Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Medicaid Cuts Are Not the Healthcare Crisis. They Are the Warning Signal.

 


“The good physician treats the disease; the great physician treats the patient who has the disease.” — William Osler


A 33-Year-Old Woman, Her Family, and the Healthcare System Failure Nobody Wants to Discuss

Every morning, 33-year-old Alexia Flory faces a challenge most of us never think about.

Getting out of bed.

Not because she lacks determination.

Not because she lacks intelligence.

Not because she lacks ambition.

Alexia has cerebral palsy. Her condition affects her muscles and limits her ability to complete many daily activities independently.

But despite those challenges, she built a life.

She earned a college degree.

She continued her education.

She developed relationships.

She became an example of what is possible when the right support system exists.

That support system was not just medical care.

It was something much bigger.

It was a network of caregivers, family support, and Medicaid-funded services that allowed her to live at home, participate in her community, and maintain independence.

Then that system became uncertain.

Proposed Medicaid-related reductions threatened the caregiver support that helped make her independence possible.

Her family faced an impossible question:

What happens when the healthcare system that keeps someone independent becomes financially unstable?

For Alexia’s family, this was not an abstract policy debate.

It was not a political talking point.

It was not a number on a government spreadsheet.

It was their daily life.

Her parents worried about losing the support that allowed their daughter to remain at home.

They worried about caregiver shortages.

They worried about exhausting their own financial resources.

They worried about what happens when a system designed to protect vulnerable patients begins creating vulnerability itself.

And this is where physicians need to pay attention.

Because Alexia’s story is not only about Medicaid.

It is about the future of healthcare.


The Medicaid Debate Is Missing the Bigger Healthcare Problem

The public conversation often frames Medicaid as a question of government spending.

How much should we spend?

How much should we cut?

How do we control costs?

Those questions matter.

But physicians see another layer.

A deeper problem.

A more uncomfortable problem.

Healthcare has become a system where access depends not only on medical need, but on operational survival.

The patient needs care.

The physician wants to provide care.

The caregiver wants to support care.

But between those three points sits an increasingly complicated machine:

  • Insurance requirements.
  • Documentation rules.
  • Prior authorizations.
  • Coding requirements.
  • Claim submissions.
  • Appeals.
  • Compliance obligations.
  • Administrative delays.

The result?

The healthcare system spends enormous energy managing healthcare instead of delivering healthcare.


Healthcare Does Not Only Have a Funding Problem

It has a friction problem.

This is the conversation we rarely have.

When healthcare funding becomes tighter, most people immediately look at reimbursement rates.

But what if part of the problem is hidden waste inside the system?

What if billions of dollars disappear because healthcare processes are inefficient?

What if physician practices are losing resources not because physicians are providing poor care, but because the infrastructure supporting care is outdated?

A denied claim is not just a billing inconvenience.

It creates a ripple effect.

A denied claim can mean:

  • Less revenue for hiring staff.
  • Less investment in technology.
  • Longer patient wait times.
  • More physician burnout.
  • Less capacity for underserved communities.

The healthcare industry often treats administrative inefficiency as a business issue.

It is not.

It is a patient care issue.


The Physician Paradox: Doctors Are Responsible for Outcomes They Cannot Fully Control

Modern physicians carry an extraordinary burden.

They are expected to:

  • Deliver high-quality care.
  • Improve patient outcomes.
  • Reduce costs.
  • Document perfectly.
  • Navigate insurance rules.
  • Maintain compliance.
  • Manage financial sustainability.

The contradiction?

Many physicians have less control over the operational systems determining whether their care can continue.

A physician can make the right diagnosis.

Choose the appropriate treatment.

Provide excellent care.

And still face:

  • Delayed reimbursement.
  • Coverage restrictions.
  • Administrative barriers.
  • Claim denials.

The clinical decision may be correct.

The operational pathway may still fail.


The Healthcare Industry’s Biggest Blind Spot

We have spent decades asking:

“How do we create better medicine?”

But we have spent less time asking:

“How do we create a better system for delivering medicine?”

Healthcare innovation has often focused on visible problems:

  • New drugs.
  • New devices.
  • New procedures.
  • New digital platforms.

These are important.

But some of healthcare’s biggest problems exist in invisible infrastructure.

The workflow between:

Patient visit → Documentation → Coding → Claim → Payment → Sustainable care

That pathway determines whether a clinic survives.

Yet it receives far less attention than clinical innovation.


Why Medicaid Pressure Should Matter to Every Physician Owner

Some physicians may think:

“I do not treat Medicaid patients.”

“This policy issue does not directly affect my practice.”

But healthcare systems are interconnected.

When reimbursement pressure increases in one area, consequences spread.

The same forces affect:

  • Independent practices.
  • Specialty clinics.
  • Primary care offices.
  • Community health providers.
  • Hospital systems.

The pattern is familiar:

More complexity.

More administrative workload.

More pressure on margins.

Less time for patients.


