Initial claim denials hit 11.8% in 2024 — up from 10.2% just a few years earlier. Hospitals spent $18 billion overturning denials in 2025, with the AHA estimating $43 billion chasing payments insurers owe for care already delivered. Meanwhile, physicians spend 49% of their day in the EHR, with only 27% spent caring for patients.
This is not a billing problem. It's an operational crisis. AI-driven revenue cycle management isn't a technology upgrade — it's the structural response to a system that has pushed human capacity past its limit.
Revenue Pressure
41% of providers face denial rates of at least 10%. One in ten healthcare leaders reports losing over $2 million annually to denials. Reworking a single denied claim costs $25–$181 in staff time.
Administrative Burden
Physicians complete 40 prior authorizations per week, consuming 13 hours of physician and staff time weekly. Two in five practices employ staff dedicated exclusively to prior authorization.
Staff Turnover
Revenue cycle departments face persistent staffing shortages. As denial volumes rise, billing staff burn out — taking institutional knowledge with them. Replacing trained RCM staff takes months.
AI moves the revenue cycle from reactive claim management to proactive denial prevention:
Practices using predictive denial tools achieve 30–40% reductions in initial denial rates. That's a structural shift, not incremental improvement.
AI doesn't replace staff. It replaces the repetitive, rule-based tasks that consume most of their time. This frees experienced staff for complex cases, payer negotiations, and judgment-dependent work. The result: higher claim volumes handled with fewer errors and less burnout.
TRIARQ Health's Pathways Revenue Performance integrates AI-driven intelligence across the full revenue cycle — built for the specialty practices where coding complexity and payer scrutiny are highest.
When people and intelligence move together, care performs better. Costs fall. Quality rises. Trust grows.