Medical practice automation

Medical Practice Automation for Front Desk, Intake, Follow-Up, and Reporting

Cornerstone helps medical practices automate the admin workflows that slow down staff and leak revenue: missed inquiries, intake, insurance readiness, reminders, no-shows, reviews, and operational reporting.

Start with workflow discovery before AI. Administrative automation only: no diagnosis, treatment advice, emergency triage, final insurance determinations, or replacement of licensed clinical staff.

Front desk response
Intake and visit readiness
Follow-up and reviews
Azure and GitHub delivery

The practical starting point

Automate the repeatable admin work before asking AI to make decisions.

Most practices do not need a giant AI rollout first. They need a clear map of where inquiries, forms, tasks, reminders, and handoffs break down, then one safe automation pilot that staff can trust.

Missed patient inquiries

Calls, web forms, voicemail, and after-hours requests can sit too long before staff sees, logs, or follows up on them.

Incomplete intake

Patients often arrive with missing information, unclear visit reasons, incomplete forms, or details that need staff review before scheduling.

Manual follow-up

Reminders, no-show outreach, review requests, and status updates are repeated every day but are easy to miss when the front desk is busy.

No operations visibility

Practice managers need simple reporting that shows what is waiting, what was missed, and where staff time is going.

Workflow map

The core workflows to review first.

A good automation plan follows the patient admin journey from first contact through completed follow-up. Each workflow below can be reviewed, scored, and turned into a focused pilot.

01

Inquiry capture

Route missed calls, contact forms, voicemails, after-hours messages, and booking requests into one staff-reviewed follow-up process.

02

New patient intake

Collect required fields, flag missing information, route documents, and keep staff from asking the same questions repeatedly.

Explore patient intake automation

03

Insurance readiness

Check eligibility and benefit readiness, procedure coverage questions, prior authorization flags, referral needs, and staff-review exceptions before provider or procedure scheduling creates surprises.

Explore insurance readiness and provider routing

04

Visit reason and provider routing

Use practice-approved rules to route requests to the right provider type, appointment category, service line, procedure slot, or staff queue.

05

Reminders and no-show follow-up

Send consistent reminders, route reschedule requests, notify staff when needed, and follow up after missed appointments.

06

Reviews and reporting

Trigger review requests at the right time, monitor follow-up status, and give managers a simple daily view of workflow activity.

Before AI

Start with rules, queues, reminders, and reporting.

The safest first wins are usually structured workflow automations. They reduce manual work without asking AI to make clinical, payer, or patient-facing decisions.

Good first automations

Missed-call intake, callback review queues, form follow-up, intake review queues, missing information queues, scheduling exception queues, no-show follow-up queues, review requests, and daily status reporting.

Where AI can help later

Classifying inquiries, summarizing messages for staff, drafting internal notes, answering approved admin FAQs, and helping managers find patterns in workflow data.

What stays human-reviewed

Clinical questions, urgent symptoms, final coverage/payment decisions, prior authorization judgment, patient-facing benefits explanations, and anything outside approved routing rules.

How Cornerstone builds it

A practical Azure and GitHub delivery process.

We design around the workflow first, then choose the right implementation: Azure Function Apps for event-driven or scheduled work, Microsoft Foundry when AI is actually needed, GitHub for versioned delivery, and an EHR/EMR, practice-management, portal, clearinghouse, or reporting approach only when the practice has the right access and workflow reason.

After the audit, we can work with the practice’s internal IT team, MSP, website team, phone/SMS provider, EHR/EMR vendor contact, or other technology partner to confirm access, permissions, secure hosting, domain/email/SMS setup, logging, and rollout steps needed for the automation.

Step 1

Discover

Map the current workflow, EHR/EMR or practice-management system, patient portal, clearinghouse, payer portals, eFax, phone/SMS system, online scheduling, reports/exports, forms, staff handoffs, edge cases, staff roles, and what should never be automated.

Step 2

Design

Define triggers, queues, exception paths, required fields, data boundaries, reporting, and success metrics.

Step 3

Build

Create the pilot automation with versioned implementation, documented settings, and staff-review controls.

Step 4

Test

Run realistic scenarios before launch, including missing information, unclear requests, staff handoffs, and failure paths.

Step 5

Monitor

Track usage, exceptions, response time, staff workload, and whether the workflow is creating measurable value.

Systems we work around

The first automation has to fit the systems your staff already uses.

Most medical offices already have a mix of clinical, billing, communication, scheduling, and reporting tools. Cornerstone maps those systems first, then recommends the safest practical path: direct integration where access exists, structured exports or reports where that is more realistic, or staff-reviewed queues when vendor access is limited.

EHR/EMR
Practice-management system
Patient portal
Clearinghouse
Payer portals
eFax
Phone/SMS system
Online scheduling
Reports/exports
APIs where available
FHIR where available
X12/EDI where available

Direct access depends on the vendor, contract, configuration, and security requirements. The audit evaluates access, security, minimum necessary data, staff review, reporting needs, and the simplest reliable implementation path.

Metrics that matter

Measure business outcomes, not AI novelty.

A useful pilot should show whether staff time, patient follow-up, or appointment readiness improved. These are the numbers we usually want to baseline during the audit.

MetricWhy it mattersExample signal
Response timeShows whether inquiries are reaching staff quickly.Average time from request to first response.
Intake completionShows whether required details are collected before the visit.Percent of appointments missing key fields.
No-show follow-upShows whether missed appointments become a structured follow-up task.No-show outreach completed same day.
Staff hoursShows whether automation is reducing repeated manual work.Estimated minutes saved per workflow run.
Review and reporting activityShows whether completed visits and follow-up tasks are being tracked.Review requests sent, task statuses, and daily exception count.

Compliance boundary thinking

Plan automation around PHI minimization and staff review.

For medical practices, automation planning should protect patient information, limit unnecessary data movement, and keep sensitive judgment with trained staff. Cornerstone helps define these boundaries before building.

Do not collect PHI in public request forms unless the workflow has been reviewed and configured for that purpose.
Use the minimum information needed for routing, status, reminders, and reporting.
Review vendors, access controls, logging, storage, retention, and whether business associate agreements are needed.
Document how the EHR/EMR, practice-management system, patient portal, clearinghouse, and staff queues should interact before deciding on APIs, FHIR, exports, or manual review queues.
Route urgent, clinical, payer, referral, and unclear cases to staff instead of letting automation decide.

Next step

Find the first workflow your practice should automate.

Start with the Medical Practice Automation Audit. We map current workflows, identify the highest-value opportunity, define guardrails, and recommend a practical 30-day pilot.