Snehal Gupta: Key Players and Trends Shaping the Future of Healthcare
Snehal Gupta, Team Lead at MarketsandMarkets, shared a post on LinkedIn:
“The report ‘Healthcare Analytics Market by Type (Predictive, Diagnostic), Application (Claim, RCM, Fraud, Precision Health, RWE, Imaging, Supply Chain, Workforce, Population Health), EndUser (Payer, Hospital, ACO, ASC, Govt, Clinic), and Region: Global Forecast to 2029’, is expected to reach USD 133.19 billion by 2029 from USD 44.83 billion in 2024, at a CAGR of 24.3% during 2024–2029.
Download PDF Brochure.
Browse
- 516 Market Data Tables
- 55 Figures
- 410 Pages and in-depth TOC on ‘Healthcare Analytics Market – Global Forecast to 2029’
Some of the prominent key players are:
- IBM (US), SAS Institute Inc. (US),
- Optum, Inc. (US),
- Cerner Corporation (US),
- Allscripts Healthcare, LLC (US),
- Cotiviti, Inc. (US),
- CitiusTech Inc (US), and many more……
Mergers and acquisitions, investments and expansions, partnerships and collaborations, and new product developments are some of the major strategies adopted by these key players to enhance their positions in the Healthcare Analytics Market.
- The growing adoption of Electronic Health Records (EHR), coupled with enhanced decision-making capabilities and ongoing technological advancements, is significantly driving the demand for clinical analytics. Financial analytics emerged as the fastest growing segment, accounting for the second-largest share of the healthcare analytics market.
- Healthcare providers, including hospitals and health systems, are increasingly adopting healthcare analytics to improve patient care and operational efficiency. This shift is driven by the need to effectively manage massive amounts of patient data and improve decision-making using real-time insights.
- By component type, the healthcare analytics market is segmented into services and solutions segment. The service segment accounted for the largest market share in 2023.
Based on application, the Healthcare Analytics market is segmented into financial analytics, clinical analytics, operational and administrative analytics, and population health analytics. - Rising healthcare costs in North America, driven by increased service demand, costly treatments, and operational inefficiencies, have created an urgent need for healthcare analytics. In 2023, the United States spent nearly USD 4.8 trillion on healthcare, with 93.1% of the population covered.
The major factors driving the market growth of the healthcare analytics market include growing pressure to curb healthcare spending and improve patient outcomes, growing venture capital investments in healthcare analytics start-up, growing focus on real-world evidence, rise of telemedicine, remote monitoring and growing pressure to curb healthcare spending and improve patient outcomes and growing venture capital investments in healthcare analytics start-up. The potential of healthcare analytics to improve efficiency and overall care quality has attracted significant venture capital to the sector.”

Stay updated on all scientific advances in the field of fertility with Fertility News.
-
Oct 11, 2025, 06:44The Global IVF Market Is Set to Reach $65B by 2032 – Meddilink
-
Dec 12, 2025, 15:11Webinar on Fertility Preservation in Cancer Care – ESHRE
-
Dec 12, 2025, 14:59Novel Microfluidics Device Enhances Sperm Selection Success – Fertility and Sterility
-
Dec 12, 2025, 14:55Human Embryo Preimplantation Genetic Testing and Phased Validation – Fertility and Sterility
-
Dec 12, 2025, 14:40Unraveling Immune Mechanisms in Reproductive Health – Reproduction and Fertility
-
Dec 12, 2025, 14:30Swarup Chakrabarti: A New Era for IVF Success
-
Dec 12, 2025, 14:25Guidelines Unveiled for Recurrent Pregnancy Loss Management – The ObG Project
-
Dec 12, 2025, 11:31AMWA Advocates for Equitable Care in Endometriosis Treatment – Womb WatchAI
-
Dec 11, 2025, 16:16AI Model Predicts Pregnancy Outcomes Through Endometrial Receptivity Scoring – Future Fertility
-
Dec 11, 2025, 15:55Houssein El Hajj: Training Without Borders: Mobility and Opportunity in Gynaecologic Oncology