The Real Healthcare Technology Opportunity: Reduce Friction

The healthcare industry does not need more technology for technology’s sake.

Physicians are not asking for another login.

Another dashboard.

Another complicated workflow.

They want something much simpler:

Help me spend more time caring for patients and less time fighting the system.

The next generation of healthcare technology should focus on:

1. Better Data Capture

Many downstream problems begin upstream.

Incomplete information creates:

  • Coding errors.
  • Claim delays.
  • Documentation problems.

Better data quality creates better outcomes.

 

2. Intelligent Automation

Automation should remove repetitive administrative work.

Not replace physician judgment.

The goal is not:

“Make healthcare more robotic.”

The goal is:

“Make healthcare more human by removing unnecessary tasks.”

 

3. Transparent Operations

Physician owners need visibility.

They need to understand:

  • Where revenue is lost.
  • Why claims fail.
  • Where workflows break.
  • Which processes need improvement.

You cannot improve what you cannot see.


The AI Healthcare Debate Is Focused on the Wrong Question

Many discussions about AI ask:

“Will AI replace doctors?”

That question attracts attention.

But it may not be the most important question.

A better question:

“Can AI remove the administrative friction preventing doctors from doing what only doctors can do?”

Healthcare has no shortage of intelligence.

It has a shortage of efficient systems.

AI’s greatest opportunity may not be replacing expertise.

It may be protecting expertise.


Three Expert Perspectives on the Future of Healthcare Operations

Expert Perspective #1: Patient Access Depends on Sustainable Systems

Healthcare leaders consistently emphasize that access requires more than insurance coverage.

Patients need:

  • Available providers.
  • Functional systems.
  • Reliable support services.

A healthcare benefit that cannot be efficiently delivered becomes a promise without execution.

 

Expert Perspective #2: Administrative Burden Has Become a Workforce Crisis

Healthcare experts have increasingly recognized administrative overload as a contributor to physician burnout.

The issue is not simply workload.

It is unnecessary workload.

Physicians expect hard work.

They do not expect spending hours solving preventable administrative problems.

 

Expert Perspective #3: Healthcare Innovation Must Move Upstream

The next generation of healthcare innovation will focus less on fixing problems after they occur.

It will focus on preventing problems before they happen.

Examples:

Instead of fixing denied claims:

Improve information quality before submission.

Instead of chasing missing documentation:

Create better documentation workflows.

Instead of reacting:

Predict.

Prevent.

Simplify.


The Lesson From Alexia’s Story

Alexia did not need more complexity.

She needed a system that worked.

Her family did not need another healthcare barrier.

They needed reliability.

Her caregivers did not need uncertainty.

They needed support.

And physicians do not need more administrative weight.

They need infrastructure that allows them to practice medicine.

This is the healthcare conversation we should be having.

Not only:

“How much money are we spending?”

But:

“Are we building a healthcare system that can actually deliver the care we promise?”


The Numbers Behind the Crisis: Why Healthcare Operations Matter More Than Ever

Stories like Alexia’s remind us that healthcare is personal.

But healthcare systems also operate on numbers.

And those numbers reveal a difficult reality:

A healthcare system can fail patients even when the people inside it are trying their best.

The challenge is not always a lack of compassion.

The challenge is often a lack of alignment between:

  • Patient needs.
  • Physician capacity.
  • Financial sustainability.
  • Administrative infrastructure.

Healthcare Access Is More Than Having an Insurance Card

One of the biggest misconceptions in healthcare is that coverage automatically equals access.

It does not.

A patient may technically have insurance coverage but still experience:

  • Long appointment delays.
  • Difficulty finding accepting providers.
  • Transportation barriers.
  • Administrative delays.
  • Interrupted services.

For vulnerable populations, especially individuals with disabilities, chronic conditions, and complex medical needs, continuity matters.

A disruption in services can create consequences far beyond a single missed appointment.

It can lead to:

  • Emergency room visits.
  • Hospitalizations.
  • Functional decline.
  • Increased caregiver burden.

The lesson:

Healthcare access is not created by policy alone. It is created by functioning systems.


Statistics Physicians Should Understand

1. Medicaid Is a Critical Healthcare Infrastructure

Medicaid supports tens of millions of Americans, including:

  • Children.
  • Low-income adults.
  • Seniors requiring long-term services.
  • Individuals with disabilities.

For many populations, Medicaid is not simply an insurance program.

It is the foundation supporting daily healthcare needs.

 

2. Administrative Costs Continue to Burden Practices

Physicians increasingly report spending significant time on administrative activities.

Common examples include:

  • Prior authorization requests.
  • Documentation requirements.
  • Insurance communication.
  • Billing corrections.
  • Appeals.

The hidden cost is physician attention.

Every hour spent navigating unnecessary complexity is an hour removed from:

  • Patient education.
  • Care coordination.
  • Clinical improvement.

 

3. Independent Practices Operate Under Increasing Pressure

Small and medium-sized clinics face unique challenges.

