Gauging Reasons for Holdups in the Medical Billing Process

Medlearn Media NPOS Non-patient outcome spending

Tia Tech USA and ICD10monitor conducted a survey among Talk Ten Tuesdays listeners and Monitor Mondays readers.

The revenue cycle function in healthcare is a complex process that has led to a disconnect between physicians, coding teams, billers, and administrators. The result is unnecessary time and staffing resources reallocated toward capturing revenue, instead of focusing on patient care. In the end, significant amounts of money are left on the table, patient care is diluted, and staff morale is lowered from frustration. Much of this has to do with the revenue cycle process playing out in silos. The full impact of lost revenue as a result of each player’s actions is not always apparent nor understood by the individual players in the process.

It is not always clear where or why the holdups are taking place. A recent survey, posed to healthcare revenue cycle management (RCM) professionals by TiaTech USA and MedLearn Media, asked, “what is your biggest holdup in this process?” Almost 40 percent of respondents felt the biggest delays were attributable to physicians either not creating or not signing their notes. Another 25 percent of respondents suggested the biggest holdup was in the coding process, with some commenting that the problem lies with billers, slow payment by payors, or in staffing shortages.

Why were so many respondents pinpointing the physician as the primary holdup? While electronic medical records (EMRs) are commonplace for health records, physicians still stick to antiquated methods of tracking their daily patient lists on paper for billing purposes. Whether the list funnels over to coders and billers comes down to the efficiency of the physician.

Often, the office administrator is tasked to gather those pieces of paper and pull together a daily patient census for each physician in the practice, for each location visited within the day, for revenue cycle management purposes – simply using a spreadsheet. The information must then be delivered to coders or billers for next steps. But with constant distractions in a clinical workday, for both physicians and administrators, paper gets set aside, and isn’t scanned or faxed, and the data falls through the cracks. It never makes it to the coder or the biller. The turnaround time for resolution is extremely slow, compounding as the next clinical day arrives, making revenue difficult to fully capture with this method. But it is common.

Tracking the daily patient list is essential, but the responsibility of creating and signing notes for each patient encounter is critical. Physicians on a tight schedule may intend to create or finalize notes in a timely manner, but often fall behind in their schedule or have a desire to review the notes later for accuracy, leaving notes in limbo (or absent altogether). In many cases the physician is unaware of the negative impact they have on the billing process, and how simple omissions like an attestation can bring the process to a grinding halt. Until notes are finalized, the coders’ hands are tied. Once completed, the physician can still hold up the process if coders or billers require the physician to clarify content within those notes or regarding the codes.

Coders can also hold up or affect the revenue cycle when key criteria are overlooked or misinterpreted within the notes, leading either to undercoding (lessening the monies owed a practice) or overcoding (exposing the practice to Recovery Audit Contractor (RAC) and commercial payor audits.

Billers receive a mountain of claims each day, from multiple physicians and practices, outpatient and inpatient alike. When pieces of the puzzle haven’t already been put into place upstream on a particular claim, the claim is set aside in hopes of “getting to it later,” so effort can be focused on what is able to get out to insurance payors now. Unfortunately, the effort required to solve that set-aside claim often downgrades its priority. The claim gets forgotten as new claims come rolling in.

These delays and oversights on the front end affect a biller’s ability to capture revenue on the back end. And each party is pointing a finger at the other player. Simple oversights like these add to unnecessary administrative workload, stretching resources that could be better directed toward patient care.

What can appear to be a minor issue to a player in the chain can have an enormous impact, and is often the difference between a health provider being profitable or not. If you consider an average claim to be valued at $100, and assume that an average of 10 claims fall off the radar each week for just one physician, the lost revenue compounds quickly. This can be true regardless of the reason – whether the daily patient list never made it to the biller, the notes weren’t finalized, demographics or insurance was missing or featured incorrect data, coding was not complete, eligibility was not verified, or a myriad of other details up and down the revenue process line, halting the claim’s submission or creating a payor’s denial or rejection. Depending on the size of a practice, this can result in tens of thousands of dollars lost per physician, per year, and hundreds of thousands per practice, per year. The numbers grow exponentially higher in hospital settings.

