Monday, May 18, 2026

< + > Is Being a “Disruptor” Still a Good Thing? A Look at the 2026 Healthcare Disruptors List

In 2026, is it a good thing to be labeled a healthcare disruptor, or does that label just set you up for failure? For the past several years, Alan Shoebridge, AVP & Chief Communication Officer (National) at Providence, has been publishing a highly anticipated “Disruptors List,” tracking which organizations and trends are moving the needle in healthcare (and which are just hype).

In a recent sit-down with Healthcare IT Today, Shoebridge unveiled his 2026 list, breaking down why heavyweights like AARP and direct-to-consumer (DTC) primary care made the cut, why CVS got the boot, and why vaccine hesitancy is forcing its way back into the conversation.

Core Insight: Shoebridge believes that true disruption in healthcare isn’t about flashy tech; it’s about the very real policy, labor, and social shifts that affect how care is delivered and consumed.

The New Additions and the Danger of Hubris

When you look at the landscape, it’s easy to get distracted by companies claiming they will single-handedly fix the industry. Shoebridge takes a pragmatic approach, heavily discounting organizations with too much hubris. This is exactly why CVS fell off this year’s list. “We’re gonna revolutionize healthcare. We’re gonna fix it all. We’ve got it figured out,” Shoebridge noted of their past grandiosity, adding that ultimately “their vision was just not realized” and they remain “far away from that” goal.

Instead of tech panaceas, Shoebridge looks at raw influence. Take the AARP, a new addition for 2026. While not a flashy tech startup, they are “very visible advocates” leveraging massive political and financial sway on behalf of the baby boomer generation. Similarly, DTC primary care is generating buzz. Shoebridge remains cautiously optimistic about its durability, noting that without a robust referral network, “the margins on primary care are just really, really poor.”

Negative Disruption and the “Waiting Room”

Not all disruption is positive. Shoebridge brought vaccine hesitancy back onto his 2026 list, framing it as a dangerous barrier to access. “We’re seeing the negative effect,” he explained. “This is bad disruption… where you have people questioning scientific evidence.” This resistance leads to preventable outbreaks that tie up valuable hospital beds and strain an already exhausted workforce.

For those companies with potential but unproven staying power, like Best Buy Health and Salesforce, Shoebridge created a “waiting room” category. These are organizations doing interesting things, but as Shoebridge stated, “we’re going to keep them out here in the waiting room until we see if they’re really committed to doing something.”

Notable Healthcare Disruptors

New Disruptors: AARP, DTC Primary Care, Vaccine Hesitancy, Home Medical Testing, Maven Clinic

Disruptors Still on the List: Amazon, Epic, Mark Cuban, Microsoft, SEIU, Staffing Shortages

Disruptors Leaving the List: CVS

Waiting Room: Best Buy Health, Hinge Health, Optum/United Healthcare, Salesforce

The overall lesson here is simple: it’s easy to announce a disruption, but incredibly difficult to sustain one in an industry that still requires a massive amount of hands-on care.

See the full list here: https://www.linkedin.com/posts/shoebridge_healthcare-hospitals-disruption-activity-7447278247471656961-Zlfk

Connect with Alan Shoebridge on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/shoebridge/



< + > CIO Podcast – Episode 114: ACOs and Long-Term Care with Mike Camacho

For the 114th episode of the CIO podcast hosted by Healthcare IT Today, we are joined by Mike Camacho, CEO at Sound Long Term Care, to talk about ACOs and long-term care! We kick this episode off by discussing why ACOs have been a challenge for long-term care. Then, Camacho shares what his experience and results have been from being a part of an ACO. Next, we talk about how Camacho is leveraging data, care coordination, and technology in his efforts. We also talk about where Camacho is getting his data – is it from the provider or outside sources? Next, Camacho shares how he approached engaging providers in this effort. Then, we debate how important ACOs and value-based care efforts are to the future of long-term care, as well as what we think the keys are to doing it successfully. We then conclude this episode with Camacho passing along the best piece of advice he’s received in his career.

Here’s a look at the questions and topics we discuss in this episode:

  • Why have ACOs been a challenge for long-term care?
  • What’s been your experience and results from being part of an ACO?
  • How are you leveraging data, care coordination, and technology in these efforts?
  • Where are you getting the data? Is it from the provider or from other outside sources?
  • How did you approach engaging providers in this effort?
  • How important are ACOs and value-based care efforts to the future of long-term care? What will be the keys to doing it successfully?
  • What’s the best piece of advice you’ve been given in your career?

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

We release a new CIO Podcast every ~2 weeks. You can also subscribe to the Healthcare IT Today podcast on any of the following platforms:

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We’d love to hear what you think of the podcast and if there are other healthcare CIO you’d like to see us have on the program. Feel free to share your thoughts and perspectives in the comments of this post with @techguy on Twitter, or privately on our Contact Us page.

