More than 2.2 million cases of chlamydia, gonorrhea, and syphilis were reported in the United States in 2024. Sexually transmitted infections (STIs) remain one of the most persistent public health challenges in our communities. While some case counts have modestly declined year over year, overall STI morbidity is still 13% higher than it was a decade ago. Congenital syphilis continues to rise in vulnerable populations.
Behind every statistic is a person. A young adult navigating stigma. A pregnant mother hoping for a healthy birth outcome. A clinician racing the clock to diagnose and treat before complications set in.
Accurate screening, timely diagnosis, and coordinated care are not optional in this environment. They are essential. At the center of this effort, electronic health records (EHRs) have evolved far beyond digital charts. Today’s EHR systems support clinical decision-making, streamline mandatory reporting, and give leaders clearer visibility into emerging community health needs.
Consistency matters in sexual health screening. EHRs help clinicians document sexual health histories, identify risk factors, and follow Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)-aligned screening protocols.
Structured templates and clinical decision support tools prompt providers to screen based on age, risk profile, pregnancy status, or presenting symptoms. These reminders reduce variability in care and increase the likelihood of catching infections earlier. Earlier detection means faster treatment, fewer complications, and reduced transmission.
When laboratory reporting integrates directly into the EHR, clinicians receive results sooner and can act quickly. Built-in alerts flag positive tests, incomplete treatments, or patients due for retesting. This kind of automation reduces missed follow-ups and supports safer, more complete care. In STI treatment, speed and reliability are critical. Delays can have lasting consequences.
Electronic prescribing and medication reconciliation are embedded directly within modern EHR platforms. These tools help clinicians avoid prescribing errors, identify potential drug interactions, and ensure patients receive the correct treatment promptly.
Electronic prescribing has been shown to reduce prescription delays and minimize medication errors, improving adherence across many conditions, including STIs. When the treatment plan is clear and accessible, patients are more likely to complete it.
Together, these clinical tools create a proactive care environment. Every visit becomes an opportunity to diagnose, treat, educate, and prevent onward transmission.
Historically, providers reported infectious diseases using paper forms, fax machines, or phone calls to health departments. This process consumed valuable clinical time and introduced opportunities for delay or error.
Electronic case reporting (eCR) transforms that workflow. Structured case reports are automatically generated and securely transmitted from the EHR to public health agencies in real time.
This automation:
Reduces administrative burden for clinical and quality teams.
Improves the timeliness and completeness of mandatory reporting.
Helps organizations stay compliant with state and federal requirements without manual re-entry.
Because data flows directly from the point of care into public health systems, agencies receive more accurate information faster. Meanwhile, clinicians regain time to focus on patients.
Structured EHR data strengthens documentation quality. Instead of relying solely on free-text notes, standardized fields support accurate coding, billing alignment, and regulatory compliance.
For administrators and billing teams, this structure reduces audit risk and supports cleaner claims submission. When documentation and reporting align, operational friction decreases.
EHR systems can automatically trigger reminders for appointments, follow-ups, and other notifications. STI care often requires multiple touchpoints. Missed follow-ups can undermine progress.
By reducing care gaps, clinics improve outcomes and strengthen patient engagement. A well-timed reminder can make the difference between an unresolved infection and full recovery.
For healthcare leaders, visibility drives strategy. Modern EHR platforms generate dashboards and analytics that make population trends immediately visible.
Screening rates, treatment completion, demographic disparities, and clinical quality measures can all be tracked in near real time. Leaders gain a clearer understanding of what is happening across programs, clinics, and communities.
Real-time data feeds allow public health leaders to identify geographic hotspots or rising infection rates in specific age groups months earlier than traditional manual reporting systems.
Earlier insight supports earlier intervention. Targeted outreach campaigns, focused education efforts, and resource reallocation can be deployed before trends escalate.
EHR data can reveal screening or treatment gaps across populations by geography, race, age, or socioeconomic status. This visibility supports more equitable program design and culturally responsive care pathways.
When leaders can see disparities clearly, they can act intentionally to reduce them.
Reliable data strengthens grant applications and reporting. Leaders who can demonstrate defined outcomes and measurable improvements are better positioned to secure funding, justify staffing levels, and support policy advocacy.
In STI prevention and treatment, accountability and sustainability go hand in hand.
EHR vendors are increasingly expected to do more than store data. They are asked to enable scalable, compliant public health workflows that support both clinical care and community impact.
Patagonia Health partners with health organizations that vendors who want to strengthen their STD and STI capabilities in meaningful, standards-aligned ways.
We support vendors in developing structured templates and clinical decision support tools that reflect CDC guidance and real-world clinical workflows. The result is smoother adoption across diverse care settings.
Patagonia Health brings deep expertise in electronic case reporting (eCR) standards and integration strategies. Vendors can build compliant, real-time reporting interfaces that support both clinicians and health departments.
From intuitive sexual history documentation to automated follow-up reminders and laboratory integration, our approach centers on usability. When EHR systems align with clinical workflows, care quality improves, and administrative burden decreases.
We help vendors integrate dashboards and quality reporting modules that give healthcare leaders actionable insight into STD trends, care pathway optimization, and equity initiatives.
By partnering with Patagonia Health, health departmentsEHR vendors can evolve beyond basic record systems into connected platforms that strengthen care coordination, reporting accuracy, and community health outcomes.
STD and STI care has always required coordination among clinicians, administrative staff, and public health leaders. Thoughtfully implemented EHR systems are not digital filing cabinets. They are infrastructure for connection and insight.
As healthcare organizations work to reduce infection rates, prevent complications, and advance health equity, EHRs will remain central to progress. When powered by intelligent workflows and strong partnerships, they guide clinical action and strengthen community well-being.
The path forward is not just digital. It is data-informed, collaborative, and human-centered.
EHRs with electronic case reporting (eCR) automatically transmit required reportable disease data to public health agencies. This improves timeliness, accuracy, and compliance while reducing manual work.
Yes. Automated alerts and recall reminders prompt patients to return for retesting or continued treatment, helping close gaps in care.
Faster and more complete reporting supports real-time outbreak tracking, resource prioritization, and evidence-based public health interventions.
Dashboards and quality reports provide visibility into trends, screening rates, disparities, and treatment outcomes. Leaders can allocate resources strategically and design targeted prevention efforts.