual input required. ModMed also released ModMed Scribe, an ambient documentation tool trained on more than 750 million dermatology encounters. 

For the largest peer community, the deepest template library, and a platform built alongside KLAS-recognized capabilities, ModMed is the correct answer. For a direct comparison of ModMed against Edvak for small practices, see Edvak vs ModMed for small practices. 

The scale problem for solo practices. At $600 to $900 or more per provider per month, a single-provider practice pays $7,200 to $10,800 per year in subscription fees alone before implementation. Enterprise implementation fees for large groups run to $50,000 or more. The RCM service that many practices need is priced separately on top of the base subscription. ModMed is built for the scale it targets. That scale is not a solo dermatology practice. 

AI-assisted vs AI-native: a critical distinction. ModMed’s documentation model is AI-assisted rather than AI-native. EMA auto-populates templates based on learned patterns and AI suggestions. The provider still selects a template, reviews the output, and edits before finalizing. For a provider charting 25 patients per day, ModMed reduces post-visit documentation time meaningfully. The note is not complete at the moment the patient leaves the room the way it is with an AI-native engine. The gap between AI-assisted and AI-native grows with patient volume. 

A real practice scenario. A 3-provider practice in Florida currently seeing 60 patients per day and planning to add two providers in the next 18 months is the correct ModMed candidate on this list. Paying enterprise pricing now avoids a disruptive migration later. Practices not on that growth path pay for capacity they will not use for years. For Florida-specific revenue cycle context, see our guide on Florida dermatology revenue cycle management. 

Best for small practices because: The only reason to select ModMed as a small practice is if scaling to 10 or more providers is a concrete near-term plan, not an aspiration, and you want to avoid a future platform migration. 

Honest limitation: The most expensive platform on this list. A 3 to 6 month implementation timeline makes it unsuitable for practices that need to go live within weeks. Small practices pay enterprise pricing without using enterprise-scale capacity.

5. Nextech: Best Cosmetic-Specific Toolset; Enterprise Pricing for an Aesthetic-Dominant Niche

Best for: Small practices where 70% or more of revenue comes from cosmetic and aesthetic procedures Starting price: $450 to $700 or more per provider per month, custom pricing (estimated from publicly available data; verify directly with vendor) Implementation timeline: 8 to 12 weeks Capterra rating: 4.0/5 | KLAS 2024 and 2025: Best in KLAS for Ambulatory Specialty EHR (two consecutive years) 

Nextech holds two of the strongest third-party validations available in dermatology EHR: KLAS Best in KLAS for Ambulatory Specialty EHR for two consecutive years (2024 and 2025), and the AAD DataDerm Gold Recognition, the only EHR with that designation from the American Academy of Dermatology. For practices where these certifications function as procurement requirements, the decision is effectively made before the demo. 

Nextech’s Smart Stamping feature lets providers pre-populate exams, assessments, treatment plans, and billing codes directly on an iPad using 3D anatomical models with a single tap. For high-volume cosmetic encounters where the visit pattern repeats predictably across patients, Smart Stamping is genuinely fast. 

Injectable inventory as a revenue protection tool. Nextech’s lot tracking integrates directly with point-of-sale collection. A Botox injection documented in the clinical record automatically deducts units from the lot-tracked inventory ledger and triggers the cosmetic billing event in one connected step. For a practice where injectables represent 40% of revenue, that connection eliminates end-of-day reconciliation between the clinical record and the cash register. For detail on how inventory tracking works inside an AI EHR, see our guide on dermatology inventory tracking in AI EHR. 

The pricing reality. Nextech does not publish pricing. Third-party sources estimate $450 to $700 or more per provider per month (estimated from publicly available sources as of April 2026; verify directly with Nextech). Medical insurance billing is secondary to Nextech’s cosmetic focus. A practice running 60% insurance and 40% cosmetic would find the medical billing tools functional but less developed than the cosmetic side. 

A real practice scenario. A solo cosmetic dermatologist in California running 15 filler appointments and 10 Botox sessions per day would find Nextech’s Smart Stamping, POS-integrated inventory, and cosmetic package billing more operationally aligned than any other platform on this list. A general dermatologist running primarily insurance-based medical visits with occasional Botox would pay for cosmetic infrastructure used on a minority of encounters. For California scheduling context, see our guide on the best scheduling software for California dermatology. 

Best for small practices because: The deepest cosmetic billing and injectable tracking tools available. Worth the premium for cosmetic-dominant practices where aesthetic procedures drive the majority of revenue. 

