
The consolidation creates a single data backbone for clinical and business functions, boosting operational efficiency and enabling scalable, data‑driven decision‑making in a rapidly growing market.
The healthcare sector in the Middle East is accelerating its shift to cloud‑based platforms, and Alrajhi Medicine’s partnership with Oracle exemplifies this trend. By moving to Oracle Health Foundation and Fusion Cloud, the network gains a modern, interoperable architecture that eliminates data silos between clinical and back‑office systems. This integration not only streamlines patient record management but also embeds advanced analytics and AI, allowing clinicians and administrators to derive actionable insights from a single source of truth.
For ERP professionals, the Alrajhi case underscores a broader industry pivot: enterprise resource planning is evolving from a financial ledger to the operational spine of healthcare organizations. Unified data models now demand ERP teams to oversee workforce planning, financial forecasting, and compliance reporting across clinical workflows. The embedded analytics in Oracle’s suite empower real‑time performance monitoring, which is critical for hospitals managing complex cost structures and regulatory requirements.
The strategic implications extend beyond Alrajhi Medicine. As Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 drives investment in private healthcare, providers will increasingly seek scalable, cloud‑native solutions that can grow with expanding facility networks. Vendors that can deliver end‑to‑end, industry‑specific ERP and EHR integrations will capture a growing market share, while legacy system owners face mounting pressure to modernize. This transformation not only enhances patient care but also positions Saudi healthcare as a competitive, technology‑forward sector on the global stage.
Alrajhi Medicine, a private healthcare network operating multi-specialty hospitals and medical centers in Saudi Arabia, said it has selected Oracle to replace and consolidate its clinical and enterprise systems.
The organization plans to deploy Oracle Health Foundation electronic health record (EHR) alongside Oracle Fusion Cloud Applications. The implementation will connect clinical systems with finance, HR, and operational applications on a single cloud-based platform.
According to the companies, Alrajhi Medicine is the first private healthcare group in Saudi Arabia to adopt both Oracle Health and Oracle Fusion Applications as part of the same transformation program.
Alrajhi Medicine is expanding its hospital and clinic footprint and sought technology capable of supporting operations across multiple facilities. The project is intended to centralize patient records, financial management, and workforce data within a unified environment.
Omar Turjman, chief information officer at Alrajhi Medicine, said the organization is replacing legacy systems to standardize processes and support long-term growth across its network.
Oracle Health Foundation EHR will serve as the core clinical system, while Oracle Fusion Cloud Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), Enterprise Performance Management (EPM), and Human Capital Management (HCM) will manage finance, planning, and HR functions. The applications include embedded analytics and automation features.
In a statement, Seema Verma, executive vice president and general manager of Oracle Health and Life Sciences, said “Oracle’s comprehensive healthcare offerings with advanced AI capabilities uniquely align with Alrajhi Medicine’s vision of modern technology that will transform healthcare. Our end-to-end approach offers scalability for future growth and continuous innovation.”
ERP is becoming the operational backbone of unified healthcare data. As clinical and enterprise systems converge, unified data models move from aspiration to requirement, giving ERP teams greater responsibility for forecasting, workforce planning, and financial visibility across the enterprise.
Large-scale system replacements signal continued demand for modernization expertise. As providers retire legacy environments in favor of integrated cloud platforms, ERP teams should expect increased involvement in data migration, process redesign, and cross-system governance.
Industry-specific ERP deployments are accelerating. Healthcare organizations have complex regulatory, workforce, and cost structures, making standardized cloud architectures attractive for scaling operations while maintaining control.
The post Alrajhi Medicine Replaces Legacy Systems with Oracle Cloud ERP and EHR appeared first on ERP Today.
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