“The patient is the center of the medical experience.”
— Abraham Verghese
A CHILD WAS DECLARED DEAD… THEN FOUND ALIVE HOURS LATER
An 18-month-old boy is brought into an emergency department
after a drowning incident. Resuscitation begins. The team works under pressure.
Emotions are high. Time is collapsing.
At one point, a physician leaves the room to prepare for a
death notification.
Then something changes.
A nurse detects a pulse.
The team continues efforts.
But the child is still pronounced dead.
Hours later, during post-procedure handling, the child is
found to be alive.
He survives.
The hospital launches a review. Questions emerge around
communication, timing, documentation, and decision confirmation loops.
No single actor “failed.”
The system did.
And this is where most physicians quietly nod—because they
recognize this pattern immediately.
Not just in emergency medicine.
But in documentation. Billing. Coding. Claims. Prior
authorizations. Revenue cycles.
THE UNSEEN PARALLEL: CLINICAL ERROR AND ADMINISTRATIVE
ERROR ARE THE SAME PROBLEM
Most physicians think of mistakes as clinical events.
But modern healthcare has two parallel systems:
- Clinical
care system
- Financial
+ documentation system
And both depend on the same fragile input:
HUMAN DATA UNDER PRESSURE
When that data breaks, consequences differ—but the root
cause is identical:
Broken capture → delayed correction → systemic distortion
In clinical care, it may affect outcomes.
In billing, it affects revenue, compliance, and
sustainability.
WHY THIS MATTERS FOR PHYSICIANS AND CLINIC OWNERS
Let’s translate the hospital story into clinic reality:
In your clinic, this looks like:
- Missing
documentation leading to denied claims
- Upcoded
services rejected weeks later
- Undercoded
visits silently draining revenue
- Prior
authorization delays impacting patient care
- Staff
rework cycles consuming 15–30% of admin time
The outcome is not dramatic like a headline.
But it is financially and operationally devastating over
time.
THE REAL PROBLEM: HEALTHCARE DATA IS NOT CAPTURED IN REAL
TIME
Most clinics still rely on:
- Post-visit
documentation
- Manual
coding workflows
- Fragmented
billing vendors
- Delayed
claims validation
This creates a dangerous gap:
Clinical reality ≠ documented reality ≠ billed reality
And when those three diverge, you get:
- Revenue
leakage
- Compliance
exposure
- Staff
burnout
- Physician
frustration
- Patient
friction
KEY STATISTICS EVERY CLINIC OWNER SHOULD KNOW
Revenue Leakage & Billing Inefficiency
- Up to
15–25% of clinic revenue is lost due to coding and billing
inefficiencies (MGMA benchmarks)
- Denial
rates commonly range between 5–10% of all claims
- Nearly
40% of denied claims are never reworked
Administrative Burden
- Physicians
spend an estimated 15–20% of their time on documentation tasks
- Billing-related
admin costs account for 25–30% of total practice overhead
Error Propagation
- Documentation
errors propagate into billing errors in 1 in 5 outpatient encounters
INSIGHT: THE SYSTEM DOES NOT FAIL AT COLLECTION — IT
FAILS AT CAPTURE
The healthcare industry is obsessed with:
- Faster
billing
- Better
collections
- Outsourcing
revenue cycle management
But the real bottleneck is earlier:
DATA CAPTURE AT THE POINT OF CARE
If the input is wrong, everything downstream becomes
optimization theater.
PRACTICAL PERSPECTIVE: WHAT HIGH-PERFORMING CLINICS DO
DIFFERENTLY
Top-performing clinics do not “work harder.”
They design systems around three principles:
1. Real-time documentation capture
Reduce memory dependency post-visit.
2. Automated coding intelligence
Reduce human interpretation variability.
3. Closed-loop billing feedback
Every denial is traced to its origin, not patched at the
surface.
EXPERT ROUND-UP: WHAT LEADING VOICES IN HEALTHCARE ARE
SAYING
Dr. Robert Wachter (UCSF – Digital Health Leader)
Emphasizes that healthcare failure is increasingly a systems
design problem, not individual incompetence.
Dr. Eric Topol (Scripps Research)
Highlights the need for AI-assisted clinical workflows
that reduce cognitive overload and documentation burden.
Dr. Ziad Obermeyer (Health AI Researcher, UC Berkeley)
Focuses on how data quality determines downstream AI and
operational outcomes in healthcare systems.
MYTH BUSTERS IN MEDICAL BILLING
Myth 1: “Good coders fix bad documentation.”
Reality: They can only interpret what exists. They cannot
reconstruct missing clinical context.
Myth 2: “Billing is back-office work.”
Reality: Billing is a direct extension of clinical
documentation quality.
Myth 3: “More staff solves revenue issues.”
Reality: More staff amplifies broken workflows unless the
system itself changes.
PITFALLS CLINICS FALL INTO
- Over-reliance
on third-party billing vendors
- Lack
of real-time audit visibility
- No
structured feedback loop from denials
- Physician
burnout leading to documentation shortcuts
- Fragmented
software stack (EHR ≠ billing intelligence)
LEGAL AND COMPLIANCE IMPLICATIONS
Billing inaccuracies are not just financial issues.
They carry regulatory exposure:
- False
Claims Act risk
- Audit
penalties
- Credentialing
risk
- Payer
contract termination
Even unintentional errors can escalate when systemic.
ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS
Healthcare documentation is not just administrative work.
It is:
- A legal
record
- A financial
instrument
- A clinical
communication tool
When documentation is inaccurate:
- Patients
are misrepresented
- Physicians
are exposed
- Systems
lose trust
STEP-BY-STEP: HOW MODERN CLINICS SHOULD REBUILD BILLING
WORKFLOWS
Step 1: Capture structured data at point of care
Reduce narrative-only dependency.
Step 2: Standardize coding logic across providers
Reduce variability in interpretation.
Step 3: Automate claim validation before submission
Prevent downstream denial loops.
Step 4: Integrate feedback from payers into workflow
Close the loop between denial and documentation.
Step 5: Use AI-assisted billing intelligence
Shift from reactive billing to predictive billing.
TOOLS, METRICS, AND OPERATIONAL DASHBOARD INDICATORS
Clinics should actively track:
- Clean
claim rate (%)
- Denial
rate (%)
- Days
in A/R
- Revenue
per encounter
- Documentation
completion time
- Coding
variance across providers
If you cannot measure it, you cannot optimize it.
RECENT INDUSTRY CONTEXT (EMERGING THEMES IN 2026)
Across healthcare systems, three shifts are accelerating:
1. AI documentation assistance is becoming standard
Reducing physician typing burden.
2. Payers are tightening real-time validation
Claims are being evaluated more strictly at submission.
3. Small clinics are consolidating tech stacks
Moving away from fragmented billing vendors.
FUTURE OUTLOOK: WHERE THIS IS HEADED
Healthcare billing is moving toward:
- Real-time
claim validation
- AI-assisted
documentation correction
- Autonomous
coding suggestions
- End-to-end
revenue intelligence systems
The next generation of clinics will not “submit claims.”
They will operate in a continuous billing validation
environment.
THE BIG IDEA
The toddler case is not just a medical anomaly.
It is a reminder that:
When systems rely on delayed confirmation, errors persist
longer than they should.
The same is true in billing.
And the cost is silent—but cumulative.
WHY ONNX EXISTS
OnnX was built around a simple premise:
Eliminate middlemen and reduce friction between clinical
reality and financial reality.
We focus on:
- AI-powered
medical billing automation
- Real-time
coding intelligence
- Reduction
of administrative overhead
- Direct
clinic control over revenue workflows
Not as theory.
But as operational infrastructure.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQ)
Q1: Is AI billing replacing medical coders?
No. It is augmenting them by reducing repetitive
interpretation work.
Q2: What causes most claim denials?
Documentation gaps, coding mismatch, and missing clinical
specificity.
Q3: Can small clinics benefit from automation?
Yes. Smaller clinics often benefit the most due to limited
administrative staff.
Q4: Is billing really a clinical issue?
Yes. Billing accuracy is directly tied to documentation
quality.
Q5: How fast can clinics see impact from optimization?
Typically within one billing cycle when workflows are
corrected.
FINAL THOUGHTS
Healthcare is not broken in one place.
It is fragmented across many small delays:
- A
delayed chart entry
- A
missed code
- A
denied claim
- A
rework cycle
- A
lost payment
Individually small.
Collectively expensive.
The question is not whether systems need improvement.
The question is:
How long can modern clinics afford to operate with
disconnected systems?
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Dr. Daniel Cham is a physician and medical consultant
specializing in healthcare technology, medical billing systems, and operational
optimization for clinical practices. He focuses on translating complex
healthcare workflows into practical systems that improve efficiency,
compliance, and financial performance.
Connect with Dr. Cham on LinkedIn to
learn more.
DISCLAIMER
This article is intended to provide an overview of
healthcare operational and billing concepts and does not constitute medical or
legal advice. Readers should consult appropriate professionals for specific
guidance.
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CALL TO ACTION
What breaks first in your practice: documentation, coding,
or billing?
Drop a comment with your experience.
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References
1. AI
in Healthcare Revenue Cycle Transformation (Industry Analysis)
Healthcare systems are rapidly deploying AI to reduce revenue
leakage, coding errors, and administrative burden, especially in billing
and denial management workflows. However, most gains are still limited to
partial automation rather than full system transformation.
Source: Healthcare Finance News — “The AI arms race in the
revenue cycle”
2. AI Increasing
Revenue Cycle Efficiency but Raising System Complexity (Recent Industry Report)
AI adoption in healthcare billing is expanding quickly, but
organizations still report challenges around data accuracy, compliance risk,
and integration with existing workflows, limiting full ROI realization.
Source: Experian Health — “AI in healthcare RCM: 2026
opportunities and insights”
3. Leading
Healthcare Systems Expanding AI in Billing & Coding Workflows (Case Study)
Major institutions like Mayo Clinic are actively exploring
AI in coding, documentation, and revenue cycle management, but emphasize
that full automation remains constrained by clinical complexity and
documentation variability.
Source: MedCity News — “How Is Mayo Clinic Using AI in Its
Revenue Cycle?”
#HealthcareInnovation #MedicalBilling #PhysicianBurnout
#HealthTech #AIinHealthcare #RevenueCycleManagement #HealthcareOperations
#ClinicalWorkflow #DigitalHealth #MedTech #PracticeManagement
#HealthcareEfficiency #OnnX



