Modernize healthcare software

Solbeg helps healthcare
and healthtech clients modernize
platforms in a controlled, phased
way — preserving workflows
while de-risking operations.

Solbeg helps healthcare
and healthtech clients modernize
platforms in a controlled, phased
way — preserving workflows
while de-risking operations.

Modernize

healthcare

software

Modernize

healthcare software


What brings organizations to us

The system is old but still in daily operational use

Replacing it is too risky. Leaving it unchanged is becoming a growing constraint.

Every change carries disproportionate risk

The codebase is fragile. New features take too long and come with unacceptable delivery risk.

Integration with other systems is difficult

Connecting to current platforms requires effort that far exceeds what the value justifies.


How we solve it

Application assessment

Risk mapping before any changes begin

Legacy platform renewal

Framework and stack upgrades in stages

Phased migration

Modernization aligned to operational realities

Integration readiness

API and interface layer improvements

Continuity support

System maintained and stable throughout


What we bring

Healthcare domain experience

Solbeg brings hands-on experience working with healthcare and wellness platforms across different segments of the industry.

  • Appointment scheduling and patient management systems  
  • Medical marketing and engagement platforms  
  • Pharmacy procurement and supply chain solutions  
  •  Integration with third-party healthcare systems and services  
  • Wellbeing and rehabilitation platforms  
  • IoT and medical device software  
  • Telemedicine and remote care applications 
  • Support for regulatory processes, including FDA-related documentation  

In addition, Solbeg has developed and continues to support a cross-platform social network designed for communication between healthcare professionals and patients — including private and public groups, peer communities, and secure, HIPAA-compliant messaging. 


Techlology:

.NET
REACT NATIVE
JAVA
Python
PHP
C/C++
flutter
objective – c
kotlin
swift

50+

СOMPLETED
PROJECTS


The real constraint

Healthcare software rarely exists in isolation. It is woven into operations, workflows, and systems that cannot pause while a replacement is built.

In Solbeg projects, these are typically systems deeply integrated with internal tools, third-party services, and data flows where even a small change can have downstream impact across operations. 

Scheduling platforms, clinical administration tools, patient record handling, billing, reporting — these are not standalone applications that can be switched off while a new version is prepared in parallel.

The logic embedded in these systems — years of workflow decisions, edge cases, and integration behavior — is rarely fully documented anywhere outside the code itself. The people who built it have moved on.

That is what makes healthcare software modernization more demanding than modernizing a general-purpose business application. The tolerance for disruption is lower, and the cost of getting it wrong is higher.

What a controlled path looks like

Modernization does not require a replacement event. It requires a plan that improves the system incrementally while keeping it fully operational throughout.

The technology stack gets updated. The codebase becomes easier to maintain. The integration layer becomes more capable. And all of that happens while the workflows it currently supports continue without interruption.

Solbeg maps the current state of the system, identifies where the highest risk and constraint is concentrated, and builds a modernization roadmap that can be executed in stages — each stage delivering visible improvement without requiring a pause in operations.

This is not about avoiding change. It is about managing change in a way that healthcare operations can actually absorb.


  • Phased — no forced
    replacement
  • Clinical workflows
    preserved throughout
  • 30+ years of software
    delivery

8

Modernization Workstreams
Available

30+

Years of Engineering

500+

Completed Projects

100M+

End Users
of Our Products


Common situations

Modernization challenges in healthcare software

These are the patterns that appear consistently in healthcare platforms that have been in operation for several years or more.

Outdated frameworks and unsupported dependencies

The technology stack was built on components that are no longer maintained. Security patches are unavailable. Dependency upgrades are blocked by cascading compatibility issues.

Integration with existing systems is increasingly difficult

The application was designed for a different integration landscape. Each new connection requires disproportionate effort — a custom workaround, not a proper integration.

Fragile architecture where safe changes are hard to make

The system has accumulated years of patches and extensions. Components are coupled in ways that were never planned. Engineers avoid modifying certain modules.

Business and workflow logic embedded in opaque code

The system encodes significant operational logic that was never properly documented. Understanding what it does requires reverse engineering from the codebase itself.

User flows that no longer match current operational needs

The application was designed around workflows that have changed. Users have developed manual workarounds. Administrative overhead grows as the software falls behind.

Growing maintenance burden and operational exposure

The cost of keeping the system stable is increasing. Performance problems appear more frequently. Engineering capacity consumed by maintenance rather than improvement.


Scope of work

What healthcare software modernization can include

Modernization is a structured program. The scope in any given engagement is defined by where the most meaningful constraints actually are — not by a fixed service menu.

Foundation

Application assessment and modernization roadmap

A structured review of the system's architecture, codebase, dependencies, and integration landscape. The output is a prioritized modernization roadmap — practical, sequenced by risk and operational impact.

Stabilization

Refactoring of high-risk and high-complexity modules

Targeted refactoring of the areas where fragility, accumulated debt, or hidden dependencies create the highest operational cost. External behavior is preserved — only internal structure improves.

Stack renewal

Framework and library upgrades

Migrating from end-of-life or outdated technology to supported versions. Runtime environments, backend frameworks, front-end libraries, and build tooling — staged to minimize disruption.