Unlike large healthcare organizations, many physician-owned practices operate without:

  • Large administrative teams.
  • Extensive technology budgets.
  • Dedicated operational departments.

This creates a dangerous imbalance:

The physician is expected to deliver excellent care while simultaneously managing a complicated healthcare business.


The Revenue Cycle Problem Nobody Wants to Discuss

Here is the uncomfortable truth:

Many healthcare organizations focus heavily on increasing revenue.

But fewer focus on preventing revenue loss.

Revenue loss often happens quietly.

A claim is delayed.

A code is incorrect.

A document is incomplete.

A payer requests additional information.

A denial sits unresolved.

One claim may seem insignificant.

Thousands of claims become a systemic problem.


The Hidden Tax on Physician-Owned Clinics

Independent physicians pay a hidden tax.

Not a government tax.

A complexity tax.

This tax comes from:

  • Manual processes.
  • Fragmented systems.
  • Poor communication.
  • Repetitive administrative tasks.

The cost is measured in dollars.

But also in something harder to replace:

Physician time.


The Biggest Pitfalls Healthcare Organizations Must Avoid

Pitfall #1: Treating Billing as an Afterthought

Many physicians view billing as something that happens after medicine.

That mindset creates problems.

The revenue cycle begins before the claim.

It begins at:

  • Patient scheduling.
  • Documentation.
  • Clinical workflow.
  • Data capture.

A billing problem is often a symptom of an upstream process problem.

 

Pitfall #2: Adding Technology Without Fixing Workflow

Healthcare has a history of purchasing solutions before understanding the problem.

More software does not automatically equal better healthcare.

A poorly designed process with new technology is still a poorly designed process.

The right question is:

“What friction are we removing?”

Not:

“What software are we buying?”

 

Pitfall #3: Ignoring Data Quality

Healthcare runs on data.

But many organizations focus on collecting more data instead of improving data quality.

Poor data creates:

  • Incorrect claims.
  • Delayed payments.
  • Compliance concerns.
  • Operational confusion.

The future belongs to organizations that treat data as infrastructure.


Myth Busters: Challenging Healthcare Assumptions

Myth #1:

“Medicaid problems only affect Medicaid providers.”

Reality:

Healthcare systems are interconnected.

Reimbursement pressure, workforce shortages, and administrative complexity influence the entire healthcare ecosystem.

 

Myth #2:

“Physician burnout is only caused by long hours.”

Reality:

Physicians expect demanding work.

The problem is spending excessive time on work that does not require physician expertise.

 

Myth #3:

“Artificial intelligence will replace doctors.”

Reality:

The near-term opportunity is not replacing physicians.

It is removing unnecessary friction around physicians.

AI should amplify human expertise.

Not eliminate it.


A Practical Framework for Physician Owners: The Healthcare Resilience Checklist

Physician leaders should ask five questions.

Step 1: Understand Your Revenue Leakage

Measure:

  • Claim denial percentage.
  • Days in accounts receivable.
  • First-pass claim acceptance rate.
  • Unresolved claim volume.

You cannot improve invisible problems.

 

Step 2: Identify Administrative Bottlenecks

Map your workflow:

Patient appointment.

Clinical encounter.

Documentation.

Coding.

Claim submission.

Payment.

At each step ask:

Where does friction occur?

 

Step 3: Improve Data Quality Before Automation

Before implementing AI or automation:

Review:

  • Documentation consistency.
  • Coding accuracy.
  • Missing information.
  • Staff workflow.

Automation magnifies existing processes.

Good processes create better automation.

 

Step 4: Protect Physician Attention

The most valuable resource in healthcare is not software.

It is physician expertise.

Every unnecessary administrative task steals attention from the patient.

 

Step 5: Build Systems That Can Survive Change

Healthcare will continue to experience:

  • Policy changes.
  • Reimbursement changes.
  • Workforce changes.
  • Technology disruption.

The goal is not predicting every change.

The goal is building adaptable systems.


Legal Considerations: Why Healthcare Operations Matter

Healthcare organizations operate under significant regulatory requirements.

Changes involving Medicaid, reimbursement, and documentation can create compliance challenges.

Physicians and practice owners should pay attention to:

  • Accurate documentation.
  • Appropriate coding.
  • Record retention.
  • Billing compliance.
  • Patient privacy requirements.

Operational improvement should never come at the expense of compliance.

The goal is:

Efficiency with integrity.


Ethical Considerations: The Human Cost Behind Healthcare Decisions

Healthcare discussions can become dominated by financial language.

Budgets.

Costs.

Savings.

Efficiency.

But behind every number is a person.

A patient.

A family.

A caregiver.

A physician.

The ethical challenge is balancing sustainability with compassion.

A financially unstable healthcare system cannot protect patients.

A financially focused healthcare system that ignores humanity also fails patients.

The answer is not choosing between economics and empathy.

The answer is designing systems where both can exist.


The Future of Healthcare: From Reactive to Predictive

The next decade of healthcare innovation will likely move toward prevention.

Not only preventing disease.

Preventing system failure.

