“The system doesn’t reward what is valuable. It rewards
what is visible.”
THE BOOK THAT PROVED VALUE IS NOT ENOUGH
A forgotten children’s vocabulary book from the 1980s sat
untouched for decades.
No marketing.
No distribution.
No attention.
It was called The Weighty Word Book.
It wasn’t bad. It wasn’t outdated. It wasn’t irrelevant.
It was simply… invisible.
Then something changed.
A viral post resurfaced it. Within days, it sold more than
it had in decades.
Nothing about the book changed.
Only one thing changed:
distribution finally caught up to value.
And that’s where most physicians misunderstand what is
happening inside healthcare right now.
Because medicine is sitting on its own version of that
forgotten book.
Except it is not a book.
It is:
- clinical
documentation
- billing
data
- coding
logic
- revenue
pathways
And it has been invisible for years inside fragmented
systems.
THE UNCOMFORTABLE TRUTH: HEALTHCARE IS NOT
UNDERPERFORMING—IT IS MIS-RECOGNIZED
Most physicians are taught a comforting narrative:
“If you deliver good care, the system will eventually reward
you.”
That is no longer true.
In reality:
- value
is created in the clinic
- but
recognized somewhere else entirely
- often
by systems you do not control
This is the silent fracture in modern medicine.
Not clinical incompetence.
Not lack of effort.
But a break between value creation and value recognition.
HERE IS THE CONTRARIAN IDEA NO ONE WANTS TO SAY OUT LOUD
Healthcare is not broken because it is inefficient.
It is broken because:
efficiency is not the goal of the systems controlling
reimbursement.
The goal is:
- risk
containment
- cost
shifting
- documentation
defensibility
- audit
resistance
Efficiency is optional.
Control is mandatory.
And control sits far away from the physician.
WHY YOUR BILLING SYSTEM IS NOT A TOOL (AND NEVER WAS)
Most clinics believe they are “using an RCM system.”
They are not.
They are participating in a distributed negotiation
system between:
- payer
algorithms
- clearinghouses
- outsourced
billing vendors
- EHR
defaults
- compliance
logic layers
And you sit at the edge of it.
Not the center.
That’s the illusion.
The system is not designed to help you get paid.
It is designed to decide what is defensible enough to pay.
THE REAL LEAK IS NOT DENIALS. IT IS LOSS OF STRUCTURE.
Physicians obsess over:
- denial
rates
- prior
auth delays
- underpayments
But those are downstream symptoms.
The real issue happens upstream:
Unstructured clinical intent becomes ambiguous billing
data
Once ambiguity enters the system:
- coders
interpret
- systems
approximate
- payers
challenge
- revenue
gets delayed or reduced
This is not inefficiency.
This is entropy in financial translation of care.
THE MODERN HEALTHCARE PARADOX
The more advanced the tools become:
- EHRs
- AI
scribes
- automation
layers
The less control physicians actually have over:
- how
care is represented
- how
it is coded
- how
it is reimbursed
Because every new layer adds:
abstraction, not clarity
And abstraction is where revenue leakage hides.
WHY SMALL AND MID-SIZED CLINICS ARE BEING SQUEEZED
Large systems survive because they have:
- internal
billing intelligence
- compliance
teams
- denial
recovery infrastructure
Small clinics do not.
So they rely on:
- outsourced
RCM
- black-box
billing vendors
- EHR-native
billing tools
Which leads to a structural problem:
You cannot optimize what you cannot see.
And most clinics cannot see:
- why
revenue was lost
- where
coding decisions diverged
- how
documentation became insufficient
A COUNTERINTUITIVE INSIGHT
Healthcare does not have a money problem.
It has a translation problem.
Between:
- clinical
reality
- and
financial representation
And that translation layer is where most revenue disappears.
WHAT AI IS ACTUALLY DOING IN HEALTHCARE (NOT WHAT YOU
THINK)
AI is not primarily replacing clinicians.
It is doing something more subtle:
It is becoming the interpreter of clinical reality for
financial systems.
Which means:
- whoever
controls interpretation
- controls
reimbursement logic
- controls
downstream economics
This is why AI in healthcare is not just a productivity
tool.
It is a control layer shift.
EXPERT LENS (THREE SYSTEM-LEVEL PERSPECTIVES)
1. Don Berwick (Quality Systems Thinking)
Healthcare systems fail not from bad intent, but from:
“misaligned system design incentives”
Interpretation:
You don’t fix outcomes by fixing people.
You fix outcomes by fixing system structure.
