The historical bifurcation of dentistry and medicine has resulted in a fragmented healthcare ecosystem characterized by isolated data repositories, disjointed clinical workflows, and compromised patient safety. This comprehensive meta-analysis evaluates the critical imperative for transitioning from disparate "best-of-breed" dental software to unified, enterprise-grade Electronic Health Record (EHR) platforms, with a specific focus on the Epic Systems ecosystem and its dental module, Wisdom. By synthesizing data from peer-reviewed literature, institutional case studies including the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, UT Health San Antonio, and the University of Mississippi Medical Center, and health economic analyses, this report demonstrates that unified platforms are not merely administrative enhancements but clinical necessities. The analysis reveals that integrated systems significantly reduce medication reconciliation errors, unlock substantial cost savings through the co-management of chronic conditions such as diabetes and periodontal disease, streamline complex revenue cycles, and facilitate large-scale epidemiological research. We argue that the adoption of unified EHRs is the foundational technological requirement for bridging the medical-dental divide, thereby achieving the "Triple Aim" of healthcare: improved patient experience, better population health, and reduced per capita costs.
Owen R Thornton (Fri,) studied this question.