Do we have solutions?

New innovations in digital health are solving these disconnects by streamlining, tracking, and monitoring each step of the process to nudge the individual players along, reducing frustration among the members within the revenue-cycle chain. Some platforms have incorporated artificial intelligence (AI), providing predictions to assist coders in optimizing code capture.

Advances in digital health platforms simplify the complex RCM business process to make it more transparent, with concurrent audits to hold indiviudals more accountable, and a few go as far as to incorporate cloud-based “zero trust” revenue cycle platforms for higher levels of security. RCM team members are able to interact faster and work together to create a successful administrative simplification model of the steps of the revenue cycle, including pre-registration, registration, charge capture, claim submission, remittance processing, insurance follow-up, and patient collections. To be able to create real-time dashboards allows practices to rapidly access insurance information, readily track (ideally, to a patient encounter level), streamline eligibility, manage the preauthorization process using decision-support systems, and engage in direct, real-time interactions between insurers and providers through secure portals.

For delays in payments made by insurance payors, the RCM team as a whole needs to create a universal standard business contract for all providers, based on quality metrics, complexity of care, and the time spent on patients, which ideally should include direct and indirect patient care times.

Digital platforms focused in this area bring transparency to the point in the RCM process where a claim is being held up. Technology has the ability to help reduce unnecessary follow-ups, making a more efficient and lean process. Everyone’s role becomes easier and more focused, and resources can be redirected to patient care.

About the author:

Ramesh Madhavan, MD, DM, FAAN, is a physician entrepreneur and the CEO of International Medical Clinic, TiaTech USA and TiaTech India. He is the Residency Program Director and Chief for Garden City Hospital and Director of the Michigan Stroke Network at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. He is well-published, and previously an Associate Professor and Associate Chief Medical Officer at Wayne State University. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Neurology and former President of the Association of Indian Neurologists of America. His interests include promoting cost-effective global healthcare in revenue cycle, virtual health, and experiential learning, which promote efficient healthcare and outcomes.

Contact the author: rmadhavan@tiatech.net

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

Related Stories

Leave a Reply

Please log in to your account to comment on this article.

Featured Webcasts

Sepsis Sequencing in Focus: From Documentation to Defensible Coding

Sepsis sequencing continues to challenge even experienced coding and CDI professionals, with evolving guidelines, documentation gaps, and payer scrutiny driving denials and data inconsistencies. In this webcast, Payal Sinha, MBA, RHIA, CCDS, CDIP, CCS, CCS-P, CCDS-O, CRC, CRCR, provides clear guideline-based strategies to accurately code sepsis, severe sepsis, and septic shock, assign POA indicators, clarify the relationship between infection and organ dysfunction, and align documentation across teams. Attendees will gain practical tools to strengthen audit defensibility, improve first-pass accuracy, support appeal success, reduce denials, and ensure accurate quality reporting, empowering organizations to achieve consistent, compliant sepsis coding outcomes.

March 26, 2026
I022426_SQUARE

Fracture Care Coding: Reduce Denials Through Accurate Coding, Sequencing, and Modifier Use

Expert presenters Kathy Pride, RHIT, CPC, CCS-P, CPMA, and Brandi Russell, RHIA, CCS, COC, CPMA, break down complex fracture care coding rules, walk through correct modifier application (-25, -57, 54, 55), and clarify sequencing for initial and subsequent encounters. Attendees will gain the practical knowledge needed to submit clean claims, ensure compliance, and stay one step ahead of payer audits in 2026.

February 24, 2026
Mastering Principal Diagnosis: Coding Precision, Medical Necessity, and Quality Impact

Mastering Principal Diagnosis: Coding Precision, Medical Necessity, and Quality Impact

Accurately determining the principal diagnosis is critical for compliant billing, appropriate reimbursement, and valid quality reporting — yet it remains one of the most subjective and error-prone areas in inpatient coding. In this expert-led session, Cheryl Ericson, RN, MS, CCDS, CDIP, demystifies the complexities of principal diagnosis assignment, bridging the gap between coding rules and clinical reality. Learn how to strengthen your organization’s coding accuracy, reduce denials, and ensure your documentation supports true medical necessity.

