Monday, July 6, 2026

< + > Revenue Cycle Management – Healthcare IT Today Podcast Episode 196

For the 196th episode of the Healthcare IT Today Podcast, we are talking about revenue cycle management! We kick this episode off by sharing what we have been hearing at the recent conferences we’ve both been attending in the RCM space. Next, we talk about what technology actually helps the coding personnel shortage we are currently facing. Then, we discuss what we think the reality and the promise of AI is in RCM. Lastly, we debate whether we are heading towards having totally autonomous coding/RCM one day.

Here’s a preview of the topics and questions we discuss in this episode:

  • We’ve both been to conferences recently in the RCM space; what are you hearing?
  • We are facing a coding personnel shortage. What technology actually helps?
  • What is the reality and promise of AI in RCM?
  • Are we heading for a day when we have totally autonomous coding/RCM?

Now, without further ado, we’re excited to share with you the next episode of the Healthcare IT Today podcast.

We publish a new Healthcare IT Today podcast every ~2 weeks. Thanks to our friends at Healthcare Now Radio, you’ll be able to listen to the latest episodes of Healthcare IT Today on their radio station for the first two weeks. Then, we’ll be publishing each episode as a podcast and YouTube video here after it finishes on the radio.

You can also subscribe to the Healthcare IT Today podcast on any of the following platforms:

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Along with the popular podcasting platforms above, you can Subscribe to Healthcare IT Today on YouTube. Plus, all of the audio and video versions will be made available to stream on HealthcareITToday.com.

If you work in Healthcare IT, we’d love to hear where you agree and/or disagree with the perspectives we shared. Feel free to share your thoughts and perspectives in the comments of this post, in the YouTube comments, with @Colin_Hung or @techguy on Twitter, or privately on our Contact Us page. Let us know what you think of the podcast and if you have any ideas for future episodes.

Thanks so much for listening!

Listen to Our Latest Episodes:



< + > Assort Health Raises $120 Million Series C | Telepatia Raises $33 Million Series A

Check out today’s featured companies who have recently raised a round of funding, and be sure to check out the full list of past healthcare IT fundings.


Assort Health Raises $120 Million Series C to Scale Largest Deployment of AI Agents for the Patient Journey

Assort Health, the most widely used AI agents platform for the patient journey, today announced a $120 million Series C led by Menlo Ventures at a valuation of $1.2 billion. Assort has now raised more than $222 million to become the standard for healthcare organizations wanting to transform the patient journey with AI.

Healthcare providers now spend nearly twice as much on administration as on direct patient care. That $1.1 trillion in annual administrative burden, from scheduling calls to intake forms to referral loops, is one of the most consequential and correctable failures in modern healthcare. Assort was founded on a simple, uncomfortable conviction: the industry would never fix this problem from the middle. You had to start at the front door.

What began as the first voice AI agent to schedule a specialty appointment is now a platform spanning scheduling, intake forms, referrals, document processing, medication refills, real-time eligibility, lab requests, and payments. That expansion has been powered by more than 190 million patient interactions, 62,000 care protocols, and 1.6 million decision pathways, creating the largest proprietary specialty dataset in healthcare.

Synapse, Assort’s proprietary AI model, learns the patterns of specialty workflows across every deployment, then generates the edge cases, tests, and simulations each one has to handle. Even the most complex, provider-specific workflows go live with high automation and resolution rates. That advantage compounds with scale. In the last 15 months, revenue has grown 20x.

“After investing in Anthropic, our thesis was simple: find the best application-layer companies in every category,” said Matt Murphy, Partner at Menlo Ventures…

Full release here, originally announced June 24th, 2026.


Telepatia Raises $33 Million Series A

Brazil-Based Telepatia Raised $33 Million in Series A Funding Led by Andreessen Horowitz

Telepatia, a São Paulo, Brazil-based healthtech startup that provides an AI-native clinical platform, has raised a $33 million in Series A funding.

Investors

The round was led by Andreessen Horowitz and included participation from Palantir CTO Shyam Sankar, Rappi founder Simón Borrero, and Nubank founder David Vélez.

Telepatia Use of Funds

The funding will be used to scale Telepatia’s AI-powered healthcare platform, expand deployments across Latin America, and further develop its suite of AI healthcare employees, including AI doctors, nurses, and auditors…

Full release here, originally announced June 19th, 2026.