Honest limitation: Pricing is custom and not publicly disclosed. Medical billing workflows are less developed than the cosmetic side. Not the right fit for insurance-heavy practices.

SIDE-BY-SIDE COMPARISON TABLE

Platform Best for (small practices) Price per provider per month AI documentation Hybrid billing Implementation Rating
Edvak Solo to 3-provider hybrid medical and cosmetic $299 bundled AI-native, real-time SOAP during encounter Native dual-lane in one system 4 to 5 weeks 5.0/5 G2
EZDERM Medical/surgical and Mohs-heavy practices $250 to $500 est. Template-based plus Eve AI module Limited cosmetic development 6 to 10 weeks 5.0/5 G2, 4.3/5 Capterra
DrChrono Budget-first multi-specialty small practices $199 to $499 est. Speech-to-text plus template, not AI-native Requires configuration 2 to 6 weeks 3.6/5 G2, 4.0/5 Capterra
ModMed Practices planning to scale to 10 or more providers $600 to $900 or more est. AI-assisted template learning via EMA Strong medical, RCM priced separately 3 to 6 months 4.2/5 Capterra
Nextech Cosmetic-dominant practices, 70 or more percent aesthetic revenue $450 to $700 or more est. Smart Stamping on iPad Strong cosmetic, medical billing secondary 8 to 12 weeks 4.0/5 Capterra, KLAS 2024 and 2025

Competitor pricing estimated from publicly available sources and third-party reviews as of April 2026. Verify directly with each vendor before making purchasing decisions. 

For a full pricing breakdown including total cost of ownership modeling, see our dermatology EHR pricing guide for 2026. 

WHICH PLATFORM IS RIGHT FOR YOUR SPECIFIC PRACTICE

Five practice profiles. One direct recommendation each. 

Solo or 2-provider practice running both insurance visits and cosmetic services: Edvak. The $299 per month bundled price covers every module needed without add-on decisions. Billing and Revenue Cycle Management and Practice Management run inside one system. Go-live takes 4 to 5 weeks. For operational detail, see our dermatology practice management software guide. 

Medical or surgical dermatology practice with Mohs-heavy volume and minimal cosmetics: EZDERM. The 3D body map and surgical documentation depth are unmatched on this list. The 24-month contract is the trade-off for the deepest dermatology-specific charting available. Confirm current pricing directly before signing. 

Small practice on a tight budget where dermatology is one of three or four specialties: DrChrono. Entry price is the lowest on this list. Budget upfront time for template configuration. Verify pricing tiers and current support response times before committing. 

2 to 3 provider practice with a concrete plan to scale to 10 or more providers within 3 years: ModMed. Pay the enterprise price now to avoid a disruptive migration later. The adaptive learning and peer community justify the cost at that growth trajectory, not before it. 

Practice where 70% or more of revenue comes from cosmetic procedures: Nextech. KLAS recognition, Smart Stamping speed, and POS-integrated lot tracking are built for this workflow. Verify custom pricing directly. 

Edvak dermatology EHR

SIX QUESTIONS TO ASK EVERY EHR VENDOR BEFORE SIGNING

These questions target the failure modes small practices discover after go-live, not before. 

1. What is the total monthly cost including every module a single-provider practice would actually use?

The number that matters is the all-in monthly fee including inventory tracking, two-way SMS, scheduling automations, billing tools, and any per-encounter or per-message fees. Get that number in writing before signing. 

2. Is AI documentation producing a structured SOAP note in real time, or a transcript I review after the encounter?

The difference is 30 to 45 minutes of recovered provider time per day at 25 patients. Ask vendors to demonstrate the exact post-encounter workflow in a live demo, not a marketing video. 

3. How does the system handle one appointment that includes both a covered skin check and a cash-pay Botox injection?

This is the hybrid billing stress test. A system with genuine dual-lane billing answers this clearly. A system with a workaround will describe a manual step or pause before answering.

4. What is the minimum contract length, and what are the exit terms if the workflow does not fit after 90 days?

Some platforms require 24-month commitments. Know the exit terms before signing. For what to verify during data migration from any EHR, see our dermatology EHR data migration guide. 

5. Are clinical photos migrated with metadata intact, including encounter date, patient ID, and anatomical location?

Photo metadata is where migrations break. A system that migrates photos as generic files disconnected from encounter records creates a longitudinal documentation gap. For photo documentation standards in dermatology EHR, see our guide on dermatology photo documentation in EHR

6. What is the implementation timeline for a practice with one provider and no dedicated IT staff?

Ask for the average timeline for a practice of your exact size. Timelines quoted for five-provider groups do not apply to solo practices. The gap matters when your patient schedule does not stop during the transition.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT DERMATOLOGY SMALL PRACTICES

  • What is the cheapest EHR for a small dermatology practice?