December 3, 2025

Proactive Denial Management: Data-Driven Strategies to Prevent Revenue Loss

Denials continue to delay reimbursement, increase administrative burden, and threaten financial stability across healthcare organizations. This essential webcast tackles the root causes—rising payer scrutiny, fragmented workflows, inconsistent documentation, and underused analytics—and offers proven, data-driven strategies to prevent and overturn denials. Attendees will gain practical tools to strengthen documentation and coding accuracy, engage clinicians effectively, and leverage predictive analytics and AI to identify risks before they impact revenue. Through real-world case examples and actionable guidance, this session empowers coding, CDI, and revenue cycle professionals to shift from reactive appeals to proactive denial prevention and revenue protection.

November 25, 2025

Trending News

Featured Webcasts

Compliance for the Inpatient Psychiatric Facility (IPF-PPS): Minimizing Federal Audit Findings by Strengthening Best Practices

Federal auditors are intensifying their focus on inpatient psychiatric facilities, using advanced data analytics to spotlight outliers and pursue high‑dollar repayments. In this high‑impact webcast, Michael Calahan, PA, MBA, Compliance Officer and V.P., Hospital & Physician Compliance, breaks down what regulators are really targeting in IPF-PPS admissions, documentation, treatment and discharge planning. Attendees will learn practical steps to tighten processes, avoid common audit triggers and protect reimbursement and reduce the risk of multimillion-dollar repayment demands.

April 9, 2026

Mastering MDM for Accurate Professional Fee Coding

In this timely session, Stacey Shillito, CDIP, CPMA, CCS, CCS-P, CPEDC, COPC, breaks down the complexities of Medical Decision Making (MDM) documentation so providers can confidently capture the true complexity of their care. Attendees will learn practical, efficient strategies to ensure documentation aligns with current E/M guidelines, supports accurate coding, and reduces audit risk, all without adding to charting time.

March 31, 2026

The PEPPER Returns – Risk and Opportunity at Your Fingertips

Join Ronald Hirsch, MD, FACP, CHCQM for The PEPPER Returns – Risk and Opportunity at Your Fingertips, a practical webcast that demystifies the PEPPER and shows you how to turn complex claims data into actionable insights. Dr. Hirsch will explain how to interpret key measures, identify compliance risks, uncover missed revenue opportunities, and understand new updates in the PEPPER, all to help your organization stay ahead of audits and use this powerful data proactively.

March 19, 2026

Top 10 Audit Targets for 2026-2027 for Hospitals & Physicians: Protect Your Revenue

Stay ahead of the 2026-2027 audit surge with “Top 10 Audit Targets for 2026-2027 for Hospitals & Physicians: Protect Your Revenue,” a high-impact webcast led by Michael Calahan, PA, MBA. This concise session gives hospitals and physicians clear insight into the most likely federal audit targets, such as E/M services, split/shared and critical care, observation and admissions, device credits, and Two-Midnight Rule changes, and shows how to tighten documentation, coding, and internal processes to reduce denials, recoupments, and penalties. Attendees walk away with practical best practices to protect revenue, strengthen compliance, and better prepare their teams for inevitable audits.

January 29, 2026

Trending News

Prepare for the 2025 CMS IPPS Final Rule with ICD10monitor’s IPPSPalooza! Click HERE to learn more

Get 15% OFF on all educational webcasts at ICD10monitor with code JULYFOURTH24 until July 4, 2024—start learning today!

CYBER WEEK IS HERE! Don’t miss your chance to get 20% off now until Dec. 1 with code CYBER25

CYBER WEEK IS HERE! Don’t miss your chance to get 20% off now until Dec. 2 with code CYBER24