Sunday, July 5, 2026

< + > Bonus Features – July 5, 2026 – 58% of dermatology practices see patients daily with AI-generated diagnoses, 94% of CIOs say AI delays would put their orgs at a competitive disadvantage, plus 27 more stories

Welcome to the weekly edition of Healthcare IT Today Bonus Features. This article will be a weekly roundup of interesting stories, product announcements, new hires, partnerships, research studies, awards, sales, and more. Because there’s so much happening out there in healthcare IT that we aren’t able to cover in our full articles, we still want to make sure you’re informed of all the latest news, announcements, and stories happening to help you better do your job.

Stats

Partnerships

Products

Implementations

Company News

People

If you have news that you’d like us to consider for a future edition of Healthcare IT Today Bonus Features, please submit them on this page. Please include any relevant links and let us know if news is under embargo. Note that submissions received after the close of business on Thursday may not be included in Bonus Features until the following week.

Happy day after the Fourth of July! Give yourself 15 bonus points if you remembered that today is, in fact, Sunday.



Saturday, July 4, 2026

< + > Weekly Roundup – July 4, 2026

Welcome to our Healthcare IT Today Weekly Roundup. Each week, we’ll be providing a look back at the articles we posted and why they’re important to the healthcare IT community. We hope this gives you a chance to catch up on anything you may have missed during the week.

Relieving the Burden of Release of Information Requests. Kaylan Blice-Mullins at Sherpas Healthcare Solutions and Brian Sitongia at Wills Eye Hospital joined John Lynn to talk about outsourcing records retrieval and cutting response times from hours to minutes. Read more…

The Hidden Link Between Legacy Data and Patient Safety. Justin Campbell at RLDatix chatted with Colin Hung about technical debt’s role in increasing burnout, because staff need to hunt for necessary information, and bridging gaps between incident reports and EHRs with AI’s help. Read more…

Reducing Hold Times and Staff Burnout With AI Call Automation. Tracy Causey, CEO of Virginia’s Capital Area Health Network, sat down with John to discuss using healow Genie to handle 80% of all inbound patient calls and connect patients to agents in less than 90 seconds if necessary. Read more…

Optimizing End-to-End Revenue Cycle Workflows with Health IT Solutions and AI.  Hear from a variety of experts on things you can do to optimize your RCM (Revenue Cycle Management) by leveraging AI and other health IT solutions. Read more…

Life Sciences Today Podcast: Why Pediatrics Poses the Hardest Problem. Danny Lieberman caught up with Dr. Darren Klugman at Alumni Ventures to address a difficult topic: Bringing value to pediatrics, where the market is structurally small and the patients are the most vulnerable. Read more…

CIO Podcast: An Inside Look at Being a CIO. Jeff Sturman at WittKieffer (and a former CIO) spoke to John about what today’s health systems are looking for in a CIO. They also debate an emerging concern: Are IT leadership teams getting too crowded? Read more…

Building Real-Time Medication Visibility Across the Enterprise. For many organizations, the hardest part of drug scarcity is that availability signal arrives too late or in the wrong place. Real-time visibility, exception-based workflows, and practical analytics can help bring order, said Kilee Yarosh at Omnicell. Read more…

Navigating EMR Implementation in Saudi Arabia. The Kingdom’s Vision 2030 plan for healthcare envisions secure and integrated systems. Dr. Rohin Rameswarapu at InterSystems said overcoming these obstacles will require change management, infrastructure modernization, and staff training. Read more…

Less Charting, More Care: Ambient AI’s Promise for Rural Clinicians. Christopher Rogowski at Pivot Point Consulting laid out six keys to success for deploying ambient AI in a rural setting. They include governance, incident response, and effective change management. Read more…

The Real Problem With Healthcare Data? No One’s Connecting It. AI’s role in supporting care delivery is synthesizing fragmented data and surfacing what’s already knowable but not easily visible, according to Steve Brown at CureWise. Read more…

How to Migrate Healthcare Infrastructure Without Disruption. Kelly Goolsby at Nexcess outlined the benefits of mapping out what infrastructure is in place, and who owns it. This can reduce downtime, migration costs, and above all frustration with the process. Read more…

This Week’s Health IT Jobs for July 1, 2026: MarinHealth, just north of San Francisco, is looking for a CIO. Read more…

Bonus Features for June 28, 2026: Third-party failures disrupt operations at 85% of practices; nearly 60% of nurses say their tech training falls short. Read more…

Funding and M&A Activity:

Thanks for reading and be sure to check out our latest Healthcare IT Today Weekly Roundups.