We appreciate you listening!

Listen to the Latest Episodes



< + > Under Pressure: Why Pre-Bill Prevention is Now Non-Negotiable in Coding and Denial Management

The following is a guest article by Ritesh Ramesh, CEO at MDaudit

Healthcare organizations are operating in an environment defined by financial pressure, regulatory scrutiny, and rapid shifts in payer behavior. Leadership teams are expected to maintain financial stability, protect compliance, and support patient care with fewer resources and less margin for error.

These trends point to a clear reality: revenue risk is no longer isolated to downstream denials or post-payment reviews. It now runs through the entire revenue cycle, spanning charge capture, documentation, coding, billing, and payer response. Organizations relying on retrospective reviews and siloed oversight are increasingly exposed to lost revenue, audit risk, and operational strain.

Payer tactics continue to evolve and grow more aggressive. Policies are becoming more complex and less predictable. Enforcement is tightening as payers rapidly expand their use of artificial intelligence (AI) to automate reviews, spot anomalies, and trigger audits. Combine that with frequent unannounced policy updates and mid-cycle contract changes, and even fully compliant claims can be denied, including 14.4 million pre-approved claims that are rejected annually.

This puts HIM and coding teams directly in the crosshairs.

The mid-cycle — documentation, coding, and billing — is where revenue is captured or permanently lost. In fact, it has become the most critical point in revenue cycle management (RCM), one that can no longer be managed effectively with reactive tactics alone.

Reactive Denial Management Strategies are No Longer Sustainable

Denial management approaches that rely on reworking rejected claims have become increasingly unsustainable. Denial volumes, complexity, and costs are rising faster than healthcare organizations can absorb, in turn driving up administrative costs, straining staff, and eroding margins.

Findings from the most recent MDaudit Benchmark Report highlight the scale of the challenge confronting HIM and coding leaders:

  • Average lag days for initial claims response by commercial payers increased across all care settings.
  • Both the average denied amount and denial volume increased for Medicare Advantage (MA) plans.
  • Average amount of RFI and medical necessity denials increased by 70% across all settings.
  • Coding-related denials increased 26% across professional and hospital outpatient settings.
  • Total amount at-risk and audit requests per customer rose by 30% for external payer audits.

The rising cost of reworking denials adds pressure, now averaging $25 per claim for practices and $181 for hospitals. With denial volumes climbing, these per-claim costs quickly reach millions of dollars annually. As a result, many provider organizations must prioritize which claims to rework, leading hospitals to lose an average of $5 million annually from unresolved denials — up to 5% of net patient revenue.

These trends demand a redefined approach to revenue integrity; one centered on solutions that unite revenue growth and risk mitigation into a single, disciplined framework.

How Technology is Redefining Revenue Integrity

When revenue integrity solutions are supported by connected technology, real-time data, and automated workflows, it shifts from a reactive function to a proactive, executive-level capability. Leaders gain early visibility into risk, clearer insight into performance trends, and the ability to act before issues escalate into financial loss or regulatory exposure.

The organizations that realize the strongest outcomes are those that break down silos between compliance, coding, revenue cycle, and clinical teams. They rely on data to drive objective decision-making, prioritize high-risk activity, and align teams around shared accountability. They are also increasing their use of risk-based audits, expanding pre-bill reviews, and leveraging technology to protect revenue with foresight rather than hindsight.

For healthcare revenue cycle leaders, revenue integrity is a financial performance strategy and not just a department-level operational concern. It directly impacts operating margins, forecasting accuracy, workforce planning, and capital decisions. Therefore, executives need revenue integrity solutions that provide:

  • Clear visibility into financial risk. With total at-risk revenue from external payer audits increasing year over year, early detection of risk exposure is essential. A connected revenue integrity platform surfaces high-risk encounters, denial drivers, documentation gaps, and payer patterns before they scale.
  • Proactive denial prevention. Reactive denial management is costly and inefficient. Pre-bill oversight and predictive monitoring allow organizations to correct issues before claims are submitted, protecting reimbursement and reducing administrative burden.
  • Stronger audit readiness and accountability. Executive teams require centralized tracking, documentation, and response management to maintain control over exposure and defend reimbursement effectively.
  • Data-driven decision-making across departments. When compliance, coding, billing operations, clinical documentation, and finance operate from siloed systems, leaders lack a unified view of performance. Technology-enabled revenue integrity solutions create shared accountability, measurable outcomes, and consistent reporting across teams.
  • Sustainable financial performance. Revenue growth and risk mitigation are inseparable. Executives need balanced solutions that protect margin while reducing regulatory risk.