Imagine a healthcare environment where:

  • Documentation problems are identified before claims are submitted.
  • Revenue leakage is predicted before losses accumulate.
  • Administrative tasks are automated before they burden clinicians.
  • Physicians receive actionable insights instead of more alerts.

This is where AI can create meaningful value.

Not replacing the human connection.

Protecting it.


Three Actions Physician Leaders Can Take Today

1. Audit Your Hidden Friction

Look beyond clinical performance.

Review your operational workflow.

Where are delays happening?

Where is revenue lost?

Where is staff time wasted?

 

2. Stop Accepting Complexity as Normal

Healthcare has normalized unnecessary difficulty.

A process being common does not mean it is efficient.

Ask:

“Why do we do it this way?”

 

3. Design Healthcare Around Physicians and Patients

The best systems serve the people using them.

Technology should adapt to healthcare.

Healthcare should not constantly adapt to technology.


Final Thoughts: The Healthcare Crisis Is Also an Opportunity

Alexia’s story is about Medicaid.

But it is also about something bigger.

It is about what happens when systems fail the people depending on them.

The future of healthcare will not be built only through new treatments.

It will be built through better systems.

Three ideas matter:

First: Healthcare access depends on operational strength, not only financial resources.

Second: Physicians cannot solve tomorrow’s challenges using yesterday’s administrative systems.

Third: The greatest healthcare innovations will remove friction so clinicians can return their focus to what matters most — patients.


Join the Conversation

Healthcare is changing rapidly.

The question is not whether change is coming.

The question is:

Will physicians help design the future healthcare system, or will they continue adapting to systems designed without them?

I would like to hear your perspective:

What is the biggest source of unnecessary friction affecting your practice today — reimbursement, documentation, staffing, technology, or something else?

Share your experience in the comments.

Your insight may help another physician or clinic owner facing the same challenge.

If this perspective resonates, consider sharing this article with another healthcare professional who believes medicine deserves better systems.

Healthcare improves when we stop accepting broken processes as inevitable.


Continue the Conversation

Healthcare innovation requires more than new ideas.

It requires practical strategies, operational insight, and honest conversations about the challenges facing physicians, patients, and healthcare organizations.

Explore additional perspectives on healthcare technology, medical operations, and innovation:

Knowledge drives progress — start your journey today.

Start your journey by continuing to learn, question existing systems, and explore new possibilities for the future of healthcare.


About the Author

Dr. Daniel Cham is a physician, medical consultant, and healthcare technology entrepreneur focused on improving the intersection between clinical care, healthcare operations, and innovation.

As the founder of OnnX, an AI-powered medical billing SaaS platform designed for small and medium-sized physician practices, Dr. Cham focuses on solving operational challenges that prevent clinicians from spending more time delivering patient care.

His work explores healthcare transformation through better workflows, improved data quality, and practical technology solutions that support independent physicians.

Connect with Dr. Cham on LinkedIn to learn more.


Disclaimer

This article provides general educational information about healthcare operations, policy discussions, and technology trends. It is not intended to provide medical, legal, financial, or regulatory advice. Healthcare professionals and organizations should consult qualified experts when making decisions specific to their circumstances.


Free Resource for Physicians and Clinic Owners

Looking to rethink how healthcare operations impact your practice?

Check my LinkedIn profile’s Featured section for a free resource designed to help physicians and clinic owners better understand revenue cycle challenges and practical improvement strategies.

No signup required.


References

1. Medicaid and disability advocates continue highlighting the impact of potential Medicaid reductions on vulnerable populations and community-based care services.
KFF Medicaid Policy Resources

2. Healthcare administrative burden remains a major concern for physicians and healthcare organizations seeking greater efficiency.
American Medical Association Administrative Simplification Resources

3. Federal Medicaid information and program updates provide ongoing guidance regarding coverage, eligibility, and healthcare access.
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Medicaid Information


#HealthcareInnovation #PhysicianLeadership #MedicalPracticeManagement #Medicaid #HealthcareAccess #HealthcareAI #ArtificialIntelligence #MedicalBilling #RevenueCycleManagement #HealthTech #DigitalHealth #IndependentPhysicians #HealthcareTransformation #FutureOfHealthcare #PatientCare #HealthcareSystems


♻️ If this perspective resonates, consider reposting it to help physicians, clinic owners, and healthcare leaders rethink how operational systems influence patient care.

 

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

The Hidden Referee in Healthcare: What FIFA’s Red Card Controversy Reveals About AI, Algorithms, and the Future of Physician Independence

 


“The good physician treats the disease; the great physician treats the patient who has the disease.” — Sir William Osler


A red card changed a World Cup conversation.

Not because of the tackle.

Not because of the player.

But because of what happened afterward.

A referee made a decision.

A player was removed from the game.

The match continued.

Then came the review.

The debate was no longer just about what happened on the field.

It became a deeper question:

Who really controls the outcome of the game?

Is it the players?

The coaches?

The referee?

The review system?

The rules?

