
Revenue Cycle Leakage: What It Is and How to Stop It
Identify and stop revenue leakage with expert tips and prevention strategies from Claimocity.
According to a survey conducted by Premiere, Inc., inaccurate claims and payer denials cost U.S. healthcare providers an estimated $19.7 billion annually in administrative costs alone. Many healthcare providers report denial rates of at least 10%, and the cost to resubmit each claim averages from $25 for a small practice to $181 for a hospital. Those numbers add up quickly.
So, what’s the solution? Clean claims.
Payer-specific rules and compliance standards evolve every year, making it nearly impossible for revenue cycle management (RCM) teams to keep up. Claims scrubbing is a proactive process that improves clean claim rates, accelerates reimbursement, and stabilizes cash flow for inpatient facilities and large practice groups. Scrubbing is the most effective frontline defense in medical billing. It helps providers catch preventable errors before submission to protect revenue and reduce delays.
Claims scrubbing is an automated and manual review of medical billing claims to validate coding, data, and payer information before submission to the payer. Scrubbing tools are used within the RCM process after charge capture and before claims are transmitted to clearinghouses or payer systems. These scrubbing tools are designed to ensure CPT/ICD coding accuracy, demographic data completeness, insurance eligibility, and compliance with payer-specific rules.
Modern claims scrubbing relies on both automation and experienced billing teams. Software quickly catches potential errors before submission, and trained staff review flagged claims to make sure everything is accurate and compliant. This combination of automated tools and human expertise provides the best chance of meeting the ultimate goal: clean claims that meet payer requirements on the first submission to reduce rework and improve first-pass acceptance rates.
Claims scrubbing reduces the number of preventable errors in your claims while accelerating reimbursement timelines. This leads to shorter reimbursement cycles and improved cash flow predictability. Another benefit of effective claims scrubbing is reduced audit risk. Clean claims are, by definition, in compliance with CMS and HIPAA requirements.
Clean claims alleviate several pain points for providers. Fewer denials mean fewer claim resubmissions, which means less time spent on admin work and fewer disruptions to reimbursement.
Scrubbing claims is a multi-step process that will begin saving your team time and your practice money as soon as the first reimbursements start rolling in.
Here is a step-by-step breakdown of the process:
Step 1: Claim creation from EHR and billing systems. This includes patient demographics, coding, and documentation inputs.
Step 2: Automated software applies rule engine checks for payer-specific requirements, coding mismatches, and missing data.
Step 3: Edits and alerts flag potential errors. These errors may include invalid codes or incomplete payer information, for example.
Step 4: Exception-based workflow routes flagged claims to billing staff for correction and validation.
Step 5: Secondary review ensures compliance with payer policies and internal quality benchmarks.
Step 6: Clean claims are submitted to the clearinghouse or payer for adjudication.
There are several types of errors and denials that can be avoided with effective claims scrubbing.
Coding inaccuracies are very common because of constantly changing rules and overall complexity. Incorrect or outdated CPT/ICD coding can lead to invalid code or medical necessity denials. Regular coding updates and automated claim checks help catch these issues before submission.
Missing or incomplete data such as patient demographics or insurance details will trigger rejections. Front-end verification and required field checks help ensure claims are complete before submission.
Payer-specific rule violations are also very common. Mismatched coverage policies or benefits limits will cause denials. The solution is software that applies payer-specific rules to identify claim issues before submission.
Duplicate claims will also trigger automatic denials. Be sure to use an automated solution that will detect and notify your team when it identifies a duplicate claim.
Missing insurance approvals or referrals can lead to denied claims. Checking authorization requirements before services are provided helps avoid reimbursement delays.
Missing or incorrect modifiers can cause claims to be denied or underpaid. Automated claim checks help catch these mistakes before claims are submitted.
Providers can run into problems when they bill separately for services that insurers consider part of an earlier procedure. Claims scrubbing tools help flag these billing conflicts before submission.
Documentation gaps or documentation that is not sufficient to support billed services will also cause claims to be denied. The solution is to align coding with clinical notes and audit trails.
We’ve touched on some of the general benefits of claims scrubbing and some of the things that commonly trigger denials, but what are the benefits of creating a claims scrubbing process for your practice? There are several.
Reducing the number of denials improves your clean claim rates and speeds up your reimbursement cycles with more accurate first-pass submissions. Claims scrubbing also helps providers stay current with payer rules and healthcare regulations, reducing compliance risks.
Clean claims minimize manual corrections and resubmissions to lower rework costs and reduce administrative workload. Fewer billing delays and clearer financial communication improve the patient experience with increased transparency. Finally, claims scrubbing enhances providers’ financial performance with more stable cash flow and reduced revenue leakage.
An effective clean claims process doesn’t just run itself. It needs to be constantly monitored, measured, and optimized. With periodic maintenance, you’ll see your clean claim rates improve, and your denial rates continue to fall.
A claim scrubbing process that balances automation and human expertise gives you the best of both worlds. Leverage outsourcing services for specialized expertise and RCM scalability.
Claimocity is an industry leader in automated and outsourced manual RCM services. We provide integrated solutions that combine software and expert services for optimized medical billing. We specialize in accurate coding, real-time claims scrubbing, and proactive denial prevention. Whatever the size of your practice, we tailor workflows for providers to improve reimbursement and reduce administrative burden. There are other automated RCM tools out there, but nothing can match the scalability and precision of pairing cutting-edge, AI-powered charge capture with decades of RCM expertise.
Proactive claims scrubbing protects you from audit exposure, maximizes revenue, and reduces administrative workloads. Accurate data, strong compliance, and efficient submission workflows are critical in the modern healthcare environment. Even seemingly insignificant gaps in your billing process can, over time, have negative impacts on your revenue stream. Advanced automated solutions can expose and quickly correct those process gaps to reduce errors, prevent denials, and accelerate reimbursements.
Book a demo to explore how Claimocity can enhance your RCM performance.
It’s a pre-submission review process that identifies and corrects errors in medical billing claims to ensure accuracy and compliance.
Claims scrubbing improves clean claim rates, reduces denials, and accelerates reimbursement to strengthen overall RCM performance.
It prevents avoidable revenue loss from rejected claims, reduces rework costs, and ensures timely, accurate payments from payers.

Identify and stop revenue leakage with expert tips and prevention strategies from Claimocity.

Discover how claims scrubbing in medical billing maximizes your revenue by minimizing denials and speeding up reimbursements effectively.

Discover how automating medical claims processing improves accuracy and efficiency while highlighting why human oversight remains crucial.