Interface

UI renewal for operational workflows

Modernizing the front-end layer for workflows where the current interface is a genuine operational problem — without rebuilding the underlying system logic.

Integration

API and integration layer modernization

Replacing point-to-point integrations with a properly structured API layer. Improving interoperability with current healthcare and enterprise systems.

Data

Database and infrastructure updates

Schema migration, database engine upgrades, query optimization — executed with careful data integrity validation at each step.

Quality

Automated testing introduction

Building test coverage around the most critical, most frequently changed, or least understood areas. This is what makes it possible to modify the system safely at each subsequent phase.

Architecture

Phased migration to newer architecture

Where the long-term direction requires architectural change — decoupling components, restructuring data flows — Solbeg supports this as a phased migration alongside the running system.


Why Solbeg

Why healthcare organizations modernize software with Solbeg

Solbeg has experience working with complex, long-lifecycle systems where operational continuity is critical including platforms supporting high-frequency usage and integration-heavy environments. Specific reasons that matter when the software being modernized supports operational processes that cannot be disrupted.

Assessment before any action

Every engagement begins with a structured assessment. We document what the system does, where the risk is concentrated, and what the integration dependencies are before a single change is planned.

Workflow logic treated as valuable

The logic embedded in healthcare software reflects years of real operational decisions. Solbeg treats that as something to understand and preserve — not as a burden to discard.

The system keeps running throughout

Changes are introduced incrementally and verified against the existing system's behavior before deployment. There is no hard cutover event where the organization absorbs significant operational risk.

Priorities set by operational impact

Solbeg works with clients to prioritize the areas that reduce the most meaningful operational constraints first — not the ones that are most technically interesting to address.

Maintenance and modernization run in parallel

Organizations cannot freeze feature delivery while a modernization program runs. Solbeg handles both — ongoing maintenance alongside the planned workstreams — within the same engagement.

Integration awareness from the start

Healthcare systems rarely operate alone. Integration constraints are mapped in the assessment phase and shape the modernization plan from the beginning — not as an afterthought.


Two paths compared

Full replacement versus phased modernization

Both approaches can be appropriate. The right one depends on the system, the organization, and the operational risk the business can realistically absorb.

Option A

Full replacement from scratch

Build a new system in parallel and transition at a defined cutover point.

  • Large initial investment before any production value is delivered
  • Long timeline — typically years for systems of significant operational dependency
  • High risk of losing embedded workflow logic that was never fully documented
  • The existing system must be maintained in full until the replacement is operational
  • Cutover is a significant operational event with its own disruption risk
  • Appropriate only when the system is genuinely beyond recovery
For most mature healthcare systems with active operational dependencies, this is a higher-risk and more expensive path than necessary.

Option B — often the more practical fit

Phased modernization

Improve the existing system incrementally, in a sequence aligned to operational priorities.

  • Earlier delivery of measurable value — each phase produces visible improvement
  • Workflow logic is handled in context, with existing behavior as a reference
  • Operational continuity maintained throughout — no hard cutover event
  • Risk distributed across smaller, verifiable changes rather than concentrated at a single migration moment
  • Priorities adjusted as organizational needs evolve during the program
  • Architectural migration incorporated as a planned phase where genuinely needed
For most healthcare platforms that still support active workflows, phased modernization is the more controlled and more practical path forward.

Engagement process

How a healthcare modernization engagement runs

A structured approach from initial system review through to ongoing delivery — while the system stays operational at every stage.

SYSTEM UPTIME Assessement Roadmap ready Roadmap Priorities defined Modernize Per-phase delivery Evolve Ongoing support 01 02 03 04 100%

Assess the current system and operational constraints

Solbeg reviews the codebase, architecture, dependencies, and integration landscape. We document the system's behavior and identify the highest-risk areas that must be preserved throughout.

Define modernization priorities and roadmap

Based on the assessment, Solbeg and the client define a prioritized roadmap — which areas to address first, what each phase delivers, and how the sequence minimizes operational disruption.

Modernize high-impact areas in phases

Work proceeds in defined phases, each with a specific scope and clear success criteria. The system remains fully operational throughout. Results are verifiable at each stage.

Support, stabilize, and evolve over time

After initial phases, Solbeg continues supporting maintenance and further modernization. Engineers who worked on earlier phases carry the context forward.


Working model

How Solbeg works with your team during modernization

Healthcare modernization requires close coordination with people who understand both the system and the operations it supports. We work with your knowledge, not around it.

