Healthcare IT teams are under constant pressure. Staff need to reach each other instantly. Patients expect fast, clear communication. Regulators want airtight security. Leadership wants costs down, and they want them down now.
For a long time, the answer was to add more vendors. One for phone systems. Another for network connectivity. A third for security. A fourth for video. Each solved a specific problem, but together they created a more complex one.
Today, more healthcare IT teams are moving in the opposite direction. They are cutting the vendor list and consolidating communications and network services under one provider. The results are measurable: better uptime, lower costs, simpler compliance, and IT teams that can spend time on what actually moves the needle.
What Is Vendor Sprawl, and Why Does It Hurt Healthcare Organizations?
Vendor sprawl happens when a healthcare organization adopts a different point solution for every problem. One platform for scheduling. Another for patient outreach. A separate system for voice. Different vendors for the network and security layers. Each tool works mostly in isolation, and they rarely communicate well with each other.
Every new vendor adds another contract to manage, another support line to call when something breaks, and another potential failure point in the stack.
The warning signs are familiar to most healthcare IT managers: fragmented workflows, duplicate data entry, long troubleshooting cycles, and staff spending their days chasing down the right vendor contact instead of resolving the actual problem.
According to research from Notable Health, vendor sprawl in healthcare leads directly to data silos, higher training and maintenance requirements, and higher overall costs. In a healthcare environment where fragmented communication can delay care, frustrate clinical staff, and expose the organization to compliance risk, those costs carry real consequences.
Healthcare Downtime Carries Costs That Go Beyond the Spreadsheet
When communications or network services go down in a hospital or clinic, the fallout extends well beyond a frustrating afternoon. Downtime halts ambulance arrivals, delays surgeries, forces staff back to paper workflows, and creates direct risk to patients who depend on connected care.
The financial numbers are significant. According to Censinet research, healthcare downtime costs hospitals an average of $7,500 per minute, amounting to roughly $450,000 per hour. Facility size matters too: industry data from The Network Installers puts the range at $5,300 to $9,000 per minute depending on the organization.
According to CapMinds, nearly 96% of healthcare organizations report at least one unplanned system outage, and 70% have experienced an outage lasting eight hours or more.
Here is where the multi-vendor problem compounds the damage. When a network issue occurs, the first challenge is figuring out which vendor is responsible before anyone can start fixing it. Is it the telecom provider? The UC platform? The network hardware vendor? The security layer? Each vendor points to the others, and the clock keeps running the entire time.
Uptime Institute research, cited by The Network Installers, found that third-party network provider failures are responsible for 39% of network outages. When six different vendors are involved in a communications stack, that risk multiplies across every layer. A single-vendor approach eliminates the finger-pointing and compresses the time from problem identification to resolution.
How a Single Provider Improves Uptime Across the Communications Stack
When your healthcare communications platform and your network come from the same provider, accountability is clear. There is one support team, one SLA, and one escalation path when something goes wrong. That clarity matters more than most organizations realize until they are in the middle of an outage.
Healthcare facilities operate around the clock. The goal is near “five nines” availability, meaning 99.999% uptime, which translates to just over five minutes of allowable downtime per year. Getting there requires tight integration between every layer of the technology stack. According to IR.com’s healthcare UC analysis, achieving that level of availability in healthcare requires comprehensive observability across the full communications environment, something that is exponentially harder to deliver across a fragmented, multi-vendor stack.
When network and communications are managed by the same vendor, the infrastructure is designed to work together from the start. Failover is faster because there are no handoffs between organizations during an incident. Monitoring covers the full stack. Escalations reach the right team without bouncing between companies.
That integration also gives IT teams the visibility to get ahead of issues before they become outages. A unified platform shows the entire environment in one place, making it easier to identify network bottlenecks, aging equipment, or configuration drift before any of it disrupts clinical workflows.
See also: Bundled Communications for Healthcare: Better Scheduling, Reminders, and Call Routing
The Financial Case for Consolidating Communications and Network Vendors
The cost argument for consolidation stands on its own, separate from the reliability benefits. Healthcare organizations are managing operating margins that average just 1.4%, according to Kaufman Hall. Duplicate contracts, redundant infrastructure, and IT hours spent managing vendor relationships all represent waste that is hard to justify in that environment.
Research from Clarify Health published in January 2025 highlights that vendor consolidation creates measurable cost savings for hospitals, alongside significant reductions in compliance and security overhead. When IT is not managing seven different vendor relationships, that time returns to productive work.
Purchasing leverage also improves with consolidation. A healthcare organization that sources network, UC, security, and managed services from one provider has more negotiating power than one with a fragmented stack. That typically translates to better pricing, higher support tiers, and more favorable contract terms.