Or the invisible decision-making process behind the scenes?

That question extends far beyond soccer.

Because healthcare has its own referees.

They do not wear uniforms.

They do not stand on a field.

They operate quietly behind computer screens.

They are:

Insurance algorithms.

Prior authorization systems.

Claim processing rules.

Coding requirements.

Artificial intelligence models.

Revenue cycle workflows.

And increasingly, these systems influence whether physicians are paid, whether practices survive, and how much time doctors spend with patients.

Here is the uncomfortable truth:

Many physicians are no longer losing the healthcare business game because they provide poor care. They are losing because they are playing against invisible systems they cannot see, measure, or control.


The Healthcare Game Has Changed

Most physicians were trained to diagnose diseases, manage complex cases, and improve patient outcomes.

They were not trained to become:

  • billing analysts
  • denial specialists
  • compliance officers
  • payer negotiators
  • revenue cycle managers

Yet modern medicine increasingly requires all of these skills.

A physician can deliver exceptional care.

The documentation can be clinically accurate.

The treatment can be medically necessary.

And still:

The claim can be denied.

The reimbursement can be delayed.

The revenue can disappear.

The frustrating question becomes:

How can a physician win the clinical game but lose the financial game?

The answer is simple:

Because healthcare is no longer only a clinical system.

It is also a data system.

And whoever controls the data often influences the outcome.


The Contrarian View: Your Biggest Practice Competitor May Not Be Another Doctor

Healthcare leaders often talk about competition.

They discuss:

  • hospitals versus independent practices
  • specialists versus primary care
  • private equity versus physician ownership

But another competitor is emerging.

Administrative complexity.

The modern physician practice is fighting against:

  • fragmented systems
  • unpredictable payer behavior
  • increasing documentation demands
  • growing administrative workload
  • outdated billing processes

The biggest threat to many independent clinics is not another medical practice down the street.

It is the invisible friction inside their own operations.


The Hidden Revenue Leak Most Physicians Never See

Many clinic owners ask:

“How can I increase revenue?”

But the better question is:

“Where is my existing revenue disappearing?”

Revenue leakage often hides inside:

  • denied claims
  • missed follow-up opportunities
  • incorrect coding
  • delayed submissions
  • underpayments
  • authorization failures
  • payer inconsistencies

The problem?

Many practices discover these issues too late.

By the time revenue problems become obvious, the damage has already occurred.


The AI Revolution: The New Healthcare Replay System

Sports changed when instant replay arrived.

Technology allowed officials to review decisions.

But replay systems created a new debate:

Does technology improve fairness?

Or does it simply move decision-making power from one person to another?

Healthcare is entering the same moment.

Artificial intelligence is becoming the new review system.

AI can help identify:

  • documentation gaps
  • coding inconsistencies
  • denial risks
  • payment trends
  • operational inefficiencies

But AI is not magic.

AI does not eliminate responsibility.

AI does not replace physician judgment.

The future is not:

Humans versus AI.

The future is:

Humans empowered by AI.

The strongest healthcare organizations will combine:

Machine speed + human expertise

Automation + accountability

Data intelligence + clinical judgment


Statistics Physicians Should Pay Attention To

Healthcare administrative complexity continues to grow.

Industry studies have highlighted several major challenges:

  • Physicians continue reporting significant administrative burden as a contributor to burnout.
  • Prior authorization remains one of the most frustrating operational challenges for clinicians.
  • Claim denials represent billions of dollars in avoidable administrative waste.
  • Small and medium-sized practices often lack the technology infrastructure available to larger health systems.

The financial impact is not just accounting.

It affects patient care.

When practices struggle financially:

  • hiring becomes harder
  • technology investment slows
  • physician stress increases
  • access to care can suffer

The revenue cycle is not separate from healthcare delivery.

It supports healthcare delivery.


Three Expert Perspectives on the Future of Healthcare Operations

1. Physicians Need Less Administrative Friction

Healthcare technology should simplify medicine, not create additional work.

The best technology does not ask physicians to become IT experts.

It removes unnecessary obstacles.

The goal:

Let physicians practice medicine.

Let intelligent systems handle repetitive complexity.

 

2. AI Must Be Transparent and Human-Controlled

Healthcare cannot blindly automate important decisions.

A responsible AI system should provide:

  • explainable recommendations
  • confidence levels
  • audit trails
  • human review options

The question is not:

“Can AI make decisions?”

The question is:

“Can humans understand and trust those decisions?”

 

3. Independent Practices Need Enterprise-Level Tools

Large healthcare systems have entire departments dedicated to revenue optimization.

Small practices often have:

  • one office manager
  • limited staff
  • outsourced billing support

The technology gap creates an unfair disadvantage.

The next healthcare transformation should not only help large organizations.

It should empower independent physicians.


The Five-Step Physician Revenue Protection Framework

Step 1: Measure Your Reality

Stop guessing.

Track:

Clean claim rate

Denial rate

Days in accounts receivable

Net collection rate

Average reimbursement time

Top denial reasons

What gets measured gets improved.