Happy Fourth of July! We’re celebrating by making a red, white, and blue gingerbread house, as one does.



Friday, July 3, 2026

< + > Breaking News: Sumit Rana to Step Away from Epic

In an email sent to Epic staff, Sumit Rana, President of Epic, just shared that he’ll be stepping away from Epic on August 14, 2026. His father recently passed away and he’s decided that he needs to be more present for his mother who lives in India along with devoting more time to his wife and kids. Healthcare IT Today wishes Rana and his family all the best as they navigate this challenging time.

Rana’s departure does leave a hole at Epic that will need to be filled since most in the industry saw Rana as the successor to Judy Faulkner. Plus, Rana had increasingly become the face of Epic at industry events, Epic UGM, and with customers.

We had a chance to ask Rana about the change along with some of his experiences and success at Epic. Plus, we ask him where he sees Epic and the EHR industry in general heading in the future.

What are some of your feelings and emotions as you step away from Epic?

Sumit Rana: The overwhelming feeling is gratitude, with some bittersweetness. Our north star has always been that the needs of providers and their patients come first, and I’ve had a wonderful opportunity to make my small contribution to that mission. Leaving people I love working with, colleagues and customers alike, is hard. And I’m at peace with it. This is the right thing for my family right now, and I’m leaving with a full heart.

What are some of your accomplishments at Epic that you’re most proud of?

Sumit Rana: A few things come to mind. I was one of the original developers of MyChart, and it’s humbling to see how it’s grown into something 195 million people use actively around the world to have agency and take part in their own care. As a concrete example of MyChart’s impact, nearly half of all new additions to the National Donate Life Registry in the past year (130,000 new registrations), came through MyChart, because it made it easy for people to record their choice. One donor can save up to eight lives, restore sight to two people, and heal more than 75 people through tissue donation.

I’m proud of Epic’s push into AI, which is giving clinicians precious time back so they can on the person in front of them. It’s saving lives by flagging incidental radiology findings. It is eliminating work that adds no value and automating essential work so there is less administrative burden for both providers and payers.

Most of all, I’m proud of the people I’ve worked with and, in many cases, mentored, and of a culture of ownership that helps them grow and go on to do great things. Our interoperability team is a great example. In April we exchanged a record 845 million records in a single month, more than half of that with other EHRs. We’re leading on TEFCA and partnering with the SSA, VA, and DoD, where organizations using Epic make up over 80% of their data-sharing.

What should Epic customers know about the Epic team without your leadership in place? Who will be filling in your leadership role at Epic in your absence?

Sumit Rana: A small group of strong leaders that others and I have mentored will be stepping up to take on more, and that’s exactly how Epic has always worked. For almost 50 years, this has been a place that grows its own leaders, people ready to make strong contributions to what comes next.

What’s something about Epic that many people from the outside don’t understand?

Sumit Rana: A few things. The biggest is that we take a very long-term view, 20 to 50 years ahead. Being privately held lets us do that. We’re not managing to a quarter or to anyone’s expectations other than our customers’, and that shapes almost everything. A concrete example: we don’t do budgets. Instead, people are expected to know their leading indicators, project where things are heading, and decide their next steps from there. It puts judgment where the work is.

We also hire well. Our process is testing-focused, so we can hire for aptitude, and we have a strong training program to onboard new hires. And there’s an intense focus on accountability and execution. Make clear commitments and honor them; expectations ≡ reality. One small thing that captures the culture: for a job well done, we say “Congratulations” rather than “Thank you.” The work was yours. You earned the outcome. Even our campus is built for it, designed to spark productivity, collaboration, and creativity.

And through all of it, a sense of humor. Serving the mission of healthcare takes hard work, and it’s a lot easier when you’re laughing and having fun.

What role/responsibility do you see Epic playing the broader healthcare industry?

Sumit Rana: One is to build connections. We are building the networks that link the healthcare ecosystem together, connecting providers to their patients, to one another, and to the specialty diagnostics, retail health, post-acute, social safety net, payers, and life sciences organizations, and others that all play a part in someone’s care. When you build those bridges well, you improve patient care, create real efficiencies and take cost out of the system.

