(Press-News.org) Denied insurance claims are among the biggest challenges facing the U.S. health care system – driving up costs and leaving providers with billions in unpaid bills.
Hilal Atasoy, an associate professor at the Rutgers Business School, thinks she’s uncovered an elegant if simple solution: better software management. Her paper on the topic appears in the September issue of the journal MIS Quarterly.
Medical claims contain a range of information, including patient demographics, medications, medical histories and procedures performed. Claims can be denied when they include erroneous information or uncovered services, among other errors.
To strengthen the quality of health data that doctors collect, in 2009, U.S. lawmakers adopted the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act, or HITECH, which incentivized the use of electronic health record (EHR) systems. The goal – lauded at the time – was to make technology the “foundation for health care reform.”
It was only partially successful. While the move incentivized adoption, the resulting mix of systems from different vendors created interoperability challenges that can contribute to claim denials, Atasoy said. When software used by one clinic or hospital system differs from another, patient data can get jumbled or go missing – making denials more likely.
Between 2000 and 2020, some $745 billion worth of care was provided without compensation, and claim denials were a significant contributor. Atasoy wanted to understand the potential role that EHR technologies played in these health payer rejections.
To quantify the connection between unpaid bills and gaps in software interoperability, Atasoy and colleagues from Temple University and the University of Wisconsin-Madison analyzed the health records of more than 19 million anonymized patient visits to 48 Maryland hospitals. The dataset included information on whether initial claims were approved or rejected.
By comparing this data with information on EHR adoption and software sourcing, the researchers determined that software decisions play an outsized role in whether claims are initially approved or denied. The dataset did not capture appeals or eventual resubmissions.
For instance, they found that when hospitals relied on multiple vendors rather than a single vendor, claim denials rose. By contrast, hospitals that standardized software from a single vendor saw denials decrease to 1.03% from 1.18% — a seemingly small shift that translates into significant savings across millions of claims.
The researchers also investigated whether physicians’ familiarity with EHR applications from different vendors could explain claim denials. They found that when physicians practiced across hospitals with similar EHR systems, claim denials decreased, since familiarity improved data accuracy and compliance.
“Our findings suggest that [EHR] alignment improves clinical data collection and adherence to payer requirements, ultimately reducing claim denials,” they wrote.
Reducing the cost of health care in the U.S. will require a basket of solutions; technology is only part of the answer. And yet, as the researchers found, EHR coordination has the potential to reduce unnecessary spending, and in turn, bring costs back down to earth.
“If there is any inefficiency in this process, that can lead to surprise bills for clinics and health care organizations, which in turn shifts the cost burden to patients and eventually, to taxpayers,” said Atasoy. “Reducing denials is among the best ways to help contain skyrocketing health care costs.”
The findings suggest that the federal government should work to strengthen EHR certification and minimize variation among vendors, Atasoy added.
“Placing greater emphasis on the usability and standardization of user interfaces and layouts will improve the accuracy of information flow across disparate applications, suggesting a potential to reduce the extent of errors in claim processing,” the researchers wrote.
END
How better software choices could cut US health care costs
To reduce claim denials and ensure providers are compensated, hospitals and clinics should ensure their software are compatible, according to a Rutgers researcher
2025-10-03
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Concussion history in NCAA athletes yields mixed health outcomes
2025-10-03
Audio
New research investigating health outcomes in NCAA athletes during their first year after leaving college sports found that some health measures were worse than expected, but others actually improved.
The results varied depending on the athletes' history of contact exposure and the number of years they played their sport.
"In athletes that are ending their collegiate careers, those with more concussions reported worse outcomes on certain health measures," said Reid Syrydiuk, first author on the study and a doctoral candidate in kinesiology studying at the University of Michigan ...
Counting plastic reveals hidden waste and sparks action
2025-10-03
Online supermarket shopping is fuelling Britain’s plastic waste crisis because packaging is less visible to consumers, according to new research from the Revolution Plastics Institute at the University of Portsmouth.
The study found that nearly half of UK households underestimate how much plastic they throw away each week, a phenomenon researchers call “plastic blindness”. Those who relied most heavily on online grocery deliveries were especially likely to be shocked by the volume ...
Warming oceans may pose a serious threat to American lobsters
2025-10-03
The Gulf of Maine is warming faster than 99% of the world’s oceans, raising concerns for its $2 billion-a-year American lobster fishery. Scientists at William & Mary’s Batten School & VIMS have been studying the impacts of ocean acidification and warming on lobster reproduction, and the results of their most recent research suggest the rising temperatures pose the greatest risk.
Utilizing a purpose-built experimental facility designed by Professor Emily Rivest and housed in the Batten School of Coastal & Marine Sciences & VIMS’ Seawater Research Laboratory, the researchers exposed egg-bearing lobsters from the Gulf of Maine ...
Deaths from drug-induced unintentional injury rise across the US
2025-10-03
Key Takeaways
Death rates from unintentional injury related to drug use rose nearly 60% from 2018 to 2023.
