Sunday, July 19, 2026

A Woman Waited in a Hospital Hallway. Everyone Did Their Job. The System Still Failed Her.

The Healthcare Crisis Nobody Wants to Admit: We Don't Have a Physician Problem. We Have a System Design Problem.



“The future of healthcare depends not only on what technology can do, but on how we redesign care around the people who deliver it and the patients who depend on it.”Rick Pollack, President and CEO, American Hospital Association, 2026 Healthcare Leadership Summit


A woman entered the emergency department looking for care.

She did not expect luxury.

She did not expect convenience.

She expected the basic promise healthcare makes to every patient:

"When you need us, we will be there."

But instead of a room, she got a hallway.

The physician cared.

The nurse cared.

The entire team cared.

Everyone was doing their job.

And yet the system still failed her.

That is the uncomfortable truth about modern healthcare:

Good people can still produce bad outcomes when they are trapped inside bad systems.

We keep asking:

"How do we make physicians work better?"

Maybe we should ask a different question:

"Why did we build a healthcare system that requires physicians to fight so hard just to deliver basic care?"


The Contrarian Truth About Physician Burnout

We have spent years diagnosing physician burnout.

But what if burnout is not the disease?

What if burnout is the symptom?

The real disease may be something healthcare rarely discusses:

Operational friction.

Physicians are not exhausted because they don't care.

They are exhausted because they care deeply while spending too much time doing work that should never have existed.

The physician who stays late finishing charts is not failing.

The physician who spends hours fighting insurance approvals is not inefficient.

The physician who feels overwhelmed by administrative work is not lacking resilience.

The system is consuming the very people it depends on.


The Healthcare Industry's Biggest Myth

The biggest myth in healthcare is:

"More technology will fix healthcare."

It won't.

Not automatically.

We have spent billions digitizing healthcare.

Yet many physicians feel they have less time than before.

Why?

Because we often use technology to automate broken processes instead of redesigning those processes.

A bad workflow with software is still a bad workflow.

It is just faster.


The Hidden Meaning Behind the Hospital Hallway

The hallway is not just a physical space.

It is a metaphor.

Patients experience healthcare hallways every day.

The hallway of waiting for authorization.

The hallway of unanswered messages.

The hallway of delayed referrals.

The hallway of confusing bills.

The hallway of uncertainty.

Every unnecessary delay creates distance between patients and care.


Why Physician Owners Should Pay Attention

Many physicians think:

"This is a hospital problem."

It isn't.

Every medical practice has its own version.

A patient waits weeks because scheduling is inefficient.

A prescription is delayed because authorization workflows are broken.

A claim is denied because documentation and billing systems are disconnected.

A physician loses an evening because administrative work follows them home.

Different setting.

Same disease.

Healthcare friction.


The Billion-Dollar Healthcare Blind Spot

Healthcare loves innovation.

But we often ignore the most expensive problems because they look boring.

Nobody wins awards for:

  • Reducing claim errors.
  • Improving scheduling workflows.
  • Eliminating repetitive documentation.
  • Preventing billing mistakes.

But these "boring" problems determine whether physicians have time to care.

The future of healthcare may not be built by the company creating the most exciting technology.

It may be built by the company eliminating the most frustrating problems.


The New Healthcare Competition

The future competition among medical practices will not simply be:

Who has the newest equipment?

Who has the biggest marketing budget?

Who has the largest network?

It will be:

Who can remove friction better?

Because patients do not experience your internal departments.

They experience your system.


The Revenue Cycle Is Not a Back Office Function

This is where many physicians underestimate the problem.

Billing is often treated as something separate from medicine.

It isn't.

A delayed claim becomes delayed revenue.

Delayed revenue becomes staffing pressure.

Staffing pressure becomes slower communication.

Slower communication becomes frustrated patients.

The financial health of a practice directly influences the patient experience.

A financially healthy practice has more ability to invest in:

  • People.
  • Technology.
  • Access.
  • Patient care.

The Future Physician Practice

The strongest practices of the future will not simply be the ones with great doctors.

They will be the ones with great systems.

They will ask:

How do we prevent problems instead of fixing them?

How do we remove unnecessary work?

How do we give physicians their time back?

How do we make healthcare easier for patients?


A Challenge to Healthcare Leaders

Stop asking your employees:

"How can we make you more productive?"

Start asking:

"What obstacles are preventing your best work?"

Because productivity is often not a people problem.

It is a design problem.


Final Thought

The woman in the hallway did not need a miracle.

She needed a system that worked.

And that may be the greatest healthcare challenge of our generation.

Not discovering more knowledge.

Not creating more technology.

Not building more complexity.

But designing healthcare systems where compassion can actually reach the patient.

Because the best healthcare system is not the one with the most impressive technology.

It is the one that allows humans to care for humans.


The Most Misunderstood Department in Healthcare

Ask most physicians what they think about medical billing.

You will hear words like:

Necessary.

Complicated.

Frustrating.

Administrative.

A distraction from medicine.

Many physicians view billing as something that happens after care.

The patient was seen.

The diagnosis was made.

The treatment was provided.

Now someone else handles the claim.

But this mindset creates a dangerous blind spot.

Because billing does not start after the patient leaves.

Billing starts the moment a patient enters the healthcare journey.


A Claim Denial Is Not Just a Financial Problem

A denied claim looks like an accounting issue.

A number on a spreadsheet.

A problem for the billing department.

But every denied claim has a story behind it.

Maybe:

The appointment was scheduled incorrectly.

The insurance information was incomplete.

The authorization was missed.

The documentation did not support the service.

The coding did not match the clinical reality.

The claim was submitted incorrectly.

The payer requested information that nobody knew was missing.

The denial appears at the end.

But the cause often began much earlier.

That is why reactive billing is expensive.

By the time a claim is denied, the system has already failed multiple times.


The Revenue Cycle Is a Patient Journey

This is a mindset shift physician owners need to understand:

Revenue cycle management is not separate from patient care.

It is part of the patient experience.

Think about what happens when revenue systems fail.

A clinic loses revenue.

Then what happens?

The practice delays hiring.

Staff become overloaded.

Phone calls take longer.

Appointments become harder to schedule.

Physicians spend more time on administrative work.

Patients experience the consequences.

The connection is indirect.

But it is real.


The Hidden Chain Reaction of Administrative Failure

One small operational mistake can create a long chain reaction.