A simple example: checking for duplicate imaging orders across sites. Get that right and a patient doesn’t have to drive back to the hospital and lie still in an MRI machine a second time, the doctor can plan the next step of care immediately instead of waiting on a repeat result, and the whole system spends less. One connection, and everyone is better off.

Prior authorization is another. It may be the single most hated process in healthcare today, for patients and providers alike. I’ve read that both providers and payers carry something like 30% administrative overhead around processes like prior authorizations and claims. Connecting those two sides directly can make a real dent in that, and when it works, everyone cheers.

We are also doing our part to create and promote open standards. That means participating in the industry’s work on things like FHIR and USCDI, and being timely about shipping support for them rather than treating standards as someone else’s job. A network is only as good as its ability to connect to everyone else’s, and things only work when everyone does their part.

How do EHRs need to evolve over the next 2 years to avoid being seen as just a legacy system?

Sumit Rana: In my nearly 30 years in this industry, this is not the first time someone has declared the EHR dead or written it off as legacy. And here we are. The EHR is the engine that drives healthcare, and EHRs like ours have never stopped evolving.

There was a time the EHR was defined as just the provider’s system. So we built MyChart, and it became a shared record between patient and provider. There was a time people said someone other than EHRs would build the connections and networks for sharing data. So we built Care Everywhere. And now some say EHRs can’t be AI-native. That’s baloney. We quickly built AI natively into our EHR. Our first use case, helping providers draft responses to patient messages, was up and running within a few months of large language models bursting onto the scene.

And we haven’t stopped. We’re shipping 110 AI capabilities already, with another 90 on the way. Among them, Agent Factory, which brings a digital workforce alongside our customers’ staff, stepping in during peak times and taking on the work they always wished they had the people for. And Cosmos, which helps providers check a diagnosis and determine the best course of action, powered by a new kind of AI trained on hundreds of millions of patient stories, codified in the language of medicine and drawn from real cases and outcomes.

So EHRs like ours have always evolved, and they will keep evolving. The trick is simple, even if it isn’t easy: stay focused on customers’ unmet needs, apply extreme creativity, execute with urgency, then rinse and repeat. It’s a forever loop.

As you look at Epic’s future, what are some of the most exciting projects you see happening?

Sumit Rana: I’ve already touched upon our AI work, with Agent Factory and Cosmos and the many capabilities behind them, and the networks that keep knitting the healthcare ecosystem closer together. We’re still in the early stages, and that’s the fun part. MyChart, too, keeps evolving, vibrant and growing, with new capabilities like Epic ID, which gives patients a single login across all their MyChart accounts, simplifying access and putting an end to forgotten-password woes.

Another new frontier for us is ERP (Editor’s Note: See our interview about the Epic ERP). Healthcare organizations have long run their clinical systems and their business operations, things like finance, supply chain, and human resources, on entirely separate platforms. Bringing those together on one foundation, alongside the clinical record, is a big deal. And ours is being built specifically for healthcare from the ground up.

Is there a chance you’ll come back to Epic if things with your family evolve?

Sumit Rana: I’m not looking past what’s in front of me right now. My focus is my family, fully. I’ll always care about Epic and be cheering it on.



< + > The Kids Nobody Builds For: Why Pediatrics is the Hardest Problem – Life Sciences Today Podcast Episode 68

We’re excited to be back for another episode of the Life Sciences Today Podcast by Healthcare IT Today. My guest today is Dr. Darren Klugman, Founder at Alumni Ventures. In this episode, Klugman and I confront the most uncomfortable truth in life sciences — that the financial model gates the science, and the patients who need innovation most (children) are the ones the market systematically ignores. Klugman brings the clinician’s view from the CICU, the quality leader’s view from Johns Hopkins, and the founder’s view from a company he’s building to fix what’s broken in pediatric care.