The Influence of Meaningful—Not Artificial—AI

No discussion of technology’s role in advancing revenue integrity is complete without addressing artificial intelligence. Health system CFOs face the same paradox as payers: AI is both the problem and the most powerful solution. The organizations that move fastest from theory to execution, delivering measurable AI-driven ROI, will define their financial resilience for years to come.

Successful AI integration facilitates true collaboration between people and technology, embedding augmented intelligence as a horizontal layer throughout the revenue cycle platform rather than layering it on as an afterthought. This creates a meaningful and responsible AI framework; a deliberate, outcomes-driven approach designed to deliver measurable ROI, not automation for its own sake or AI for novelty or competitive positioning.

For example, eValuator, part of MDaudit’s AI-powered platform that automates audit workflows and interrogates pre-bill charges across facilities, specialties, and multiple EHR and billing systems, delivered more than $500 million in annual ROI by doing the heavy analytical lifting and leveraging automation while keeping humans in the loop.

What AI should not do is:

  • Make autonomous decisions that bypass clinical or compliance judgment.
  • Add complexity in the name of innovation.
  • Replace the expertise of the professionals using it.

AI should amplify and augment expertise across every encounter, claim, and audit. It should serve the specific purpose of helping top healthcare RCM professionals work faster, see further, and make better decisions.

Revenue Integrity Redefined: From Reactive to Confident Control

The strongest outcomes of redefining revenue integrity emerge when silos between compliance, coding, revenue cycle, and clinical teams are broken down, and objective data drives prioritization, accountability, and cross-functional alignment. Case studies across multiple health systems consistently demonstrate what that looks like in practice:

  • Expanded audit coverage without proportional increases in staffing.
  • Measurable improvements in coding accuracy, significant reductions in denials.
  • Early identification of multimillion-dollar risk exposure.
  • Increased executive visibility through defensible benchmarking.

Organizations that treat revenue integrity as a mission-critical capability, supported by continuous monitoring and intelligent automation, are better equipped to handle payer complexity, workforce shortages, and regulatory demands. They move from reacting to denials to anticipating risk, from defending audits to preventing them, and from fragmented oversight to confident control.

About Ritesh Ramesh

Ritesh Ramesh is CEO of MDaudit, an award-winning, AI-powered continuous risk-monitoring platform and a trusted revenue integrity partner to healthcare organizations nationwide. As CEO, Ramesh is focused on driving growth and profitability for MDaudit with a customer-centric vision, strong team culture, and platform innovation. He has spent his entire career — which spans more than 22 years with leading professional services organizations — at the intersection of data, analytics, and emerging technologies, transforming business models across various retail and consumer-focused industries, including healthcare.



< + > HealthVerity Completes Acquisition of Symphony Health, Marking a New Era for the Healthcare Data Industry

The Combined Company will join Clinical Data, Commercial Analytics, and Unmatched Services into a Unified, AI-Ready Environment to Give Life Sciences Organizations a Comprehensive, Connected View of the Patient to Move Faster from Insight to Action

HealthVerity, the leader in privacy-protected real-world data exchange and patient identity solutions, today announced the successful completion of its previously announced agreement to acquire Symphony Health Solutions Corporation, a commercial healthcare data business formerly part of ICON plc.

The transaction will define the next era of healthcare real-world data by bringing together HealthVerity’s clinical data depth and experience with Symphony Health’s commercial insights and scale into a single, connected view of patients and providers – backed by 40 years of combined experience.

Healthcare data has long been fragmented with separate sources providing different commercial and clinical data, analytics, and technical capabilities, each requiring its own contract, integration, and reconciliation. Organizations operating across life sciences, government, payers, and analytics have been forced to stitch together disconnected datasets, often working from an incomplete and inconsistent view of the patient and provider.

HealthVerity’s acquisition of Symphony Health is designed to solve that problem at its core.

“With the Symphony Health acquisition, our focus turns to executing with speed and discipline as we usher in an era of unprecedented access to patient-centric data with the depth and breadth capable of driving the next generation of insights and analytics,” said Andrew Kress, Chief Executive Officer at HealthVerity. “Now the real work begins to help drive our clients to a higher level of success.”

The combined offerings will deliver the industry’s most comprehensive and scalable healthcare data solutions, eliminating the tradeoffs between data coverage, depth, and usability that have historically limited the market. With deeper insights and more flexibility than legacy or single-source approaches, customers can reduce complexity and accelerate healthcare innovation and breakthroughs.

Evercore served as financial advisor, and Blank Rome LLP served as legal advisor to HealthVerity.

About HealthVerity

HealthVerity is the leader in privacy-protected real-world data exchange, transforming how healthcare and life sciences organizations connect and analyze disparate patient data. By enabling access to the industry’s largest RWD ecosystem, HealthVerity supports critical applications in clinical development, commercial strategy, regulatory decision-making, and public health.

Originally announced May 8th, 2026.