Stakeholder and domain coordination

  • Internal engineers and product stakeholders are involved directly from the assessment stage — not consulted only at defined milestones
  • Business and operational context shapes modernization priorities, not just the technical risk profile
  • Domain knowledge captured during assessment is documented and transferred — not held only within the Solbeg team
  • Internal team members participate in the process, building familiarity with the changed codebase as work progresses

Continuity through the program

  • The system remains operational throughout all modernization phases — no planned service interruption unless a specific migration step genuinely requires one
  • Ongoing bug fixes, stability work, and minor delivery continue alongside modernization workstreams where needed
  • Rollback procedures and validation criteria are defined before each deployment
  • Changes are sized and sequenced to keep each deployment verifiable and recoverable where possible

Transparency and delivery reporting

  • Each phase has a defined scope, timeline, and success criteria before work begins
  • Risk status and delivery progress are reported on a regular, predictable cadence
  • Changes that affect workflow behavior or integration points are escalated for explicit stakeholder review and approval

Long-term engineering presence

  • Engineers from assessment and early phases stay engaged through later ones — context accumulates rather than resetting
  • Solbeg supports future development after initial phases — the same team that modernized the system can continue to extend it
  • Recommendations for future evolution are grounded in the system’s actual state, not generic patterns

Where this applies

Healthcare systems and situations where phased modernization fits best

These are the contexts where the approach delivers consistent, reliable value compared to a full replacement program.

Mature healthcare platforms still in active use

Software in continuous operation for years, carrying significant technical debt while still supporting active users and operational workflows the business depends on daily.

Internal medical and administrative systems

Scheduling, patient administration, billing, reporting systems deeply embedded in daily operations that cannot be taken offline for an extended replacement program.

Telemedicine and remote care platforms

Applications built during rapid growth that now need architectural stabilization, performance improvement, and better integration with clinical backend systems.

Patient-facing applications that need renewal

Software where the front-end layer has fallen behind current usability expectations, but the underlying business logic should be preserved rather than rebuilt.

Software integrated into a broader enterprise ecosystem

Systems connected to other platforms where changes have downstream effects that must be carefully planned, validated, and communicated before deployment.

Organizations that need a staged path, not a replacement event

Healthcare organizations where a multi-year parallel replacement program is not a realistic option — but a phased program can be executed within normal delivery capacity.


What organizations look for

“In healthcare, the standard for modernization is not ‘build something newer.’ It is ‘improve what exists without introducing new risks into an environment that cannot afford them.'”

The organizations that come to Solbeg for healthcare software modernization are not looking for transformation programs. They are looking for a practical path to reduce technical risk, improve maintainability, and give their teams a system that is easier to extend — while keeping critical operations uninterrupted throughout.

What matters in practice

Operational continuity

The system keeps running. No planned outage. No period where operational workflows are suspended or moved to manual alternatives.

Preserved workflow logic

Business rules, edge cases, and integration behavior accumulated over years are understood and maintained throughout the modernization process.

Integration awareness

Changes are planned with full visibility into downstream effects on connected platforms, services, and data flows before they are made.

A practical roadmap

A modernization sequence realistic within the organization’s actual constraints — not a theoretical plan that requires pausing normal business activity.


FAQ

Common questions

In most cases, no. A full rewrite is appropriate in specific circumstances — when the system is genuinely beyond recovery, the business logic is well documented, and the organization can sustain a long parallel effort. For most mature healthcare platforms with active operational dependencies, a phased modernization approach is less disruptive, less expensive, and better preserves the embedded workflow logic that a rewrite could easily lose.

Yes. Phased modernization is specifically designed around the requirement that the system keeps running throughout the process. Changes are introduced incrementally, validated against existing behavior, and deployed in a way that preserves operational continuity. There is no scheduled outage unless a specific migration step genuinely requires one.

Risk reduction starts before the first change. The assessment maps the system’s structure, identifies high-risk areas, and documents the behavior that must be preserved. Changes are made in small, verifiable increments. Each deployment has a defined validation procedure and a rollback path. Stakeholders are involved in decisions that affect workflow behavior.

Yes. Partial or outdated documentation is the norm for healthcare systems that have been operating for several years. The assessment process works directly with the codebase, the running system, and available internal knowledge to reconstruct an accurate picture of what the system does and why it behaves the way it does.

Yes. Ongoing maintenance, bug fixing, and stability work run alongside the planned modernization workstreams — not as a separate engagement. A team that understands the system well enough to modernize it safely is also well placed to maintain it. Solbeg handles both within the same engagement model.

Prioritization is based on a combination of operational risk, delivery constraint, and business impact. The assessment identifies the areas with the highest fragility, the most significant integration dependencies, or the greatest impact on delivery speed. Final prioritization is done jointly with the client — because the business context, the operational calendar, and the organization’s actual capacity for change all shape what should be addressed first.

Yes. Modernization covers any layer of the system where there is a meaningful constraint — the front-end layer, the integration architecture, the data model, the infrastructure, and the build and deployment pipeline. The scope of any given engagement is defined by where the most significant constraints actually are.

Modernization is not a program with a fixed end date. After the initial phases, Solbeg can continue supporting the system — handling maintenance, delivering new functionality, and executing further modernization phases as priorities evolve. The same team that worked on earlier phases carries the accumulated context forward.


Getting Started

Let's start with an honest look at where your system stands

The right first step is understanding the actual state of the system — what the risk is, what the realistic modernization path looks like, and what your organization can practically execute. That conversation does not require any commitment to a program.

  • No disruption to your operations during the assessment
  • Partially or undocumented systems are the norm — not a barrier
  • Maintenance and modernization can run in parallel from day one
  • We respond within one business day

Let’s get to work

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