Check out the main topics of discussion for this episode of the Life Sciences Today podcast:

  • You went from Emory undergrad to Drexel master’s to GWU med school to Children’s National to Johns Hopkins CICU director. That’s a very deliberate path into one of the hardest corners of medicine. What was the moment that locked you in — and what does 20 years in pediatric cardiac critical care do to how you see the life sciences industry?
  • You told me that data, stakeholder alignment, adoption, and reimbursement are all tightly intertwined — pull one thread and the whole thing unravels. In your experience running quality and safety programs across institutions, what does it actually look like when a clinical innovation gets all of those things right? What’s the anatomy of a win?
  • How are you thinking about value capture in pediatrics, where the market is structurally small and the patients are the most vulnerable?
  •  If you could move three needles this year — for the kids in your CICU, for the physicians trying to care for them, or for the system that’s supposed to support both — what are they?
  • You said it plainly: the financial model gates the science, and pediatrics pays the price because there’s no big enough TAM. Is that the anti-pattern — or is there something deeper underneath it? And what does the fix actually require?

Subscribe to Danny’s newsletter to get strategic patterns for life science leaders building a defensible business.

Be sure to subscribe to the Life Sciences Today Podcast on your favorite podcasting platform:

Along with the popular podcasting platforms above, you can Subscribe to Healthcare IT Today on YouTube.  Plus, all of the audio and video versions will be made available to stream on Healthcare IT Today. As a former pharma-tech founder who bootstrapped to exit, I now help TechBio and digital health CEOs grow revenue—by solving the tech, team, and go-to-market problems that stall your progress. If you want a warrior by your side, connect with me on LinkedIn.

If you work in Life Sciences IT, we’d love to hear where you agree and/or disagree with our takes on health IT innovation in life sciences. Feel free to share your thoughts and perspectives in the comments of this post, in the YouTube comments, or privately on our Contact Us page. Let us know what you think of the podcast and if you have any ideas for future episodes.

Thanks so much for listening!



< + > Stop Getting Surprised by Shortages: Building Real-Time Medication Visibility Across the Enterprise

The following is a guest article by Kilee Yarosh, Senior Manager, Clinical Strategists at Omnicell

Everyone in healthcare has lived some version of the “surprise shortage” moment. It often looks like this: a clinician and pharmacist align on a medication plan, orders go in, and the care team moves on to the next urgent task. Then, someone discovers the medication is constrained, unavailable, or quietly on allocation. Now the plan that felt settled is back on the table and the full care team is under pressure to not just identify a substitution, but also ensure education materials and counseling requirements align to the new treatment plan. While all that is going on, the patient is waiting while the system reworks what should have been routine.

That moment is frustrating, operationally expensive, and clinically risky – especially when it becomes increasingly routine. With ongoing warnings from the USP that raw materials are becoming a bottleneck for medication supply chains, the organization has identified 100 clinically important medicines that are most at risk of disruption. In recent years, shortages have been widespread, expensive, and persistent enough that workaround mode can start to feel like the default operating model.

The good news is that while no single health system can solve the national shortage problem, organizations can leverage advanced technology that supports inventory transparency to reduce surprises, mitigate inconsistency, and respond faster. 

The Surprise is Rarely the Shortage, It is When You Find Out

In many organizations, the hardest part is not that a drug is scarce. It is that the availability signal arrives too late, too inconsistently, or in the wrong place. A common scenario in multi-hospital systems may look like this:

  • One campus has enough on-hand inventory to cover near-term demand
  • Another campus is already below par levels and is burning through the remaining supply
  • Clinics are still ordering as usual because nothing in their workflow indicates a constraint
  • Pharmacy only learns the “real” status after orders are placed and verification or dispensing is underway

At that point, teams have to improvise in real time to:

  • Locate the product across sites
  • Decide whether a medication supply transfer is feasible and compliant with policy
  • Re-route doses or adjust distribution plans
  • Communicate changes to nursing and providers
  • Update orders, substitutions, and documentation
  • Monitor for downstream impacts, like missed doses or delays

The scramble that ensues often gets framed as a supply chain issue, but the day-to-day pain is felt across the full care team’s workflow. When the shortage signal is late, humans become the integration layer.

The Biggest Gap Health IT Can Influence: No Single Source of Truth

Most health systems already have a lot of inventory information. The problem is that it is fragmented across automated dispensing systems and cabinet counts at the unit level, central pharmacy systems and internal distribution workflows, and EHR ordering workflows that may not reflect real-time supply constraints. 

Even when each component is working as designed, the combined picture can still be blurry. Counts might be delayed. Locations might not be normalized. On-hand inventory might not reconcile with on-order. Allocation changes may not surface where clinicians and pharmacists make decisions.

This is why shortage readiness, at its core, is an interoperability and data governance problem.

