Healthcare providers must handle many tasks like patient care, paperwork, billing, and following rules. These tasks have become more difficult over time. A 2024 survey by the American Medical Association shows that doctors deal with more than 39 prior authorizations each week. These often cause treatment delays because of slow paperwork. Also, claim denial rates, which are about 10-15% on the first try according to Experian Health, add to the workload. When new providers join, they have to learn lots of details, such as credentials, rules, and how things work.
Old ways of training and onboarding take a long time, are easy to mess up, and can be stressful. Learning to do the job can take weeks. Staff members who handle credentialing, training, and checks have more work to do. This can make employees unhappy and cause many to leave. For example, one home health provider found that slow onboarding hurt nurse retention. Fixing these problems is very important for healthcare groups in the U.S. that need to keep enough staff in a tough market.
AI documentation assistants are computer programs that use smart technology like natural language processing, voice recognition, and machine learning. They help healthcare workers with paperwork. Instead of writing notes and billing codes by hand, these tools can listen during patient visits, make draft notes right away, suggest billing codes, and check for mistakes.
One popular AI assistant used in 46 states is Netsmart’s Bells AI. This tool can cut documentation time by up to 60%, saving about 5.2 hours per week per person, based on reported data. It also speeds up signing notes by 57%, helping payments happen faster. By making documentation easier, the AI lets clinicians spend more time with patients and less time on paperwork.
AI documentation assistants help new staff learn faster and reduce the time to become skilled. Normally, training on electronic health records (EHR), onboarding, and note-writing can take up to three weeks. With AI tools like Bells AI, this time has dropped to as little as three days in some places. This means new providers can start working fully sooner, letting clinics serve patients faster.
These AI tools have built-in training modules, including text guides, instructor-led sessions, and hands-on practice made just for documentation tasks. They give feedback and coaching while providers work, helping them learn billing codes, rules, and documentation steps all at once.
Real-time quality audits are another key feature. The AI checks clinical notes as they are written and spots missing or wrong information right away. This helps avoid redoing work later, lowering stress and lessening the quality check workload.
AI documentation assistants improve workflow by automating repeat tasks and making documentation better within current EHR systems. Instead of using separate programs, AI tools like Bells AI connect directly to the provider’s software. They accept voice, typing, listening, and scanning data from many sources. They can also translate languages, helping providers document well no matter the setting or method they prefer.
Clinicians say they can finish notes right after visits, which reduces mental strain and the stress of catch-up work. This lets them see more patients. For instance, those using Bells AI have been able to care for five more patients each week on average. This also boosts the money coming into healthcare practices. Some organizations save up to 21 hours per provider every month because of less paperwork.
Too much paperwork is a main cause of burnout for healthcare workers in the U.S. The American Medical Association and other groups say extra paperwork makes staff unhappy and leads them to leave. AI documentation assistants reduce this workload by automating note-taking, coding, and checks. By handling tasks providers don’t like, these tools help clinicians focus on patients, which makes their jobs better.
Less administrative stress helps create a better work environment. One clinician said, “I can see more people because my notes aren’t as difficult,” showing how easier workflows boost morale. A healthcare manager also saw staff become more confident in their notes after using AI, helping build a culture of good documentation and ongoing improvement.
Faster, easier training and onboarding also help keep staff by lowering frustration during the first months of a job. AI onboarding prevents common mistakes in documentation or rules, saving money and improving team work.
Besides help with documentation, AI workflow automation improves how healthcare operates. For example, Glean’s Work AI platform links AI workflows to systems like SharePoint, Microsoft Teams, and EHRs. By adding AI into existing workflows, teams get fast access to updated training, credentials, payer rules, and appeal letters without leaving their software.
AI automation in areas like denial management and prior authorization lowers claim rejection rates, which stay high around 10-15% on first submission. AI provides payer-specific instructions, writes appeal letters, and tracks claim status. This saves staff about 110 hours per user yearly and reduces workflow disruptions.
AI also helps with credentialing and onboarding by tracking provider credentials and training in real time. It can cut onboarding time by up to 85%. One home health provider saw a 15% better nurse retention rate in just three months after using AI onboarding, showing more efficient workflows can ease staff shortages.
All AI systems used in the U.S. follow HIPAA rules and have secure cloud protections. This keeps patient data safe while supporting features like listening and real-time checks.
AI-driven documentation assistants and workflow automation are changing how healthcare groups in the United States train, onboard, and keep clinical staff. By cutting paperwork, these tools improve provider work speed and job satisfaction, speed readiness, and support better finances. Medical practice leaders, owners, and IT managers can benefit by using AI not just for documentation but as part of the whole clinical workflow.
As healthcare faces more demand, staff shortages, and changing rules, using AI tools is a practical way to keep good patient care while having a steady, productive team. Practices that use these systems may find it easier to handle today’s healthcare challenges and keep the skilled workers they need.
Bells AI can reduce documentation time by up to 60%, significantly alleviating administrative burden and allowing providers to focus more on patient care.
Bells AI supports multiple care settings including human services (behavioral health, autism, IDD) and post-acute care (home health, hospice, senior living), enabling flexible and accurate documentation in individual and group sessions through augmented intelligence.
Bells AI uses typing, ambient listening, voice-to-text, photo import, native language translation, and optical character recognition (OCR) to facilitate concurrent documentation with offline capabilities, ensuring providers can capture critical data anywhere.
By using a contextual recommendation engine, predictions, and clinical coaching, Bells AI guides clinicians with real-time text suggestions, billing optimizations, error detection, and prompts to address social determinants of health, reducing claim rejections and improving note quality.
Bells AI reduces burnout by simplifying note-taking, easing administrative frustrations, accelerating training from weeks to days, improving work-life balance, and supporting better morale which can help with staff retention and recruitment.
It accelerates the session-to-sign timeline by up to 57%, identifies overlapping or duplicated entries with automated note audits, reduces QA rework, supports accurate billing codes, and shortens payer reimbursement cycles by 1-2 days.
Yes, Bells AI is EHR-agnostic and integrates seamlessly with both Netsmart and non-Netsmart EHRs, enabling patient-centric AI-enhanced documentation across diverse healthcare IT environments.
Bells AI provides intuitive, multi-modal training including text materials, instructor-led courses, and hands-on learning, reducing staff ramp-up times from three weeks to three days and supporting lasting behavioral change in documentation practices.
Bells AI employs advanced cloud-based HIPAA-compliant security protocols as part of Netsmart CareFabric solutions, ensuring trusted relationships between providers and clients while maintaining strict confidentiality.
Organizations can save approximately 5.2 hours per staff weekly, increase provider productivity by 60%, reduce payroll costs by up to 21 hours monthly per provider, improve revenue with 5 additional clients per week per provider, and minimize claims denials and recoupment risk for better ROI.