    DrChrono's entry pricing starts at approximately $199 per provider per month based on third-party estimates. However, the total cost for a solo practice that needs billing, RCM, e-prescribing, and practice management rises to $300 to $600 per month depending on tier. Edvak at $299 per month bundles AI documentation, scheduling, billing, inventory, and SMS with no module add-on fees at the base tier. For most solo dermatology practices, Edvak's total cost of ownership is lower than DrChrono's once all required modules are counted. See the full cost breakdown in our dermatology EHR pricing guide for 2026. 

  • Can a solo dermatologist use one EHR for both medical and cosmetic patients?

    Yes, if the EHR supports native dual billing lanes. Edvak routes medical encounters through Claims Management and cosmetic encounters through Payment Processing, both writing back to one patient record. Practices that route both through a single billing lane end up with manual reconciliation, miscoded visits, or two separate tools, all of which add admin time the physician absorbs. For patient intake that supports both visit types, see Patient Intake with Auto Charting and Patient Engagement. 

  • How long does EHR implementation take for a small dermatology practice?

    Cloud-based platforms built for small practices typically go live in 4 to 8 weeks. Edvak's implementation timeline is 4 to 5 weeks for a solo or small practice, including data migration from other systems. Enterprise platforms like ModMed run 3 to 6 months for standard installations. The difference comes from system complexity, template configuration volume, and the level of IT involvement required. A solo practice should treat any quoted timeline over 8 weeks as an implementation risk worth clarifying before signing. 

  • What is the best EHR for a solo dermatologist?

    For a solo practice running a hybrid medical and cosmetic workflow, Edvak is the strongest fit in 2026 based on price, AI documentation architecture, hybrid billing, and implementation speed. For a solo surgical dermatologist with high Mohs volume and minimal cosmetics, EZDERM. For a solo practitioner where dermatology is one of several specialties and budget is the primary constraint, DrChrono. For AI-specific recommendations, see our guide on the best AI dermatology EHR in 2026. 

  • Does a small dermatology practice need AI documentation?

    Run the math. At 25 patients per day, a provider spending 10 minutes per patient on post-visit charting accumulates more than 1,000 hours of documentation time per year. An AI-native system that structures notes in real time during the encounter brings post-visit charting close to zero. The question is not whether AI documentation helps. It does. The question is which AI architecture actually delivers that time recovery. AI-native systems structure the SOAP note during the encounter. AI-assisted systems produce a transcript to review afterward. For the full workflow comparison, see our guides on AI documentation workflow for dermatology and the dermatology AI documentation workflow. 

  • Is there a dermatology EHR without a long-term contract?

    Edvak offers flexible contract terms. Confirm month-to-month availability directly with their team. EZDERM requires a 24-month minimum contract. DrChrono typically requires annual contracts with no standard month-to-month option based on user-reported data. ModMed and Nextech carry enterprise contract structures. Any practice evaluating a switch should ask for written exit terms before signing. For broader contract evaluation guidance, see our guide on AI EHR for dermatology practices. 

  • Which dermatology EHR handles both medical and MedSpa workflows natively?

    Edvak and Nextech are the two platforms with the strongest hybrid capability. Edvak handles both in one bundled system at $299 per month. Insurance billing for medical visits and cash-pay collection for cosmetic procedures run in two separate lanes inside one patient record, with injectable lot tracking connected to documentation at the time the note is signed. Nextech provides greater cosmetic depth at a significantly higher price point with custom enterprise pricing. Balanced hybrid practices fit Edvak. Cosmetic-dominant practices where aesthetics represent 70% or more of revenue may find Nextech worth the premium. For Patient Engagement tools that support both patient types, Edvak's Advanced EHR Software covers intake, reminders, portal, and communication in one platform. 

  • What certifications should a dermatology EHR have?

    At minimum, a dermatology EHR serving US practices should hold ONC certification under the 21st Century Cures Act, Surescripts certification for e-prescribing, and full HIPAA compliance with encrypted photo storage and audit logging. For practices handling controlled substance prescriptions, EPCS support is required in applicable states. Edvak holds ONC certification, Drummond certification, Surescripts certification, and is HIPAA-compliant across all data types including clinical images. For state-specific compliance detail, see our guides on voice-to-note EHR for California dermatology and speech-to-text EHR for Texas dermatology. 

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