A patient needs a medication.

The prescription requires authorization.

The authorization process is delayed.

The patient calls the office.

The staff spends time investigating.

The physician spends time responding.

The patient becomes frustrated.

The practice loses efficiency.

Nobody intended this outcome.

But the system produced it.

This is how healthcare friction spreads.


Why Physicians Should Care About Revenue Leakage

Many physician owners hear "revenue cycle" and think:

"This is about making more money."

That is only part of the story.

A healthy revenue cycle creates something more valuable:

Operational freedom.

Freedom to:

Hire better staff.

Invest in technology.

Improve patient access.

Create better workflows.

Reduce physician stress.

Protect the future of the practice.

Revenue is not the purpose of healthcare.

But financial instability can threaten the ability to provide healthcare.


The Small Practice Survival Challenge

For many physician-owned clinics, the margin for error is shrinking.

The practice may have:

One physician.

A handful of employees.

Limited administrative resources.

Increasing payer complexity.

Growing documentation requirements.

Rising operating costs.

A large health system may survive inefficiency.

A small clinic feels every inefficiency immediately.

A single unresolved billing issue can represent hours of lost work.

A single workflow failure can affect hundreds of patients.


The Problem With Traditional Billing Models

Many practices rely on traditional billing relationships.

The common model:

A clinic provides information.

A billing company processes claims.

Problems are discovered later.

Errors are corrected after revenue is lost.

This creates a reactive relationship.

The system asks:

"Why did this claim fail?"

The better question:

"Why did the system allow this claim to fail?"

Healthcare needs to move from correction to prevention.


The Future of Billing Is Not More Billers. It Is Better Intelligence.

This does not mean humans become unnecessary.

Experienced billing professionals provide enormous value.

The future is not replacing expertise.

It is amplifying expertise.

The next generation of revenue cycle management will combine:

Human judgment.

Clinical understanding.

Automation.

Predictive analytics.

Real-time visibility.

The goal:

Identify problems before claims leave the building.


Where AI Actually Creates Value in Medical Billing

The most valuable AI applications may not be flashy.

They may be simple.

1. Prevention of Claim Errors

Before submission:

AI can identify:

  • Missing modifiers.
  • Documentation gaps.
  • Coding inconsistencies.
  • Authorization problems.
  • Eligibility issues.

Prevention is more powerful than correction.

 

2. Payer Intelligence

Every payer behaves differently.

AI systems can analyze patterns:

Which claims are denied?

Why?

By whom?

What documentation improves approval?

What trends are emerging?

 

3. Workflow Automation

AI can reduce repetitive tasks:

  • Claim status checks.
  • Follow-up reminders.
  • Data reconciliation.
  • Administrative communication.

The goal is not eliminating people.

It is eliminating unnecessary work.


The Contrarian View: The Best AI May Be Invisible

Healthcare leaders often look for technology they can see.

A dashboard.

A chatbot.

A new platform.

But the best healthcare technology may become invisible.

It simply works.

It prevents problems.

It removes friction.

It gives physicians back time.

The greatest compliment for healthcare AI may be:

"Nobody noticed it was there."

Because the patient simply experienced better care.


The Physician Practice Operating Framework

A sustainable practice requires alignment across five systems.

1. Patient Access System

Questions:

How easy is it for patients to schedule?

How quickly do they receive answers?

Where do delays occur?

 

2. Clinical Workflow System

Questions:

How much time do physicians spend documenting?

How many unnecessary steps exist?

Where does information get lost?

 

3. Revenue Cycle System

Questions:

Why are claims denied?

Where does revenue leak?

How long does payment take?

 

4. Technology System

Questions:

Does technology remove work?

Or does it create more work?

 

5. Human System

Questions:

Do employees have what they need?

Are physicians supported?

Are patients treated like people?


The Metrics That Matter for Physician Owners

Many practices track revenue.

Fewer track the causes behind revenue.

Here are important operational signals.


Patient Access Metrics

Track:

Appointment Availability

How quickly can patients get care?

No-Show Rate

Are scheduling processes working?

Response Time

How quickly are patient questions answered?


Clinical Efficiency Metrics

Track:

Documentation Completion Time

Are physicians finishing charts after hours?

Inbox Volume

Are administrative demands increasing?

Visit Cycle Time

Where are delays occurring?


Revenue Cycle Metrics

Track:

First Pass Claim Acceptance Rate

How many claims succeed without rework?

Denial Rate

What problems repeat?

Days in Accounts Receivable

How quickly does revenue return?

Patient Collection Rate

Are financial conversations happening clearly?


The Practice Transformation Question

Do not ask:

"How do we work faster?"

Ask:

"How do we remove the work that should not exist?"

That question changes everything.


The Healthcare Lesson Hidden Inside Billing

The hallway patient and the denied claim may seem unrelated.

They are not.

Both reveal the same weakness:

A healthcare system that often reacts after problems occur instead of preventing them.

The patient waits in the hallway because the system failed upstream.

The claim fails because the workflow failed upstream.

The physician burns out because the design failed upstream.

The solution is upstream thinking.


The Future Belongs to Prevention

Medicine teaches prevention.

We prevent disease.

We prevent complications.

We prevent adverse outcomes.

Healthcare operations should follow the same principle.

Prevent:

Denials.

Delays.

Confusion.

Rework.

Burnout.

Because the best problem is the one that never reaches the patient.


The AI Question Healthcare Leaders Need to Ask

Artificial intelligence has become the newest promise in healthcare.

Every week brings another announcement:

A new model.

A new platform.

A new partnership.

A new prediction.

The excitement is understandable.

Healthcare has real problems.

Physicians are overwhelmed.

Administrative tasks continue growing.

Patients face delays.

Clinics struggle with staffing.

The opportunity for intelligent automation is enormous.

But there is one question healthcare leaders are not asking enough:

Are we using AI to remove friction, or are we using AI to automate the friction?

Because those are two completely different futures.


The Wrong Vision of AI in Healthcare

The wrong vision sounds like this:

"Let's add AI to everything."

More tools.

More dashboards.

More alerts.

More automation.

More systems.

But healthcare professionals are already drowning in complexity.

Adding another layer of technology does not create innovation.

Sometimes it creates another burden.

A physician does not wake up thinking:

"I wish I had another software platform today."

They think:

"I wish I had more time with my patients."