 

Step 2: Identify Your Biggest Revenue Obstacles

Not all problems are equal.

Ask:

Which payer denies the most?

Which codes create problems?

Which workflow causes delays?

Which claims require repeated manual intervention?

Fix the largest leaks first.

 

Step 3: Automate Repetitive Tasks

Automation should handle:

  • eligibility checks
  • claim monitoring
  • documentation alerts
  • denial prediction
  • payment tracking

The goal is not removing people.

The goal is freeing people for higher-value work.

 

Step 4: Create Human-AI Collaboration

A future-ready practice does not ask:

“Should we use AI?”

It asks:

“Where can AI help our team perform better?”

Complex medical decisions require humans.

Repetitive administrative tasks are where automation shines.

 

Step 5: Build Visibility

A physician should know:

  • where revenue is lost
  • why claims fail
  • which payers create problems
  • what trends are developing

Blind systems create blind decisions.


Common Pitfalls

Pitfall 1: Assuming More Staff Will Solve Everything

More employees cannot fix broken workflows.

A bad process with more people becomes a more expensive bad process.

 

Pitfall 2: Choosing Technology Without Understanding the Problem

Technology should solve a specific operational challenge.

Do not buy AI because it sounds impressive.

Buy it because it creates measurable improvement.

 

Pitfall 3: Removing Humans From the Process

Healthcare requires judgment.

AI should support professionals.

Not replace accountability.


Myth Busters

Myth: AI Will Replace Physicians

Reality:

AI will replace inefficient processes before it replaces physicians.

Doctors who use AI effectively may have a significant advantage.

 

Myth: Medical Billing Is Only an Administrative Issue

Reality:

Billing affects staffing, sustainability, and patient access.

 

Myth: Only Large Health Systems Can Benefit From AI

Reality:

Smaller practices may benefit the most because they have fewer resources and greater operational pressure.


Legal and Ethical Considerations

As AI becomes integrated into healthcare operations, important questions must be addressed.

Who is responsible when an automated recommendation is wrong?

How is patient information protected?

Can the system explain why a decision was made?

Healthcare organizations should consider:

  • HIPAA compliance
  • cybersecurity safeguards
  • vendor accountability
  • documentation standards
  • human oversight

Efficiency cannot come at the expense of trust.


The Future of Healthcare: The Physician-Controlled Practice

The future physician practice will not simply be more digital.

It will be more intelligent.

Imagine a system that:

  • identifies claim problems before submission
  • predicts denial risks
  • monitors payer changes
  • highlights revenue opportunities
  • provides actionable insights

This is not about replacing the human side of medicine.

It is about protecting it.

Physicians entered medicine to care for people.

Technology should help them return to that mission.


Frequently Asked Questions

Should every medical practice adopt AI?

Not every solution is right for every practice. The first step is identifying operational problems where technology can create measurable improvement.

Can AI improve medical billing accuracy?

AI can assist with identifying patterns, reducing errors, and improving workflow visibility when implemented responsibly.

Will AI eliminate billing professionals?

The role will evolve. Professionals who understand analytics, compliance, and problem-solving will become increasingly valuable.

What is the first step for a clinic considering AI?

Start with measurement. Understand your current denial rates, workflow issues, and revenue gaps before selecting technology.


Final Thoughts: The Referee Has Changed

The FIFA debate was never only about one red card.

It was about trust.

It was about transparency.

It was about who controls decisions.

Healthcare faces the same challenge.

The question is no longer whether technology will influence medicine.

It already does.

The question is:

Will physicians control the technology, or will technology control the physicians?

The future belongs to healthcare leaders who embrace innovation without surrendering judgment.

Physicians do not need fewer tools.

They need better tools.

Physicians do not need less responsibility.

They need more visibility.

Physicians do not need to fight technology.

They need to use it strategically.


Get Involved

Here is my question for physicians and clinic owners:

If you could eliminate one administrative burden from your practice tomorrow, what would it be?

Share your experience in the comments.

Your answer may help another healthcare professional facing the same challenge.

If this perspective resonates, consider reposting this article so more physicians and clinic leaders can rethink how revenue operations affect the future of independent medicine.

The healthcare system changes when the people inside it start meaningful conversations.


Continue the Conversation

Explore practical strategies, healthcare innovation insights, and operational perspectives designed to help physicians navigate the future of medicine.

Knowledge drives progress. Start building your healthcare innovation journey today.


About the Author

Dr. Daniel Cham, MD is a physician entrepreneur, healthcare technology consultant, and medical practice management expert focused on the intersection of healthcare, artificial intelligence, and operational transformation.

He is the founder of OnnX, an AI-powered medical billing SaaS platform designed to help small and medium-sized clinics reduce administrative burden, improve revenue visibility, and build more sustainable practices.

Connect with Dr. Cham:

Daniel Cham MD LinkedIn Profile


Disclaimer

This article is provided for educational and informational purposes only. It discusses healthcare technology, operational strategy, and industry trends and should not be interpreted as medical, legal, financial, or regulatory advice.

