Healthcare providers in the United States often use many different systems to handle patient records, scheduling, billing, referrals, care coordination, and claims processing. A survey of more than 900 health IT leaders showed that doctors usually work with five or more systems just to access patient information. This complicated arrangement causes many problems:
Because these issues keep happening, there is a need for a system that combines clinical and operational work to make healthcare better, less expensive, and more satisfying for patients.
To fix these problems, leading healthcare technology companies have started building unified care coordination platforms. These platforms bring together data and work steps into one easy-to-use system for all people on the care team.
One example is blueBriX. This platform combines operational and clinical features in a single system. It uses a FHIR-first design that lets different health IT systems, like electronic health records (EHRs), labs, and payers, talk to each other in real time. It automates tracking referrals, documenting patients, and other work while following laws and rules. Using AI-based risk scoring, care teams can spot patients who might have troubles early and act quickly to help them.
Unified platforms offer many benefits across healthcare, including:
As healthcare moves toward value-based care, these platforms help track performance, manage patient transitions better, and reduce unnecessary hospital readmissions. Platforms like blueBriX help organizations meet new rules and succeed.
AI is an important part of changing administrative work. Companies like Innovaccer have made AI-driven tools that handle simple, repetitive tasks such as appointment scheduling, patient intake, referrals, prior authorization, and closing care gaps. These AI agents can talk with patients naturally, giving help right away and reducing the amount of paperwork for doctors and staff.
With access to a full view of patient data from over 80 electronic health records and claims databases, these AI tools can do tasks more accurately than manual methods. This reduces duplicate work and errors caused by missing information or communication problems.
Some key facts show how AI helps:
In radiology, AI platforms automate tasks like lesion segmentation, case prioritization, and organ measurement. This helps radiologists concentrate on harder diagnostic work. The Future Health Index 2024 found that 41% of healthcare leaders plan to use automation for case prioritization in three years, and 92% see automation as essential to fix staff shortages.
For administrators and IT managers, adding AI and unified healthcare platforms means facing some challenges:
Despite the difficulties, some case studies show strong financial results. For example, Enter, an AI company for revenue cycle management, helped Auburn Community Hospital cut claim rejections by 28% and lower the average time for accounts receivable from 56 to 34 days in 90 days. Banner Health used AI to recover more than $3 million in six months and increase clean claims rates by 21%.
Good healthcare administration needs smooth operational work steps. AI-driven automation improves these steps beyond just speeding them up. It supports:
Philips’ unified radiology informatics platform shows how automating tasks, integration, and communication tools can speed up and improve diagnoses. It lets radiologists, referring doctors, and IT teams access images, reports, and collaboration tools anytime through the cloud.
In care management, platforms like HealthEdge’s GuidingCare use AI and automation to handle high-risk patients, streamline authorization tasks, and link members to community social services, supporting care for the whole person.
Medical practice administrators and owners in the United States must get ready for a future where AI and unified platforms are key to operational and clinical success. Some key points to think about are:
With a growing shortage of healthcare workers and more complex operations, moving from broken, manual systems to unified, AI-powered platforms is important. This will make healthcare administration easier, improve care coordination, and let medical practices focus on what matters most—the health and well-being of their patients.
Innovaccer’s AI agents automate repetitive, low-value administrative tasks such as appointment scheduling, patient intake, managing referrals, prior authorization, care gap closure, condition coding, and transitional care management, freeing clinicians and staff to focus more on patient care.
They are voice-activated and can have natural, humanlike conversations with patients, capable of responding to details and questions, which enhances patient engagement and efficiency in tasks like discharge planning and follow-up scheduling.
Clinicians spend nearly 28 hours weekly on administrative tasks, medical office staff 34 hours, and claims staff 36 hours, creating a significant time burden that AI agents aim to reduce.
With a projected shortage of 100,000 healthcare workers by 2028, AI agents help alleviate labor shortfalls by automating routine tasks, thus improving operational efficiency and reducing staffing pressures.
The agents access a unified 360-degree view of patient information aggregated from more than 80 electronic health records and combined clinical and claims data, enabling context-rich and accurate task management.
Their AI solutions adhere to rigorous standards including NIST CSF, HIPAA, HITRUST, SOC 2 Type II, and ISO 27001, ensuring data privacy, security, and regulatory compliance in healthcare settings.
The company aims to provide a unified, intelligent orchestration of AI capabilities that deliver human-like efficiency, transforming fragmented solutions into a comprehensive AI platform that supports clinical and operational workflows.
Startups like VoiceCare AI, Infinitus Systems, Hello Patient, SuperDial, Medsender, Hyro AI, and Hippocratic AI are developing AI-driven voice agents and automation platforms to reduce administrative burdens in healthcare.
Innovaccer’s platform uniquely integrates data from multiple EHRs and care settings, powered by its Data Activation Platform, enabling copious AI-driven insights and operations within a single, comprehensive system for providers.
Innovaccer acquired Humbi AI to enhance actuarial analytics for providers, payers, and life sciences, supporting its plans to launch an actuarial copilot, and recently raised $275 million to further develop AI and cloud capabilities.