"I wish my workflows made sense."

"I wish I could finish my work during the workday."

"I wish I didn't spend my evenings fixing administrative problems."

The future of healthcare AI should start there.


The Right Vision of AI

The best AI will not replace the physician.

It will remove everything preventing the physician from being fully present.

That means AI should help with:

Administrative Intelligence

Reducing repetitive work.

Examples:

  • Insurance verification.
  • Claim preparation.
  • Documentation review.
  • Workflow alerts.
  • Revenue cycle analysis.

Clinical Support

Supporting—not replacing—clinical judgment.

Examples:

  • Summarizing information.
  • Identifying patterns.
  • Organizing patient data.
  • Supporting decision-making.

Operational Intelligence

Helping leaders understand:

Where patients wait.

Where staff struggle.

Where revenue leaks.

Where processes fail.

 

The goal is not a more automated healthcare system.

The goal is a more human healthcare system.


The Ethical Question: Efficiency at What Cost?

Healthcare cannot pursue efficiency without asking ethical questions.

Because healthcare is different from other industries.

A delayed online purchase is frustrating.

A delayed medical decision can change a life.

A customer support chatbot can handle a complaint.

A patient facing a frightening diagnosis may need compassion.

Healthcare technology must preserve something that cannot be automated:

Human trust.


The Five Ethical Principles for Healthcare AI

1. Human Oversight Must Remain Central

AI can recommend.

AI can predict.

AI can identify patterns.

But humans must remain responsible for decisions affecting patient care.

 

2. Transparency Matters

Patients and clinicians deserve to understand:

  • When AI is being used.
  • What role it plays.
  • What its limitations are.

Trust requires clarity.

 

3. Bias Must Be Actively Addressed

AI systems learn from data.

If the data contains gaps or bias, the system may reproduce those problems.

Healthcare leaders must ask:

Who benefits?

Who might be overlooked?

Who might be harmed?

 

4. Privacy Cannot Be an Afterthought

Healthcare data is deeply personal.

Organizations must prioritize:

  • Security.
  • Appropriate access.
  • Data governance.
  • Responsible partnerships.

Innovation without trust will fail.

 

5. Technology Must Serve Humanity

The ultimate measure of healthcare innovation is not:

How advanced is the technology?

The better question:

Did it improve the human experience of care?


Legal Considerations for Physician Owners Adopting Technology

Innovation brings opportunity.

It also creates responsibility.

Physician leaders considering automation should evaluate several areas.

 

1. HIPAA and Data Security

Any system handling protected health information must consider:

  • Data storage.
  • Encryption.
  • Access controls.
  • Vendor agreements.
  • Security practices.

Convenience cannot replace compliance.

 

2. Documentation Responsibility

AI-generated documentation can improve efficiency.

But physicians remain responsible for accuracy.

A faster note is not automatically a better note.

Clinical documentation must still reflect:

  • Medical necessity.
  • Accuracy.
  • Professional judgment.

 

3. Billing Compliance

Automation in revenue cycle management creates opportunities.

But physician practices must ensure:

  • Accurate coding.
  • Appropriate billing.
  • Proper documentation.
  • Compliance with payer requirements.

Efficiency should never become a shortcut around responsibility.

 

4. Vendor Due Diligence

Before adopting technology, ask:

Who owns the data?

How is information protected?

How does the system make decisions?

What happens if the system fails?

Is there human review?

The cheapest solution may become the most expensive mistake.


The Physician Entrepreneur's Implementation Roadmap

Healthcare transformation does not happen by purchasing software.

It happens through disciplined improvement.

Here is a practical framework.

 

Step 1: Diagnose Before You Prescribe

Physicians understand this instinctively.

Before treating a patient, you gather information.

Do the same with your practice.

Identify:

Where are patients waiting?

Where is staff time lost?

Where does revenue disappear?

Where are physicians frustrated?

Do not guess.

Measure.

 

Step 2: Find Your Biggest Friction Point

Do not try to fix everything.

Start with the biggest pain.

Examples:

A clinic may discover:

  • Claims are delayed because eligibility checks are inconsistent.
  • Physicians lose hours because documentation workflows are inefficient.
  • Staff spend too much time on manual follow-up.
  • Patients struggle because communication is fragmented.

Fix the highest-impact problem first.

 

Step 3: Redesign the Process

Before asking:

"What technology should we buy?"

Ask:

"Should this process exist this way?"

Many workflows are broken because they were built years ago and never questioned.

 

Step 4: Automate What Should Not Require Human Effort

Good candidates for automation:

  • Repetitive tasks.
  • Data matching.
  • Status checks.
  • Error detection.
  • Reminders.

Poor candidates:

  • Complex conversations.
  • Ethical decisions.
  • Sensitive patient interactions.

 

Step 5: Measure the Results

Improvement requires evidence.

Track:

Patient Metrics

  • Appointment wait time.
  • Communication response time.
  • Satisfaction trends.

Physician Metrics

  • Documentation time.
  • Administrative workload.
  • After-hours work.

Financial Metrics

  • Denial rate.
  • First-pass acceptance.
  • Days in accounts receivable.
  • Revenue leakage.

Common Mistakes Physician Owners Make When Implementing Change

Mistake #1: Buying Technology Before Understanding the Problem

Technology is not a strategy.

It is a tool.

 

Mistake #2: Changing Everything at Once

Large transformations often fail because organizations attempt too much.

Small improvements compound.

 

Mistake #3: Ignoring Staff Input

The people closest to the workflow often understand the problems best.

Listen to them.

 

Mistake #4: Focusing Only on Financial Outcomes

Revenue matters.

But sustainable success includes:

Patient trust.

Physician satisfaction.

Employee retention.

Operational stability.

 

Mistake #5: Forgetting the Human Element

The purpose of efficiency is not creating a faster machine.

It is creating more space for human care.


The Future Healthcare Leaders Must Prepare For

The next decade will not simply be about more technology.

It will be about better integration.

The winning healthcare organizations will connect:

Clinical intelligence.

Operational intelligence.

Financial intelligence.

Human intelligence.

They will stop viewing these as separate areas.

Because they are connected.

A better billing system can reduce physician stress.

A better scheduling system can improve patient access.

A better workflow can improve care quality.

Everything connects.


The Final Contrarian Prediction

The future healthcare winners will not necessarily be the organizations with the most technology.