Healthcare professionals should seek appropriate expert guidance when making decisions specific to their practice, compliance responsibilities, or operational needs.


References

American Medical Association (AMA)
Provides physician resources and research related to administrative burden, prior authorization, and healthcare system challenges.
American Medical Association

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)
Provides information on healthcare policy, digital transformation, payment systems, and innovation initiatives.
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Healthcare Financial Management Association (HFMA)
Provides healthcare revenue cycle management guidance and financial performance resources.
Healthcare Financial Management Association


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Saturday, July 4, 2026

She Rowed 2,400 Miles Across the Pacific in 43 Days—Most Clinics Can’t Even Move Revenue Cleanly Through a Single Patient Visit





“She could see the ocean she was crossing. Most clinics cannot see the revenue they are losing.”


 “Tonight, hear the American woman making history.”

Kelsey Pfendler became the first American woman—and the youngest at 30—to row solo from California to Hawaii.

2,400 miles.
43 days.
17 hours. 55 minutes.

No team. No safety net. No second chances.

Every stroke mattered.

Every decision accumulated.

There was no billing department at the end to “fix” mistakes made mid-ocean.

And that is where healthcare quietly breaks.

Because most clinics are also crossing an ocean.

They just assume someone will fix the boat later.


THE TRUTH PHYSICIANS DON’T HEAR OFTEN

Most physicians believe:

Revenue problems happen in billing.

That belief is comfortable.

And wrong.

The real loss happens much earlier.

At the moment of:

  • clinical documentation
  • encounter structure
  • cognitive overload during care
  • fragmented data capture
  • unclear translation into coded reality

By the time billing “sees” the claim…

The outcome has already been decided.

Billing does not generate revenue. It only reveals what the system already failed to capture.


THE REAL PROBLEM IS NOT BILLING—IT IS VISIBILITY

Healthcare is not a financial problem first.

It is a signal integrity problem.

What happens in the clinic is rich, complex, and clinically meaningful.

But what gets captured is:

  • compressed
  • interpreted
  • fragmented
  • delayed
  • reconstructed

So the system behaves like this:

Clinical reality → translation loss → billing reconstruction → payer judgment

Every step reduces fidelity.


WHY THE SYSTEM FEELS LIKE IT IS BREAKING

Physicians feel it as:

  • “denials are increasing”
  • “billing is getting harder”
  • “we need better coders”
  • “RCM is broken”

But these are downstream symptoms.

The upstream truth is simpler:

Healthcare is trying to financially process unstructured human cognition in real time.

That mismatch does not scale.


THE ROWING METAPHOR ISN’T JUST STORYTELLING

Ocean rowing is not about strength.

It is about system discipline under isolation.

Every failure compounds:

  • navigation error → drift
  • energy miscalculation → exhaustion
  • delayed correction → compounding deviation

Now replace “ocean” with “clinical workflow.”

And the same logic applies.

But here is the difference:

In rowing, you see the drift immediately.

In healthcare, you see it weeks later in denied claims.


THE UNCOMFORTABLE NUMBER

Across independent clinics:

  • 15–30% revenue leakage is still common
  • not due to payer rejection alone
  • but due to preventable ambiguity at capture

And here is the part nobody says clearly:

You cannot fix what was never structured correctly in the first place.


WHY MOST “RCM IMPROVEMENTS” FAIL

Clinics keep investing in:

  • billing software
  • denial management
  • coding audits
  • outsourced RCM teams

But these tools assume a broken premise:

That downstream correction can fix upstream ambiguity.

It cannot.

It only organizes the cleanup.


THE REAL FAILURE POINT

Let’s name it clearly:

  • Physicians document for memory, not structure
  • Coders interpret intent after the fact
  • Billing reconstructs missing context
  • Payers adjudicate incomplete signals

Everyone is working hard.

No one owns data fidelity at the moment of care.

That is the gap.


WHY THIS IS NOW BECOMING MORE EXPENSIVE

Healthcare is shifting toward:

  • value-based reimbursement
  • automated claim validation
  • AI-driven audits
  • real-time compliance systems

Which means:

ambiguity is no longer just inefficient—it is financially punishable.

The system is becoming less forgiving.

Not more.


THE AI MISUNDERSTANDING

A growing assumption:

“AI will fix billing.”

No.

AI does not fix ambiguity.

It scales it.

If the input is unclear:

  • AI makes it faster
  • more consistent
  • and harder to detect

So the real question is not:

Can we use AI?

It is:

Can we structure clinical reality before AI touches it?


THE ONNX SHIFT

At OnnX OnnX, the thesis is simple:

Revenue is not collected after care. It is designed during care.

That means moving focus upstream:

  • structured clinical capture
  • real-time documentation intelligence
  • reduced interpretive loss
  • direct alignment between care and coding logic

Not faster billing.

Not better denial recovery.

But preventing ambiguity from entering the system.