The hidden cost of downtime decreases as well. In a multi-vendor environment, time-to-resolution is longer because the troubleshooting process is inherently slower. A unified provider resolves issues faster, which directly reduces the cost of every incident that does occur.
Fewer Vendors Means a Simpler HIPAA Compliance Footprint
HIPAA compliance is one of the most significant ongoing operational burdens a healthcare IT team carries. Every vendor that touches protected health information (PHI) requires a Business Associate Agreement (BAA). Every BAA requires review, tracking, and renewal. Every additional vendor introduces another potential compliance gap into the environment.
HHS recorded more than 775 healthcare data breaches in 2024 alone. Healthcare organizations typically allocate only 4 to 7 percent of their IT budgets to cybersecurity, compared to roughly 15 percent in financial services. That gap creates genuine exposure, and a sprawling vendor landscape makes it harder to close.
Proposed updates to the HIPAA Security Rule in 2025 are pushing organizations toward tighter vendor oversight, more frequent audits, and stricter incident reporting timelines. Managing those requirements across a large vendor list is a significant operational challenge. According to HIPAA compliance analysis from Dynaflow Solutions, modern healthcare organizations often have dozens of business associates with varying levels of PHI access, each one representing a compliance touchpoint that requires ongoing attention.
A single provider for communications and network means fewer BAAs to manage, a smaller attack surface, and one security framework to audit rather than six separate ones. For IT and compliance teams already stretched across competing priorities, that reduction in complexity has direct operational value.
What to Look for in a Consolidated Communications and Network Provider
Not every vendor that claims to offer everything in one place actually delivers it. Healthcare organizations evaluating a consolidated provider should prioritize the following criteria:
- Unified support with a single point of contact. If your team still has to call three different organizations when something breaks, the core problem has not been solved.
- Healthcare-specific compliance knowledge. HIPAA requirements are distinct from generic IT security requirements. Your provider should understand the difference and demonstrate that knowledge in how they configure and support your environment.
- Flexible deployment options. Healthcare environments range from fully cloud-ready to heavily on-premises, with most sitting somewhere in between. A reliable provider supports all of it without requiring a full infrastructure replacement on day one.
- Documented uptime SLAs with defined consequences. Uptime claims are common across the industry. The ones that matter include specific recovery time objectives and clear accountability when those objectives are missed.
- A verifiable track record in healthcare specifically. Enterprise UC experience in other industries does not automatically transfer. Healthcare communications environments have unique requirements around redundancy, compliance, and workflow that require direct experience to support well.
Where This Is Heading: AI Voice Infrastructure in Healthcare
The push toward consolidation is accelerating, and AI is a significant part of why. Healthcare IT teams are beginning to layer AI-powered voice tools into their communications infrastructure, including automated call routing that understands patient context, real-time transcription for clinical documentation, and intelligent triage capabilities at the front desk.
These capabilities depend on the underlying communications and network infrastructure being stable and unified. AI tools built on a fragmented stack tend to produce fragmented, unreliable results. The organizations that will capture the most value from AI in their communications are the ones that have already invested in a clean, integrated infrastructure foundation.
Competitors are moving in this direction, bundling AI features into their existing platforms. Healthcare organizations, however, need more than a bundled feature set. They need a provider with proven knowledge of their specific deployment environment, whether that is a cloud-based system, a hybrid configuration, or a fully on-premises PBX that remains a core part of their infrastructure for years to come.
How Sangoma Helps Healthcare Organizations Consolidate and Simplify
More vendors does not produce more reliability. In most cases, it produces the opposite: more contracts to manage, more potential failure points, more time spent on vendor coordination, and a larger compliance surface area that grows harder to manage over time.
Sangoma’s communications solutions for healthcare give organizations a single provider for the full communications and network stack. From healthcare phone systems, SIP trunking, and the Sangoma CX® contact center platform, Sangoma covers the communications layer across cloud, hybrid, and on-premises deployments.
Beyond communications, Sangoma also provides the network and connectivity services that healthcare organizations depend on, including managed networking, 5G access, managed VPN, and network security. That means one provider, one support relationship, and one infrastructure partner accountable for both voice and network performance.
For healthcare IT teams looking to reduce vendor complexity, strengthen uptime, and build a foundation that supports AI-powered voice infrastructure over time, Sangoma offers the depth and flexibility to get there without a full rip-and-replace.
To learn more about how Sangoma supports healthcare communications and network infrastructure, contact a Sangoma rep or a Sangoma partner today.