Sunday, May 17, 2026

< + > Bonus Features – May 17, 2026 – Just 59% of healthcare orgs track the performance of their AI agents, 60% of nurses lack confidence in their org’s AI oversight, plus 31 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.

Studies

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.



Saturday, May 16, 2026

< + > Weekly Roundup – May 16, 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.

News From the eClinicalWorks Health Center Summit. John Lynn made his way to the event, which brings together FQHC users. He learned about healowIQ (which provides peer-reviewed evidence at the point of care) and the AI Workbench for creating agents in a no-code platform. Read more…

Evolving From Patient Outreach to Patient Engagement. Mayank Pant at IKS Health sat down with John to discuss why organizations need to go beyond medical records and analyze patient behavior if they want to truly engage instead of repeatedly reaching out. Read more…

Using Data Analytics to Improve Claims Management, Utilization Review, and Care Coordination. Enterprise data management, predictive modeling, and proactive workflows all help providers and payers work together to address these issues, the Healthcare IT Today experts said. Read more…

Aligning Payer and Provider Goals Around Value-Based Care and Quality Measurement. How is the Healthcare IT Today community getting this done? Simplified bundles, decision support, shared data models, predictive insights, and clinical and operational alignment all help. Read more…

How Corewell Health Cut Food Waste and Improved Patient Safety. Tony Boggs at Corewell Health talked to Colin Hung about integrating Illumia with Epic to automatically cross-references a patient’s clinical requirements with available food options, among other benefits. Read more…

Medical Practice Insights from AMGA 2026. John’s interviews at the event covered what makes agentic AI most effective, how to support AI at the bedside, and selecting the right value-based care model. Read more…

MedFlorida Uses AI in RCM As a Growth Enabler. Colin caught up with Robert DeLuca at MedFlorida Medical Centers, which is using eClinicalWorks AI to manage more claims, and see fewer claims get rejected, without adding billing staff. Read more…

Life Sciences Today Podcast: The Intersection of Breakthrough Science and Market Opportunity. Danny Lieberman talked to Jennifer Ernst at Valion Bio about moving from ideation to FDA clearance to revenue – and pivoting throughout her career. Read more…

Healthcare IT Today PodcastHealth IT Mount Rushmore, Part 2. This time around, John and Colin discussed the main companies that should be on the industry’s Mount Rushmore. Read more…

Healthcare Is Under Siege Due to Ransomware Attacks. As data storage environments duplicate and expand, IT leaders lack visibility into where to find sensitive data. Attackers exploit these loopholes, but they can be closed through better defense and governance, according to Krishna Subramanian at Komprise. Read more…

When a Vendor Gets Breached, What Happens to Your Patient Data? Scheduling, intake and billing systems often leave specialty practices exposed because they’re implemented quickly, said Kelly Goolsby at Nexcess. That’s why organizations need to choose hosting environments with compliance in mind. Read more…

The Incidental Finding Problem Emergency Medicine Can’t Ignore. Because ED doctors focus on acute care, 1% of patients leave the ED with an unaddressed but clinically urgent incidental finding. AI tools that scan images and documents can close these care gaps, said Dr. Justin Schrager at Vital. Read more…

AI’s Complex Impact on Patient Access. All too often, investments in AI expose gaps between the digital front door and the phone workflow, according to Stephen Dean at Keona Health. Solving this problem means addressing all access channels in a unified way. Read more…

Here’s Why AI Alone Won’t Fix Physician Burnout. AI’s efficiency gains tend to get reinvested into throughput, noted Dr. Marc Ayoub at Saile. The industry would be well served to couple the technology with what clinicians really want: Better control over where and when they work. Read more…

This Week’s Health IT Jobs for May 13, 2026: Roles in informatics, records management, and community health. Read more…

Bonus Features for May 10, 2026: Poor communication would lead 58% of patients to look for a new provider; Google extends Chrome with security features for healthcare. Read more…

Funding and M&A Activity:

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



Friday, May 15, 2026

< + > “Healthcare Data Sucks” Song – Fun Friday

Happy Friday everyone!  That means it’s time for another Fun Friday.  I’m always a sucker for a funny health IT music video.  That’s what CognomIQ has put together with their song “Healthcare Data Sucks.”  Feels like this is one of those amazing AI song generators, but it’s quite catchy.  I’m fascinated by them calling out other vendors in it as well.  Not sure if that’s a good or bad marketing strategy.  Either way, the video is entertaining for those #HITNerds like myself.

Thanks everyone for coming by.  We’ll be back next week with more great healthcare IT contnent.



< + > Is Being a “Disruptor” Still a Good Thing? A Look at the 2026 Healthcare Disruptors List

In 2026, is it a good thing to be labeled a healthcare disruptor, or does that label just set you up for failure? For the past several years...