THE NEW DEFINITION OF REVENUE CYCLE

Old model:

Care → documentation → coding → billing → denial → correction

New reality:

Care → structured capture → validated logic → clean claim → minimal friction

Everything else is compensation for upstream failure.


THE 5 HIDDEN FAILURE MODES

Most clinics don’t see these clearly:

  1. Documentation built for humans, not systems
  2. Clinical nuance lost in translation layers
  3. Coding treated as interpretation instead of alignment
  4. Revenue measured after leakage occurs
  5. Tools added without removing structural friction

Each one compounds silently.


LEGAL AND COMPLIANCE REALITY

This is no longer just operational inefficiency.

It is increasingly:

  • audit exposure risk
  • documentation liability
  • reimbursement defensibility issue
  • compliance traceability requirement

Because payers and regulators are shifting toward:

  • algorithmic claim validation
  • structured data review
  • automated anomaly detection

Unstructured documentation becomes a liability surface.


ETHICAL LAYER MOST PEOPLE MISS

This is not about maximizing reimbursement.

It is about:

  • accurate representation of care
  • preserving clinical intent
  • ensuring fair system translation
  • maintaining trust in medical records

Bad structure is not just inefficient.

It distorts reality downstream.


PRACTICAL SHIFT: WHAT HIGH-PERFORMING CLINICS DO DIFFERENTLY

They stop asking:

“How do we fix billing?”

They start asking:

“How do we eliminate ambiguity before it exists?”

That single shift changes:

  • revenue consistency
  • operational stress
  • coding accuracy
  • denial volume
  • staff cognitive load

STEP-BY-STEP SHIFT FRAMEWORK

  1. Map where documentation becomes billing data
  2. Identify ambiguity points in encounters
  3. Standardize clinical capture structure
  4. Align coding logic earlier in workflow
  5. Measure revenue integrity, not just denial rates

TOOLS AND METRICS THAT ACTUALLY MATTER

Forget vanity metrics.

Focus on:

  • clean claim rate
  • first-pass acceptance rate
  • documentation completeness
  • coding variance
  • revenue per encounter stability

These expose system health.

Not symptoms.


FUTURE OUTLOOK

Within 3–5 years:

  • claims will be validated before submission
  • documentation will be AI-assisted by default
  • real-time revenue feedback loops will emerge
  • coding will shift upstream into care workflows
  • RCM will merge with clinical intelligence systems

The separation between “care” and “billing” will collapse.


FINAL INSIGHT

If your system needs correction after the fact…

It was never designed correctly at the source.


Healthcare is not failing because people are careless.

It is failing because:

  • clinical reality is rich
  • financial systems are rigid
  • and the translation layer between them is outdated

Until that gap is fixed upstream:

  • denials will persist
  • margins will tighten
  • complexity will grow
  • physicians will absorb system friction

The solution is not more correction.

It is less ambiguity.


CALL TO ACTION

Here is the real question:

Where is your revenue actually being lost?

At billing?

Or at the moment of documentation?

Comment with what you see in your practice.

Share this with a physician still optimizing the wrong layer.

And consider this:

  • Are you reacting to revenue loss?
  • Or designing systems where loss cannot occur?

Get involved. Get on board. Step into the conversation. Start your journey. Be part of something bigger. Engage with the community. Raise your voice. Be the change. Take the first step. Make your move. Ignite your momentum. Start here. Build your knowledge base. Explore the insights. Help shape the future.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Dr. Daniel Cham is a physician and medical consultant specializing in healthcare systems, medical technology, and revenue cycle transformation. He focuses on practical, system-level insights that help clinics improve operational clarity and financial integrity.

Connect with Dr. Cham on LinkedIn to learn more.


DISCLAIMER

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical or legal advice. Professional consultation is recommended for specific operational decisions.


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REFERENCES

1. CMS Improper Payment Data (FY 2025 Report)

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services reports a 6.55% improper payment rate (~$28.8B) in Medicare Fee-for-Service, with a significant portion linked to documentation and coding gaps.

2. Revenue Leakage in Healthcare (Industry Analysis)

Industry benchmarks show healthcare organizations lose approximately 4–5% of net revenue annually due to documentation gaps, coding errors, and denied claims—highlighting upstream workflow failures as the root cause.

3. Clinical Documentation as Revenue Cycle Risk

Revenue cycle surveys show 84% of healthcare finance leaders identify clinical documentation and coding as major revenue vulnerabilities, directly linking documentation quality to denial rates and reimbursement accuracy.


#HealthcareLeadership #MedicalBilling #RevenueCycleManagement #PhysicianEntrepreneurs #HealthTech #DigitalHealth #ClinicalOperations #MedicalPracticeManagement #HealthcareInnovation #AIinHealthcare #HealthcareStrategy #IndependentPhysicians #HealthcareSystems #MedTech #FutureOfHealthcare #ClinicalDocumentation #PracticeEfficiency #HealthcareFinance #PhysicianLeadership #HealthcareTransformation

  

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