They will be the organizations with the least unnecessary friction.

The best healthcare system is not the one that forces people to work harder.

It is the one that allows people to do their best work.

The best AI is not the one that replaces humans.

It is the one that gives humans back the time to be human.


The Biggest Healthcare Myth: The Problem Is That We Need More Heroes

Healthcare has always celebrated heroes.

The physician who stayed overnight.

The nurse who worked beyond exhaustion.

The caregiver who made impossible sacrifices.

These stories inspire us.

But they also hide a dangerous assumption:

That healthcare works because exceptional people constantly rescue imperfect systems.

That is not sustainable.

A great healthcare system should not depend on heroic exhaustion.

It should depend on thoughtful design.

The goal should not be:

"How do we make our best people work harder?"

The goal should be:

"How do we build systems where good people can consistently deliver great care?"


Myth vs Reality: Rethinking Healthcare Improvement

 

Myth 1: Physician Burnout Is a Personal Resilience Problem

Reality: Burnout Is Often a System Performance Problem

For years, burnout conversations focused on wellness programs.

Meditation.

Time management.

Self-care.

Those things may help.

But they do not solve the root cause.

A physician cannot meditate away:

  • Inefficient workflows.
  • Excessive administrative burden.
  • Poorly designed technology.
  • Constant operational friction.

You cannot wellness your way out of a broken system.

Healthcare must stop asking:

"How can we make physicians tolerate more?"

And start asking:

"Why are we creating conditions that exhaust the people we need most?"

 

Myth 2: More Technology Means Better Healthcare

Reality: Technology Without Workflow Design Creates Digital Chaos

Healthcare does not have a technology shortage.

It has a coordination problem.

Many organizations have:

  • Electronic health records.
  • Scheduling systems.
  • Billing platforms.
  • Communication tools.
  • Analytics dashboards.

But many systems still do not communicate effectively.

The result?

More clicks.

More passwords.

More interruptions.

More frustration.

Technology should simplify healthcare.

Not create another obstacle course.

 

Myth 3: Billing Is Only a Financial Function

Reality: Billing Is Part of the Patient Experience

A patient does not experience your departments separately.

They experience one healthcare journey.

A billing problem can become:

A delayed treatment.

A confused patient.

A frustrated staff member.

A stressed physician.

A damaged relationship.

Revenue cycle management is not simply about collecting money.

It is about creating the operational stability needed to deliver care.

 

Myth 4: Bigger Healthcare Organizations Are Always Better Positioned

Reality: Smaller Practices Have a Hidden Advantage

Small and medium-sized clinics often have something large organizations struggle to achieve:

Speed.

A physician owner can:

  • Change workflows quickly.
  • Listen directly to patients.
  • Implement improvements faster.
  • Create stronger relationships.

The challenge is not capability.

The challenge is having the right systems.

 

Myth 5: AI Will Replace Physicians

Reality: AI Will Separate Physicians Who Use Systems From Those Who Fight Systems

The future is not:

AI versus physicians.

The future is:

Physicians with intelligent systems versus physicians trapped by inefficient systems.

The physician remains essential.

The human relationship remains essential.

But the administrative burden surrounding medicine must change.


The Physician Owner's Five-Step Transformation Plan

Healthcare transformation does not require a massive overhaul.

It requires disciplined improvement.

 

Step 1: Find the Friction

Every practice has friction.

The question is:

Where is yours?

Look for:

  • Repeated phone calls.
  • Delayed claims.
  • Documentation bottlenecks.
  • Patient confusion.
  • Staff frustration.

The biggest problems are often hiding inside daily routines.

 

Step 2: Measure What Matters

You cannot improve invisible problems.

Track:

Clinical Efficiency

  • Time spent documenting.
  • Chart completion delays.
  • Provider workload.

Patient Experience

  • Appointment availability.
  • Response time.
  • Patient complaints.

Financial Performance

  • Denial rates.
  • First-pass claim success.
  • Days in accounts receivable.
  • Collection performance.

 

Step 3: Fix the Process Before Adding Tools

This is where many organizations fail.

They purchase technology before understanding the workflow.

The correct sequence:

First:

Understand the problem.

Second:

Redesign the process.

Third:

Apply technology.

Technology should accelerate good processes.

Not hide broken ones.

 

Step 4: Automate Repetitive Work

Human expertise should focus on human problems.

Automate:

  • Repetitive data entry.
  • Claim checks.
  • Status tracking.
  • Error identification.
  • Administrative reminders.

Protect human attention for:

  • Diagnosis.
  • Communication.
  • Compassion.
  • Decision-making.

 

Step 5: Create Continuous Improvement

Healthcare cannot improve through one-time projects.

Improvement must become part of the culture.

Ask every month:

What created unnecessary work?

What frustrated patients?

What frustrated staff?

What prevented physicians from focusing on care?


The Future of Healthcare: From Healthcare Delivery to Healthcare Design

The next era of healthcare will be defined by a shift.

From:

Treating problems.

To:

Preventing problems.

From:

Reactive operations.

To:

Predictive operations.

From:

Disconnected tools.

To:

Integrated systems.

From:

Physician exhaustion.

To:

Physician empowerment.


The Future Healthcare Practice Will Look Different

The clinic of the future will not simply be more digital.

It will be more intelligent.

It will know:

Where patients struggle.

Where workflows break.

Where revenue leaks.

Where physicians lose time.

It will use technology quietly in the background.

The patient will not think:

"This clinic has advanced AI."

The patient will think:

"This clinic understands me."

That is the real measure of success.


The Healthcare Innovation Test

Before adopting any new technology, ask five questions:

Question 1

Does this reduce unnecessary work?

 

Question 2

Does this improve the patient experience?

 

Question 3

Does this give physicians more time?

 

Question 4

Does this improve visibility and decision-making?

 

Question 5

Would we still use this if the technology were not exciting?

 

If the answer is no, reconsider.


Final Thoughts: Healthcare Does Not Need More Complexity. It Needs Better Design.

The woman waiting in the hallway represents a deeper healthcare truth.

The problem was not a lack of caring.

It was not a lack of intelligence.

It was not a lack of effort.

The people inside healthcare systems are often extraordinary.

The systems around them are often not.

That is the opportunity.

The next generation of healthcare leaders must stop asking:

"How do we make healthcare workers do more?"

And start asking:

"How do we design healthcare so people can do what they were trained to do?"