2. Atul Gawande (Complexity in Systems of Care)
Complex systems fail silently when:
- variability
increases
- feedback
loops weaken
Billing is exactly that system:
- high
variability
- weak
feedback
- delayed
correction
3. CMS Policy Direction (2025–2026 trendline)
Regulation is moving toward:
- stricter
documentation validation
- automated
claim adjudication
- AI-assisted
audit expansion
Meaning:
ambiguity will become financially expensive faster than ever
STATISTICS THAT REVEAL THE STRUCTURAL PROBLEM
- 10–30%
revenue leakage in SMB clinics tied to documentation and coding
breakdowns
- 40–70%
of denied claims are preventable with structured upstream data
- Administrative
complexity consumes up to 25% of physician operational time
- Billing
rework cycles can delay revenue by 30–90 days
But the deeper issue is not the numbers.
It is that most clinics cannot explain why those
numbers exist in their own practice.
PITFALLS THAT KEEP PHYSICIANS TRAPPED
- Believing
EHR equals billing intelligence
- Outsourcing
visibility to RCM vendors
- Treating
denial management as a strategy
- Adding
AI tools without restructuring data flow
- Accepting
“normal leakage” as unavoidable
Each of these reinforces one idea:
You cannot own what you cannot model.
THE ONNX THESIS (SIMPLIFIED, NOT HYPED)
At OnnX, the assumption is simple:
Revenue is a downstream effect of structured clinical
data.
So instead of:
Document → Code → Fix → Deny → Rework
We rebuild the sequence:
Structure → Capture → Infer → Validate → Submit → Learn
The goal is not automation.
The goal is financial determinism in clinical workflows.
STEP-BY-STEP REALIGNMENT FOR CLINICS
Step 1: Identify ambiguity points
Where does documentation fail interpretation?
Step 2: Map revenue loss patterns
Not just denials—but why they exist structurally
Step 3: Reduce variability in documentation input
Standardize clinical expression at the source
Step 4: Rebuild feedback loops
Connect billing outcomes back to clinical behavior
Step 5: Introduce structured inference systems
Only after steps 1–4 are stable
LEGAL REALITY (UNCOMFORTABLE BUT IMPORTANT)
As systems become automated:
- accountability
does not disappear
- it
shifts upstream
Risks include:
- False
Claims Act exposure
- audit
vulnerability
- documentation
defensibility gaps
Core principle:
If your revenue cannot be traced back to structured intent,
it cannot be defended under audit.
ETHICAL LAYER
There is a deeper question emerging:
Who owns the transformation of clinical care into financial
claims?
Because as AI enters billing systems:
- interpretation
becomes automated
- errors
become scalable
- accountability
becomes diffused
Physicians must not become passive participants in that
shift.
FUTURE OUTLOOK
Healthcare billing is moving toward:
1. Real-time claim adjudication
No delays. Immediate validation.
2. Structured clinical documentation by default
Unstructured notes will become liability.
3. Embedded financial intelligence in care delivery
Every encounter will have economic modeling.
4. Physician-controlled data pipelines
The next competitive advantage in medicine is data
structure ownership.
FINAL CONTRARIAN TRUTH
The system is not trying to break physicians.
It is simply evolving without them in the control loop.
And in that gap between:
- care
- and
control
value is being lost silently every day.
FINAL THOUGHTS
The forgotten children’s vocabulary book was never
worthless.
It was just waiting for the right distribution system to see
it.
Healthcare is in the same position.
Except the stakes are higher.
Because what is being rediscovered is not a book.
It is the financial architecture of clinical care itself.
QUESTION THAT SHOULD NOT BE IGNORED
What part of your clinical revenue system is currently
“valuable but invisible”?
Comment your perspective below.
CALL TO ACTION
If this resonates:
- get
involved
- join
the conversation
- step
into the system redesign dialogue
And if you disagree, even better—share why.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Dr. Daniel Cham is a physician and medical consultant
focused on healthcare systems, medical billing architecture, and clinical
workflow intelligence. His work centers on bridging the gap between clinical
care and financial system design.
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. Consult appropriate professionals for
specific guidance.
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Knowledge drives progress. Start your journey here.
1. CMS
Medicare Fee-for-Service Improper Payments Report (Latest Available)
This report highlights ongoing billing errors,
documentation gaps, and improper payment rates across U.S.
healthcare—reinforcing how structural issues in coding and documentation
directly drive revenue leakage.
2. AMA
Administrative Burden & Physician Burnout Research
The American Medical Association documents how administrative
complexity and EHR/documentation burden significantly reduce physician
efficiency and contribute to burnout and revenue inefficiencies.
3. NEJM Perspective on
Healthcare Complexity and System Design
The New England Journal of Medicine discusses how health
system complexity, workflow fragmentation, and misaligned incentives
directly impact care quality and operational performance.
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