Healthcare organizations are now facing serious shortages in revenue cycle management jobs. A March 2023 MGMA Stat poll found that medical coders are the hardest to hire. About 34% of medical group leaders said they have trouble filling these roles. Billers followed at 26%, schedulers at 18%, and authorization managers at 15%. These shortages affect the whole revenue cycle, including billing, coding accuracy, claim submission, patient scheduling, and checking authorizations.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics expects 12,300 new medical records specialist jobs between 2021 and 2031. This is about a 7% increase from 2021. Still, there are more jobs than qualified workers. This makes it hard to run effective revenue cycle management.
One clear effect of staffing shortages shows up in accounts receivable performance. In 2022, 56% of medical groups said days in accounts receivable went up during a time of staffing problems. More days in A/R means payments take longer to come in. This causes cash flow problems for healthcare providers.
Accounts receivable aging reports sort unpaid payments by how long they have been overdue, such as 0-30 days, 31-60 days, 61-90 days, and over 90 days. The over 90-day group is high risk and needs special attention. When fewer staff are available to manage these accounts, late balances build up, making cash flow tight and causing extra work.
Staff shortages also cause more claim denials. In 2021, about 69% of medical practices saw an increase in claim denials compared to 2020. The average growth in denials was 17%. Departments with too few workers struggle to handle denials well. This can delay payments or lead to lost revenue because claims are not fixed or appealed properly.
Denials often happen because of coding mistakes, missing or wrong documents, problems checking patient eligibility, and failing to meet payer rules. Skilled revenue cycle staff normally handle these tasks. With fewer workers, problems may not get fixed quickly.
Staff turnover in revenue cycle jobs stays high and makes problems worse. MGMA’s 2022 survey showed a 16.72% median turnover rate for business operations staff in groups with multiple specialties. High turnover means practices have to hire and train new workers often. This uses up time and resources. Experienced employees feel stressed by more work and lower morale, which cuts productivity. This cycle worsens collection problems, raises errors, and leads to more revenue loss.
Revenue cycle management includes many complex tasks. These tasks are patient registration, checking insurance eligibility, reviewing clinical documents, coding, submitting claims, posting payments, handling denials, and following up on accounts receivable. Each step must be done correctly and quickly to get proper payment.
There are extra challenges from changing rules and regulations. Healthcare providers must follow laws like MACRA, the 21st Century Cures Act, the Price Transparency Rule, and the No Surprises Act. Changes in payer policies, especially for Medicare Advantage plans, mean staff need ongoing training and process updates.
Billing errors caused by too few staff or weak training increase claim denials and lower collections. Good and ongoing staff education is important to manage these difficulties, but it is hard when teams are short-staffed.
Revenue leakage happens when providers do not collect all payments owed. This often happens because of coding mistakes, billing errors, or denied claims that don’t get fixed. A 2024 survey found claim denial rates at about 15%, higher than about 12% before. Staffing shortages increase the chance for these errors, causing more losses over time. Healthcare groups might collect as little as ten cents for every dollar on bills over 120 days old, which limits cash flow a lot.
The COVID-19 pandemic made revenue losses worse in many healthcare systems. From early 2020 to mid-2021, lost revenue was estimated at about $158.35 billion due to delayed care and other problems.
Healthcare groups are using a few ways to fight revenue cycle staffing shortages. These include:
Technology like artificial intelligence (AI) and automation helps reduce the effects of staffing shortages in revenue cycle work.
AI tools can do repetitive and slow tasks automatically. These include claims processing, checking insurance eligibility, helping with coding, posting payments, and handling denials. Automation lowers human mistakes, makes work faster, and lets expert staff focus on harder tasks that need judgment or talking.
For example, Magical’s Agentic AI manages revenue cycle workflows by sensing, deciding, and acting based on set instructions. It connects with many healthcare systems, including electronic health records (EHRs), billing platforms, and payment gateways. This helps speed up claim submissions, improve how often claims are fixed on the first try, and increase cash flow. The goal is to reduce days in accounts receivable and lower the number of old accounts.
AI can read clinical notes and suggest codes that follow the latest ICD-10 rules, cutting down on coding mistakes that cause claim denials. Automated insurance checks stop delays from wrong or old insurance data and lower risks of rejected claims.
Healthcare groups using AI report sharp improvements. One hospital group in Texas saw a 30% rise in cash flow after improving revenue processes with automation. Another group cut collection costs in half after using better billing and collection workflows helped by automation.
AI healthcare tools, such as those from Simbo AI, comply with security and data privacy standards like HIPAA and SOC 2 Type 2. These systems encrypt calls from end to end and keep patient data safe. They work well as AI phone agents or workflow helpers.
AI tools support remote revenue cycle teams by giving real-time access to claims workflows, data analytics, and denial tracking dashboards. This lets remote staff work as well as on-site teams, making remote hiring a stronger way to handle staffing shortages.
To check how well the revenue cycle is doing, organizations watch specific KPIs that show workflow speed and financial results:
Groups are advised to compare their staffing and operations with industry standards to find gaps, decide where to focus, and improve performance. Better KPIs lead directly to better cash flow and lower administrative costs.
Medical practice managers, owners, and IT leaders in the U.S. keep facing revenue cycle challenges from staff shortages, more rules, and patients paying more out of pocket. Over 30% of patients now have high deductible health plans. This means providers need better ways to communicate with patients so payments happen on time.
Outside providers and consultants offer coding help, audits, staff support, and full revenue recovery services. These help healthcare groups handle challenges and improve finances.
Healthcare leaders need to use staffing plans, technology investments, and process improvements together to run revenue cycles well. If revenue cycle management fails, it leads to delayed payments, lost revenue, and more risks in operations.
This detailed review shows how staffing shortages affect accounts receivable and cash flow in U.S. healthcare. Using flexible staffing, AI automation, and watching key KPIs can help providers face workforce challenges and be more financially stable.
The main challenges include hiring medical coders (34%), billers (26%), schedulers (18%), and authorization managers (15%), with many organizations facing difficulties in hiring qualified candidates due to a tight labor market.
Being short-staffed can lead to an increase in days in accounts receivable, resulting in backlogs of unpaid claims and negatively impacting cash flow.
Short-staffed departments may struggle to manage denials effectively, resulting in increased denied claims, which can escalate as coding changes and discrepancies arise.
Consistently short staffing can lead to decreased productivity and morale among staff, resulting in errors and delays that further impact revenue.
Solutions include cross-training staff for multiple tasks, offering part-time or shared roles, providing remote work options, and implementing technology solutions to streamline workload.
Technology solutions like automated billing systems can reduce workload, minimize errors, and allow staff to focus on higher-level tasks.
Organizations should benchmark against industry staffing levels and utilize key performance indicators (KPIs) to optimize revenue, cash flow, and minimize denials.
Trends include remote hiring practices that expand candidate pools, and increasing interest in apprenticeship programs to develop new talent from within.
Effective hiring processes can help reduce turnover rates, which, according to MGMA data, was around 16.72% for business operations staff in multispecialty groups.
Pros of outsourcing include access to specialized skills and potentially lower costs, while cons include potential loss of control and the need for effective monitoring of performance indicators.