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CorCare: Transforming Health Care in NL
Launching in spring 2026, the new CorCare health information system (HIS) will modernize the health-care system in this province.
In the largest health-care system evolution ever launched in Newfoundland and Labrador, CorCare will replace outdated digital health systems with one province-wide health information system, that will enable the collection, management, storage and transmission of electronic medical records.
CorCare will transform health-care delivery.
Keep visiting this website for more information as the project rolls out.
CorCare will:
- Optimize patient care delivery
- Standardize clinical workflows
- Improve interdisciplinary coordination
- Strengthen security
- Increase access to information
- Reduce error rates
Updates
News Release
NL Health Services Readying to Launch CorCare Health Information System
April 1, 2026
Newfoundland and Labrador (NL) Health Services is set to launch CorCare, a new province-wide digital health information system at sites across the province on April 25, 2026. This new health system marks the largest digital project to be undertaken to date in Newfoundland and Labrador. It will provide a holistic and coordinated approach to health care for the benefit of patients and health-care providers.
“The launch of CorCare marks a major step forward for health care delivery in Newfoundland and Labrador,” said Ron Johnson, CEO (Interim) of NL Health Services. “With patients at the centre, this modern system will improve access to health information, appointment management, and test results, while supporting more personalized care and better health outcomes for people across the province.”
About CorCare
10 things to know about CorCare
Glossary
The Basics
Beyond the Basics
Services during CorCare launch period
NL Health Services has been preparing for the implementation of CorCare and has plans in place to mitigate any potential short-term impacts on services at both hospitals and community sites (e.g. family care teams or public health).
Services will continue as usual
Inpatient services, urgent/emergent services, medical imaging and non-elective hospital services will continue as usual in the days leading up and during the launch of the new CorCare system.
Emergency departments throughout the province will provide services as usual. During this transition, some services may take a little longer as our teams adjust to a new way of working. We have thoughtfully, carefully and proactively planned ahead to maintain schedules and work out flexible hours during the temporary transition period around the launch of CorCare.
For example, we are adding extra staff and additional health-care providers who have been specifically trained in the new system will be located at health-care sites to assist staff. Usual operations will continue for most clinical services.
Temporary adjustments during the transition
This phased approach creates time within the day for anticipated slowdowns as physicians and staff learn new ways of working, followed by a planned recovery period.
For example, specialty clinics and elective surgeries, such as orthopedics, ear, nose and throat (ENT) and plastic surgery, may be impacted during the launch. To put this in context, each service may only have one or two days during the entire launch period (of several weeks) when they would do one less case. Regular scheduling will resume promptly following the launch.
Patient appointments
If you have an appointment booked during this transition period, it will not be affected. No appointments have been cancelled.
Examples of this transition period include:
- performing fewer elective surgeries in operating rooms and specialty clinics for approximately three weeks which is a similar approach we take to manage appointments during the summer holiday period and other slower periods;
- reducing one or two appointments a day at outpatient clinics;
- some services (including non-patient activities such as educational sessions and training) at community sites that provide public health, primary care and other services; however, patients will still be able to make appointments;
- adding extra staff and trained super users of the new digital system in various areas such as emergency department and operating rooms;
- offering virtual services in rural areas where there may be one health-care provider to help continue to provide services as usual.
Looking ahead
We ask patients and clients to please be kind and understanding as we begin using this new system. The result will be better care and better health for everyone.
Our priority remains providing quality care in a timely manner. Once implemented, CorCare will give patients one unified record accessible anywhere in the province, supporting seamless, coordinated care across sites and specialties.