Physicians were not trained to fight insurance systems.

Nurses were not trained to chase missing information.

Patients were not trained to navigate complexity.

Healthcare should work better.

Not because people need to try harder.

Because systems need to become smarter.


Get Involved: Help Build the Future of Healthcare

Healthcare transformation does not happen from technology alone.

It happens when healthcare professionals share experiences, challenge assumptions, and redesign what no longer works.

Three questions for physicians, clinic owners, and healthcare leaders:

1. What is the one healthcare workflow you believe should be completely redesigned from the ground up?

2. What administrative burden takes the most time away from patient care in your practice?

3. If you could eliminate one unnecessary step in healthcare tomorrow, what would it be?

Share your perspective in the comments.

Your experience may help another healthcare leader facing the same challenge.

If this article resonates with you, consider ♻️ reposting and sharing this conversation with physicians, healthcare entrepreneurs, and practice leaders who believe healthcare can become more human.


Continue the Conversation

Healthcare progress begins with better ideas, honest conversations, and practical action.

Explore additional insights, operational strategies, and behind-the-scenes perspectives on healthcare innovation, physician leadership, and building better systems.

Knowledge creates progress.

Start learning. Start questioning. Start improving.


About the Author

Dr. Daniel Cham is a physician and medical consultant specializing in healthcare technology, medical practice operations, healthcare management, and medical billing transformation.

As a physician entrepreneur, Dr. Cham focuses on helping healthcare professionals understand how operational systems, technology, and smarter workflows can improve both physician sustainability and patient care.

His work explores the intersection of medicine, innovation, and healthcare operations—turning complex challenges into practical strategies for physicians, clinic owners, and healthcare leaders.

Connect with Dr. Cham on LinkedIn to learn more.


Disclaimer

This article is intended for educational and informational purposes only. It provides general perspectives on healthcare operations, technology, and practice management. It should not be interpreted as medical, legal, financial, or regulatory advice. Healthcare professionals should seek guidance from qualified experts when making decisions specific to their practices or organizations.


References

1. Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) — Healthcare system redesign and quality improvement principles.
IHI provides widely recognized frameworks for improving healthcare systems, reducing waste, and creating safer care processes.
Reference: Institute for Healthcare Improvement

2. American Medical Association — Physician burnout and administrative burden resources.
The AMA provides research and guidance on reducing administrative complexity and improving physician practice environments.
Reference: American Medical Association

3. National Academy of Medicine — Clinician burnout and healthcare workforce challenges.
NAM examines systemic factors contributing to clinician burnout and opportunities for healthcare transformation.
Reference: National Academy of Medicine


Hashtags

#HealthcareInnovation #PhysicianLeadership #MedicalPracticeManagement #HealthcareTransformation #HealthTech #AIinHealthcare #DigitalHealth #MedicalBilling #RevenueCycleManagement #PhysicianEntrepreneur #HealthcareOperations #FutureOfHealthcare #PatientExperience #HealthcareLeadership #ClinicGrowth


Healthcare does not need more exhausted heroes. It needs better-designed systems.

The future of medicine belongs to organizations that protect physician time and restore human connection.

The greatest healthcare innovation may be creating a system where caring becomes easier.

 

Saturday, July 18, 2026

The Baby Who Received a Second Chance Became the Nurse Who Gives Others Hope — But Healthcare Is Ignoring a Bigger Problem

A transplant survivor’s journey reveals why the future of medicine is not just better technology. It is rebuilding healthcare around human connection, physician time, and smarter systems.



“The secret of the care of the patient is in caring for the patient.” — Dr. Francis Peabody, Harvard Medical School


Healthcare’s Greatest Innovation Problem May Not Be Technology. It May Be That We Forgot the Human Being Inside the System.

At eight months old, Hannah Fleming was not thinking about becoming a nurse.

She was fighting to survive.

Diagnosed with biliary atresia, a rare condition that affects the bile ducts and can lead to liver failure, Hannah’s future depended on something no algorithm could create.

A human decision.

A donor family’s generosity.

A medical team’s expertise.

A community’s support.

She received a liver transplant.

The operation saved her life.

But the real story began decades later.

Hannah did not simply become a transplant survivor.

She became the person standing beside other transplant patients when they were afraid.

She became the nurse who could look at a frightened family and say:

“I understand.”

Not because she studied the patient experience.

Because she lived it.


The Healthcare System Often Measures What Is Easy to Count — But Misses What Matters Most

Modern medicine is extraordinary.

We can:

  • Replace failing organs
  • Sequence genomes
  • Detect disease earlier
  • Develop targeted therapies
  • Perform procedures once considered impossible

Yet healthcare continues to struggle with something much more basic:

Making people feel cared for while navigating the system.

We measure:

  • Length of stay
  • Readmission rates
  • Productivity
  • Revenue
  • Claims processed

But how do we measure:

  • A caregiver’s fear while waiting for a transplant?
  • A physician’s exhaustion after spending hours on paperwork?
  • A patient’s frustration trying to navigate insurance?
  • A nurse’s emotional burden carrying other people’s suffering?

Healthcare has become incredibly advanced.

But advancement without connection creates a dangerous imbalance.


The Contrarian Healthcare Question

The healthcare industry asks:

“How do we make medicine more efficient?”

Perhaps we should ask a different question:

“Efficient for whom?”

A system can become more efficient on paper while becoming more exhausting for the people inside it.

A hospital can process more patients.

A clinic can submit more claims.

A company can automate more workflows.

But if physicians have less time with patients and patients feel less understood, have we truly improved healthcare?

Efficiency should not mean removing humanity.

It should mean protecting it.


The Patient Experience Is One of Healthcare’s Most Valuable Data Sources — And We Rarely Capture It

Healthcare has invested heavily in data.

We collect:

  • Lab results
  • Imaging studies
  • Genetic information
  • Claims data
  • Prescription history
  • Clinical documentation

But we often overlook one of the most important datasets:

The lived experience of the patient.

Patients understand things healthcare systems cannot always see.

They know:

  • Where confusion happens
  • Where trust breaks down
  • Which moments create anxiety
  • Which interactions create confidence

Hannah Fleming’s story represents a powerful idea:

A patient is not just the recipient of healthcare.

A patient can become one of healthcare’s greatest teachers.