Shortage response depends on the ability to reconcile data across EHR-facing workflows, dispensing and storage systems, and purchasing and distribution feeds so the availability signal is consistent everywhere it appears. If “available” means one thing in procurement, another in the central pharmacy, and something else at the cabinet, care teams will keep getting surprised.

What “Good” Looks Like When Visibility, Workflow, and Analytics Work Together

Organizations reduce chaos during shortages when three capabilities work together: real-time, location-aware visibility, exception-based workflows, and practical analytics that predict where shortages will hit first. Teams need an enterprise view of what is on hand by location and care area, what is on order and when it will arrive, what is allocated or delayed, what inventory is near expiration or at risk, and where demand is rising or stable, since many “shortages” are really “right drug, wrong building” issues. 

Readiness improves with standardized exception workflows that define shortage triggers, assign a clear owner (often pharmacy partnered with supply chain), document decisions and substitutions, give role-based tasks to each group, and use consistent communication to nursing and providers. These engagements and workflows must also be embedded in the tools staff already use to avoid side-channel coordination. 

Analytics platforms can also help by estimating days of supply on hand by location, empowering pharmacy teams to identify units likely to run out first. These tools can also help project the impact if trends continue, forecast demand spikes for alternatives when substituting, and flag supplies that can be redistributed quickly. Strong governance pre-defines who decides and documents, who can authorize substitutions, what thresholds trigger escalation (days of supply, allocation changes, patient safety risk), and how decisions are communicated and recorded to enable faster action with fewer meetings.

A 90-Day Playbook to Operationalize Shortage Readiness

The 90-day playbook for shortage readiness emphasizes progress over perfection by building a steady work rhythm that links actual inventory, employee workflows, and forecasting.

In the first 30 days, teams should map the full inventory process, noting breakdowns like slow updates, unclear responsibilities, mismatches between stock and activity, ambiguous product locations, and information gaps at key workflow stages. This phase produces a simple truth map of systems, handoffs, and weaknesses across the organization.

From day 31 to 60, the focus shifts to establishing a consistent minimum dataset across sites, including on-hand and on-order quantities, expected arrival dates, par levels, recent usage rates, expiration risks, and standardized location IDs. At the same time, teams should formalize substitution escalation by assigning roles, defining clear pathways, using aligned communication templates, and deciding on central versus distributed inventory.

In the final 30 days, shortage information should be integrated into core workflows so it is visible during ordering, verification, dispensing, restocking, and inventory transfers. This ensures action is based on up-to-date signals. Finally, a manageable set of KPIs should be tracked weekly, starting with metrics like time to shortage identification, time to substitution decisions, and delay days avoided.

These steps help organizations respond quickly, maintain operational consistency, and translate readiness into actual patient impact.

A Modern Platform Approach Can Support This Shift

A cloud-based medication management platform approach can make it easier to operationalize standardized workflows across multiple sites, especially when paired with unified user management and guided task workflows for technicians.

In that model, analytics can synthesize internal signals, like dispensing trends and location-level burn rates, alongside external signals, like purchasing constraints and allocation changes. When those signals are combined into risk scoring and exception queues, teams can prioritize action earlier and reduce the volume of manual triage.

Titan XT is one example of how modern automated dispensing design is evolving toward more connected, enterprise-ready inventory governance at the dispensing layer. The specific product matters less than the capability pattern: standardize data capture, improve real-time visibility, and make exception workflows easier to execute consistently across facilities.

Shortages May Be Out of Your Control, Surprise and Inconsistency Are Not

Drug shortages are likely to remain part of healthcare operations – manufacturing disruptions, quality issues, and supply constraints will continue to ripple into hospitals and clinics. What health systems can control is whether shortages show up as last-minute surprises or as managed exceptions.

When organizations pair real-time inventory visibility with standardized shortage workflows, supported by automation and analytics across the dispensing layer and the broader medication management ecosystem, three things tend to improve quickly: teams get earlier, more credible signals, manual workarounds start to shrink instead of spread, and execution becomes more predictable for pharmacy, clinicians, and patients.

The goal is not to eliminate disruption. It is to make the response faster, safer, and far less chaotic, even when the shortage itself is not going away anytime soon.



< + > Revenue Cycle Management – Healthcare IT Today Podcast Episode 196

For the 196th episode of the Healthcare IT Today Podcast , we are talking about revenue cycle management! We kick this episode off by sharin...