Sample audit deliverable
This sample shows the kind of practical output a medical practice receives after a workflow audit: a clear current-state map, prioritized automation opportunities, staff-review boundaries, and a realistic first pilot recommendation.
Fictional practice snapshot
This is a fictional example. It is designed to show the structure of an audit deliverable without using patient data, protected health information, or any real practice details.
The practice handles new patient requests, referrals, follow-up visits, procedure scheduling, insurance questions, and recurring manual status checks.
EHR/EMR, practice-management system, patient portal, payer portals, clearinghouse workflow, eFax, phone/SMS, online scheduling, and exports where available.
Staff need better visibility into missing demographics, insurance cards, referral requirements, prior authorization flags, and scheduling dependencies.
Workflow map
The audit separates the patient-facing request from the staff queue, the system lookup, the scheduling decision, and the follow-up owner. That makes it easier to see which step should be automated and which step still needs staff judgment.
Inquiry source, appointment request, referral, insurance card, patient demographics, and preferred contact path.
Missing information queue, intake review queue, prior authorization queue, referral queue, and scheduling exception queue.
Scheduler, front desk, billing/RCM, prior authorization coordinator, referral coordinator, or provider owner reviews exceptions.
Track response time, visit readiness, no-show risk, delayed scheduling, rework, and staff time spent on manual checks.
Example findings
A real audit would be specific to the practice. This sample shows the type of operational findings we document and how each recommendation keeps staff review in the loop.
| Workflow | Current issue | Automation opportunity | Staff review needed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patient intake readiness | Forms, demographics, insurance card images, or referral details arrive incomplete before appointment day. | Create a missing-information queue that flags incomplete intake before the visit and gives staff a clean follow-up list. | Front desk and scheduler |
| Eligibility and benefits | Staff manually check payer portals late in the process, which delays scheduling decisions and creates rework. | Track eligibility status, benefits questions, and coverage uncertainty earlier so staff can resolve issues before the visit. | Billing/RCM team |
| Prior authorization flags | CPT/HCPCS, ICD-10 context, referral requirements, and medical necessity documentation are checked inconsistently. | Flag cases that may need prior authorization or documentation review before scheduling dependencies create a bottleneck. | Prior authorization coordinator |
| Provider routing | Visit reason, procedure type, imaging needs, or provider rules are not always matched before the appointment is selected. | Route appointment requests by visit reason and procedure context, then send exceptions into a scheduling review queue. | Scheduler and provider owner |
| No-show follow-up | Reminder and callback work depends on staff memory, especially after cancellations or unconfirmed appointments. | Create a no-show and cancellation follow-up queue with staff-approved message paths and daily visibility. | Front desk and scheduler |
Incomplete forms, demographics, cards, or referral details.
OpportunityMissing-information queue before appointment day.
Staff reviewFront desk and scheduler.
Manual payer portal checks happen late.
OpportunitySurface eligibility status and coverage uncertainty earlier.
Staff reviewBilling/RCM team.
CPT/HCPCS, ICD-10, referral, and documentation context are checked inconsistently.
OpportunityFlag possible prior auth or document needs before scheduling.
Staff reviewPrior authorization coordinator.
Visit reason and provider rules are not always matched.
OpportunityRoute appointment requests by reason and procedure context.
Staff reviewScheduler and provider owner.
Security and boundaries
Use only the data needed for the workflow. Avoid PHI in public forms, define secure intake paths, and review BAA needs before implementation.
Separate what front desk, scheduler, billing, prior-auth, referral, and owner roles should see or approve before action.
Automation supports administrative work. Clinical judgment, diagnosis, treatment, and patient-specific medical decisions stay with licensed staff.
Important: The audit is not legal, billing, or clinical advice. It is an operational review that helps the practice identify practical automation opportunities and implementation boundaries.
Recommended first pilot
For this fictional scenario, the recommended first pilot would focus on an intake and insurance-readiness queue because it touches scheduling, staff time, patient preparedness, and preventable rework.
Deliverable package
Ready to see this for your practice?
We will review the workflow, systems, queue ownership, staff handoffs, and practical automation boundaries before recommending a first pilot.
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