The Same Human Problem Exists Behind Every Physician’s Exam Room

The irony of modern medicine is this:

Physicians are trained to solve complex human problems.

But many are trapped inside systems creating unnecessary complexity.

A physician can diagnose rare diseases.

Manage chronic conditions.

Perform life-changing procedures.

Yet after clinic hours, many are forced to battle:

  • Insurance rules
  • Documentation requirements
  • Claim denials
  • Prior authorization delays
  • Revenue cycle confusion

The physician who spends years mastering medicine may spend evenings learning the language of reimbursement.

This is not a physician problem.

This is a system design problem.


The Hidden Crisis in Independent Medicine

Small and medium-sized physician practices are facing a quiet crisis.

Not because doctors cannot provide excellent care.

They can.

Not because patients do not value independent practices.

They do.

The challenge is operational survival.

Many clinics are squeezed between:

Rising Costs

Staff salaries.

Technology expenses.

Administrative overhead.

Increasing Complexity

More payer requirements.

More documentation expectations.

More compliance obligations.

Limited Resources

Small practices do not have the infrastructure of large health systems.

The result?

Physicians spend less time doing the work they trained for.

And more time managing the machinery around healthcare.


Healthcare Has a Revenue Problem — But the Root Cause Is Not What Most People Think

The common explanation:

“Medical billing is complicated.”

True.

But incomplete.

The deeper problem:

Healthcare billing is often a data quality problem disguised as a billing problem.

A denied claim is rarely born at the billing desk.

The problem often begins earlier:

A missing detail.

An incomplete workflow.

A documentation gap.

A disconnected system.

By the time a claim is denied, the healthcare system is already reacting too late.

We keep trying to fix the final step.

The real opportunity is improving the first step.


The Future of Healthcare Is Moving Upstream

The healthcare industry has spent decades building solutions downstream.

After something goes wrong:

  • After the denial
  • After the error
  • After the delay
  • After the administrative burden appears

But the next generation of healthcare innovation will move upstream.

Instead of asking:

“How do we fix more denied claims?”

We should ask:

“Why did the claim become vulnerable in the first place?”

Instead of asking:

“How do we make physicians work faster?”

We should ask:

“How do we remove unnecessary work entirely?”


Why I Built OnnX: A Physician’s View of Healthcare Complexity

After years practicing medicine and studying healthcare operations, I noticed a pattern.

Healthcare does not suffer from a shortage of intelligence.

It suffers from disconnected systems.

The people closest to patients often understand the problems best.

But they are rarely the ones designing the workflows.

This creates a gap between:

Clinical reality.

Operational reality.

Technology reality.

OnnX was built around closing that gap.

The mission is not to create another complicated healthcare tool.

The mission is to simplify medical billing operations for small and medium-sized physician clinics by improving the connection between clinical information, workflow, and reimbursement.

The goal:

Less administrative friction.

More physician time.

Better practice sustainability.

Because every hour returned to a physician is an hour that can be spent caring for patients.


The Biggest Healthcare Innovation May Be Giving Doctors Their Time Back

Healthcare leaders often ask:

“What technology will transform medicine?”

My answer:

The most meaningful technology may be the one that restores what healthcare has slowly lost.

Time.

Time to listen.

Time to explain.

Time to think.

Time to care.

Because the most advanced healthcare system in the world still depends on one simple interaction:

One human being helping another human being.


The Lesson From a Transplant Nurse’s Journey

Hannah Fleming’s story is not only about transplantation.

It is about transformation.

A patient became a caregiver.

A survivor became a healer.

A difficult experience became a source of empathy.

Healthcare should create more moments like this.

Not just healthier patients.

But empowered people who carry healing forward.


The Healthcare Industry Has Spent Billions Fixing Symptoms. We Need to Start Fixing Causes.

Healthcare has no shortage of solutions.

There are:

  • Electronic health records
  • Practice management systems
  • Revenue cycle vendors
  • Coding platforms
  • Analytics dashboards
  • Automation tools
  • Artificial intelligence platforms

Yet many physicians still say the same thing:

“I spend too much time fighting the system.”

That should force healthcare leaders to ask an uncomfortable question:

If we have invested so much in healthcare technology, why does healthcare still feel so difficult for the people delivering it?

The answer may be uncomfortable.

Because the problem is not simply that healthcare lacks technology.

The problem is that healthcare has accumulated layers of technology on top of fragmented workflows.

We have digitized complexity.

But we have not always redesigned the process itself.


Healthcare Does Not Have a Billing Problem. It Has an Information Architecture Problem.

This is one of the biggest misconceptions in healthcare operations.

People often think:

“Medical billing is a finance problem.”

But billing is actually the final stage of a much larger information journey.

A patient enters the system.

A clinician evaluates the patient.

Documentation is created.

A diagnosis is recorded.

A procedure is performed.

A claim is generated.

A payer evaluates the information.

Payment follows.

Every step depends on the quality of the information before it.

A billing team cannot repair incomplete clinical information.

A coder cannot create documentation that does not exist.

A technology platform cannot magically fix a broken workflow.

The root issue is upstream.

Healthcare revenue is created at the moment information is captured.


The Downstream Healthcare Trap

Most healthcare organizations operate reactively.

Something breaks.

Then someone fixes it.

A claim is denied.

The billing department investigates.

A physician note is incomplete.

Staff sends reminders.

A payer rejects information.

The team appeals.

This creates a cycle:

Problem → Reaction → Correction → Delay → Frustration

The healthcare industry has become very good at recovery.

But recovery is expensive.

The better question is:

Why are we designing systems that depend on recovery in the first place?


The Upstream Healthcare Model

A better approach begins earlier.

Before the claim exists.

Before the denial happens.

Before revenue is lost.

The upstream model focuses on:

1. Better Information Capture

The quality of healthcare data determines the quality of healthcare outcomes.

Clinicians need workflows that make accurate documentation easier.

Not harder.

 

2. Better Clinical-Operational Alignment

Healthcare often separates:

Clinical teams.

Administrative teams.

Financial teams.

But patients experience one healthcare journey.

The system should reflect that.

 

3. Better Visibility

Many practice owners know revenue is declining.

But they do not always know why.

The future clinic needs operational intelligence:

  • Where are claims failing?
  • What patterns create delays?
  • Which workflows need improvement?

Three Healthcare Experts on the Future of Medicine

 

Expert Perspective #1: Dr. Atul Gawande — Complexity Is a System Problem

Surgeon, writer, and healthcare researcher Dr. Atul Gawande has spent years studying why highly trained professionals still struggle inside complex systems.

His work highlights an important idea:

Expertise alone cannot overcome poorly designed systems.

A physician may know exactly what should happen medically.

But if the surrounding process creates friction, the entire system suffers.

Healthcare leadership lesson:

Do not ask:

“How do we make people work harder?”

Ask:

“How do we design work better?”

 

Expert Perspective #2: Dr. Eric Topol — Technology Should Give Humans More Time

Cardiologist and digital medicine expert Dr. Eric Topol has emphasized that technology should enhance healthcare professionals rather than replace them.

The goal of artificial intelligence should not be:

More automation.

More screens.

More digital tasks.

The goal should be:

More human connection.

Healthcare innovation lesson:

The best technology creates more time for conversations that matter.

 

Expert Perspective #3: Dr. Donald Berwick — Healthcare Must Return to Its Purpose

Healthcare quality leader Dr. Donald Berwick has consistently advocated for patient-centered care and improving the healthcare experience.

His message challenges organizations to remember:

Healthcare is not simply a transaction.

It is a relationship.

Healthcare leadership lesson:

Operational improvement should support compassion, not compete with it.


The Numbers Behind the Problem: Why Administrative Burden Matters

Physician Burnout Is an Operational Issue

Physician burnout is often described as a personal wellness challenge.

But the causes are frequently structural.

Major contributors include:

  • Administrative burden
  • Excessive documentation
  • Loss of autonomy
  • Reduced patient interaction time
  • Workflow inefficiency

When physicians spend more time managing systems than caring for patients, healthcare loses something valuable.


Revenue Cycle Complexity Has Real Consequences

Independent practices operate under increasing pressure.

Common challenges include:

  • Claim denials
  • Delayed reimbursement
  • Staffing shortages
  • Increasing overhead
  • Complex payer requirements

For a large health system, inefficiency may become a budget problem.

For a small physician practice, inefficiency can threaten survival.


Why Independent Clinics Are Especially Vulnerable

Small and medium-sized clinics are often the backbone of community healthcare.

They provide:

  • Local access
  • Long-term patient relationships
  • Personalized care
  • Specialty services

But they often lack:

  • Large administrative departments
  • Dedicated technology teams
  • Extensive financial resources

This creates an imbalance:

The physicians closest to patients often have the fewest resources to solve operational problems.


Recent Healthcare Trend: The Growing Demand for Sustainable Physician Practices

Healthcare conversations increasingly focus on sustainability.

The industry is recognizing that improving healthcare requires more than improving hospitals.

It requires supporting the physicians delivering care every day.

The future discussion is shifting from:

“How do we make doctors more productive?”

to:

“How do we create systems where doctors can practice medicine sustainably?”


The Biggest Mistake Healthcare Technology Companies Make

Many healthcare startups fail because they begin with the wrong question.

They ask:

“What technology can we build?”

Instead of:

“What healthcare problem deserves to disappear?”

Technology is not the innovation.

Problem-solving is the innovation.


Practical Framework: How Physician Owners Can Reduce Administrative Friction

 

Step 1: Perform a Workflow Reality Check

Do not start with software.

Start with observation.

Ask:

Where does time disappear?

Where do mistakes repeat?

Where do employees become frustrated?

 

Step 2: Identify Revenue Leakage Points

Review:

Documentation

Are clinical notes supporting services provided?

Coding

Are coding decisions consistent?

Claims

What are the most common denial reasons?

Follow-up

How long does reimbursement take?

 

Step 3: Create a Monthly Practice Intelligence Review

Every clinic should understand:

  • Top denial causes
  • Days in accounts receivable
  • Collection trends
  • Administrative workload
  • Patient access issues

Data should create decisions.

Not just reports.

 

Step 4: Choose Technology Based on Outcomes

Before buying technology, ask:

Does this:

  • Save physician time?
  • Reduce staff burden?
  • Improve visibility?
  • Improve patient experience?
  • Reduce unnecessary complexity?

If the answer is unclear, the technology may not solve the real problem.


Legal Considerations in Healthcare Automation

Healthcare innovation must operate within important boundaries.

Organizations must consider:

HIPAA and Data Security

Protected health information requires appropriate safeguards.

 

Documentation Integrity

Automation should support accurate records.

It should never encourage unsupported documentation or inappropriate billing.

 

Human Accountability

Healthcare decisions require responsible oversight.

Technology can assist.

Professionals remain accountable.


Ethical Considerations: The Question Healthcare Leaders Must Ask

Not every improvement is a true improvement.

A healthcare innovation should be evaluated by more than financial performance.

Ask:

Does this improve patient trust?

Does this reduce clinician burden?

Does this improve access?

Does this protect dignity?

The purpose of healthcare is not efficiency alone.

The purpose is better human outcomes.


The Future of Healthcare Operations

The next generation of healthcare will likely be defined by three shifts:

 

1. From Reactive to Predictive

Healthcare will increasingly identify problems before they occur.

 

2. From Fragmented to Connected

Clinical, operational, and financial information will need to work together.

 

3. From Technology-Centered to Human-Centered

The winners in healthcare innovation will not simply build powerful tools.

They will build tools people trust.


The Question Healthcare Leaders Should Be Asking

Not:

“What can AI do?”

But:

“What unnecessary burden can we remove so humans can do what they do best?”

Because the future of healthcare is not about replacing humanity.

It is about protecting it.


The Future of Medicine Will Not Be Built by Technology Alone

The story of Hannah Fleming began with a transplant.

But it was never really about the transplant.

It was about what happened afterward.

A child who received care became a caregiver.

A patient who needed hope became someone who gave hope.

A healthcare experience became a healthcare mission.

This is the future lesson for healthcare leaders:

The greatest healthcare systems will not simply create healthier patients. They will create empowered people who continue improving healthcare.

The next era of medicine will require more than clinical breakthroughs.

It will require better systems.

Systems that respect:

  • Patients
  • Physicians
  • Nurses
  • Care teams
  • Independent practices
  • Communities

Because healthcare is ultimately a human relationship supported by technology.

Not a technology system occasionally visited by humans.


Frequently Asked Questions

 

FAQ 1: Why should physicians care about medical billing and revenue cycle management?

Because financial health and patient care are connected.

A financially unstable practice eventually affects:

  • Staffing decisions
  • Patient access
  • Technology investment
  • Physician sustainability

Revenue cycle management is not simply an accounting function.

It is part of healthcare delivery infrastructure.

A physician practice cannot provide excellent care if the operational foundation is collapsing underneath it.

 

FAQ 2: Is the healthcare system too complicated to fix?

No.

But the industry must stop confusing complexity with quality.

A complicated system is not necessarily a sophisticated system.

The best systems often feel simple to the people using them.

Patients do not want complicated healthcare.

Physicians do not want complicated healthcare.

Healthcare leaders should not accept complexity as inevitable.

 

FAQ 3: Will AI eliminate jobs in medical billing?

The more likely future is transformation, not elimination.

AI can help with:

  • Pattern recognition
  • Workflow automation
  • Data analysis
  • Administrative support

But healthcare still requires:

  • Human judgment
  • Compliance awareness
  • Relationship management
  • Decision-making

The question is not:

“Will AI replace humans?”

The better question:

“Which tasks should humans never have had to do manually in the first place?”

 

FAQ 4: What should physician owners do before investing in new technology?

Start with the problem.

Do not begin with:

“We need AI.”

Begin with:

“What problem consumes the most time, money, or frustration?”

A practical approach:

Step 1

Identify the workflow problem.

Step 2

Measure the impact.

Step 3

Redesign the process.

Step 4

Use technology to support the improved workflow.

Technology should be the accelerator.

Not the starting point.

 

FAQ 5: How can independent clinics compete with large healthcare systems?

Independent practices have something large organizations often struggle to replicate:

Relationships.

Community trust.

Physician accessibility.

Personalized care.

The opportunity is not becoming a smaller hospital.

The opportunity is becoming a smarter, more human-centered practice.


Myth Busters: Challenging Healthcare Assumptions

 

Myth: “Healthcare Has a Technology Problem”

Reality:

Healthcare has an alignment problem.

We have technology.

We have data.

We have talented professionals.

The challenge is connecting these pieces effectively.

 

Myth: “More Documentation Means Better Healthcare”

Reality:

Documentation should support care.

It should not overwhelm care.

The goal is not more documentation.

The goal is meaningful documentation.

 

Myth: “Physician Burnout Is Just a Wellness Issue”

Reality:

Burnout is often a system design issue.

Telling physicians to simply “practice self-care” ignores many structural problems:

  • Administrative overload
  • Inefficient workflows
  • Reduced autonomy
  • Excessive bureaucracy

Healthcare organizations must redesign environments, not only offer wellness programs.

 

Myth: “Revenue Optimization Means Putting Money Before Patients”

Reality:

A sustainable practice supports better patient care.

Financial stability allows clinics to:

  • Maintain staff
  • Invest in technology
  • Expand services
  • Improve access

The goal is not choosing between business and medicine.

The goal is making them support each other.


The Physician Owner’s Practical Checklist

1. Audit Your Administrative Burden

Ask:

  • What tasks consume physician time?
  • What tasks frustrate staff?
  • What processes require repeated correction?

 

2. Understand Your Revenue Cycle

Know:

  • Your denial rate
  • Your collection rate
  • Your accounts receivable trends
  • Your most common billing issues

You cannot improve what you cannot see.

 

3. Listen to Frontline Staff

The people performing the work every day often understand the problems best.

Ask:

“What process would you eliminate if you could?”

The answer may surprise you.

 

4. Protect the Physician-Patient Relationship

Every operational decision should eventually connect back to one question:

Does this help physicians spend more meaningful time with patients?


Three Questions Every Healthcare Founder Should Answer

 

Question 1: Are You Solving a Real Pain or a Market Trend?

Healthcare does not need another impressive demonstration.

It needs solutions that remove daily frustration.

 

Question 2: Are You Designing for Healthcare Reality?

Healthcare is not like other industries.

Trust matters.

Safety matters.

Workflow matters.

Adoption matters.

 

Question 3: Are You Building Technology Around People?

The best healthcare companies understand:

Technology serves healthcare.

Healthcare does not serve technology.


Final Thought: Healthcare’s Future Depends on Those Willing to Question the System

Every major healthcare improvement started with someone asking:

“Why do we do it this way?”

Progress requires curiosity.

Progress requires courage.

Progress requires people willing to redesign what everyone else has accepted.


Join the Conversation

I would like to hear from physicians, clinic owners, nurses, and healthcare leaders:

What is one healthcare workflow problem that you believe should no longer exist?

Share your perspective in the comments.

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


Take Action

If this article resonates:

  • Add your voice to the conversation.
  • Share what is working in your practice.
  • Challenge outdated healthcare assumptions.
  • Help other physicians rethink how healthcare operations can improve.

Consider reposting this article so more clinicians and healthcare leaders can participate in the discussion.

Healthcare improves when the people closest to the problem become part of the solution.


Further Reading

1. American Medical Association — Physician Burnout and Practice Sustainability

The AMA provides research and resources focused on physician well-being, administrative burden, and improving healthcare practice environments.

American Medical Association Physician Health Resources


2. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services — Healthcare Quality and Value-Based Care

CMS provides information regarding healthcare quality improvement, reimbursement models, and healthcare transformation.

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services


3. National Institutes of Health — Organ Transplantation Research

NIH provides educational resources and research regarding transplantation, patient outcomes, and medical innovation.

National Institutes of Health


About the Author

Dr. Daniel Cham is a physician, medical consultant, and healthcare entrepreneur focused on the intersection of medicine, healthcare operations, technology, and medical billing innovation.

As founder of OnnX, an AI-powered medical billing SaaS platform designed for small and medium-sized physician practices, Dr. Cham focuses on reducing administrative friction and helping clinicians spend more time on what matters most: patient care.

His work explores practical strategies for improving healthcare delivery, strengthening independent practices, and building technology that supports — rather than replaces — human connection.

Connect with Dr. Cham on LinkedIn to learn more.


Disclaimer / Note

This article is provided for educational and informational purposes only.

It is intended to share perspectives on healthcare operations, technology, and practice management. It does not constitute medical advice, legal advice, compliance guidance, or financial advice.

Healthcare professionals should consult appropriate qualified experts when making decisions specific to their practice, organization, or patients.


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If This Perspective Resonates

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Your voice can help shape the next generation of healthcare.


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