Men are most at risk — for every one woman who dies from a drug-related accident, about two men die.
When drugs are involved in a traumatic injury, there are more difficulties in treating these patients compared with patients whose injuries were not related to drug use.
CHICAGO (October 3, 2025) — An increasing number of people are dying from drug-related accidental injuries. The rate has risen by nearly 60% within the last five years, according to new study findings.
The research will be ...
In car crashes with pedestrians, age and zip code may predict extent of traumatic injuries
2025-10-03
Key Takeaways
While both adults and children are severely injured in pedestrian-motor vehicle collisions, adults often face more serious outcomes than children, according to a national analysis.
In another study, mapping the geographical location of injuries in Colorado revealed areas in Denver County most prone to accidents, which could help researchers target efforts to prevent future crashes.
CHICAGO — Pedestrian-motor vehicle accidents are a common cause of injury ...
AI optimizes evacuation, diagnosis, and treatment of wounded soldiers in Ukraine
2025-10-03
Key Takeaways
In Ukraine, the medical role of AI has evolved from limited use to wide-ranging applications in evacuation, diagnosis, predictive analytics, and treatment of wounded soldiers.
An analysis of 68 wounded soldiers showed that by analyzing data in real time from wearable medical devices, AI enhanced treatment by assisting medical personnel in delivering personalized care based on a soldier’s medical history, condition, and available resources.
The researchers found that AI not only accelerated drug delivery, identified new treatments for injuries, and supported artificial limb ...
Mastectomy linked to worsened sexual health, body image after surgery
2025-10-03
Key Takeaways
Women who undergo a mastectomy for breast cancer may be at higher risk of developing emotional and physical problems after treatment compared with women who undergo procedures that preserve breast tissue, such as a lumpectomy.
Developing a universal screening tool to assess a woman’s readiness for mastectomy from an emotional and psychological perspective would be an important next step to improve long-term outcomes after surgery.
CHICAGO — While mastectomy is often a necessary and life-saving treatment option for many women with breast cancer, the surgery may contribute ...
Drop in credit score after cancer diagnosis linked to increased mortality, study shows
2025-10-03
Key Takeaways
Among 42,451 patients, 8.5% developed financial toxicity (a credit score below 600) after their diagnosis; an additional 3% were already in that category.
Patients whose credit score fell by two tiers within 12 months of diagnosis faced a 29% higher risk of death. Over any six-month period after diagnosis, a one-tier drop increased mortality risk by 12%, and a two-tier drop raised it by 63%, compared with patients whose scores stayed stable.
An increase in credit score was not found ...
Use of weight loss drugs before bariatric surgery has soared in recent years, study finds
2025-10-03
Key Takeaways
Rapid uptake of weight loss drugs before metabolic and bariatric surgery: Between 2020 and 2024, the use of weight loss drugs before surgery rose sixteenfold among metabolic and bariatric surgery patients, highlighting their growing popularity and perceived effectiveness.
Substantial Increase Among Patients Without Diabetes: Use of GLP-1s, a class of drugs used to treat both Type 2 diabetes and weight loss, rose elevenfold in patients without diabetes, reflecting growing weight-focused ...
EMS call times in rural areas take at least 20 minutes longer than national average
2025-10-03
Key Takeaways
Almost 40% of emergency medical services calls in rural areas were for patients facing medically complex injuries compared with 26.4% nationally.
Rural patients were four times more likely to end up at trauma centers designated for less severe injuries and five times more likely to go to critical access hospitals – small, rural hospitals that provide essential care.
Call times for rural patients transported to specialty centers were more than 40 minutes longer compared with ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Hairdressers could be a secret weapon in tackling climate change, new research finds
Genetic risk for mental illness is far less disorder-specific than clinicians have assumed, massive Swedish study reveals
A therapeutic target that would curb the spread of coronaviruses has been identified
Modern twist on wildfire management methods found also to have a bonus feature that protects water supplies
AI enables defect-aware prediction of metal 3D-printed part quality
Miniscule fossil discovery reveals fresh clues into the evolution of the earliest-known relative of all primates
World Water Day 2026: Applied Microbiology International to hold Gender Equality and Water webinar
The unprecedented transformation in energy: The Third Energy Revolution toward carbon neutrality
Building on the far side: AI analysis suggests sturdier foundation for future lunar bases
Far-field superresolution imaging via k-space superoscillation
10 Years, 70% shift: Wastewater upgrades quietly transform river microbiomes
Why does chronic back pain make everyday sounds feel harsher? Brain imaging study points to a treatable cause
Video messaging effectiveness depends on quality of streaming experience, research shows
Introducing the “bloom” cycle, or why plants are not stupid
The Lancet Oncology: Breast cancer remains the most common cancer among women worldwide, with annual cases expected to reach over 3.5 million by 2050
Improve education and transitional support for autistic people to prevent death by suicide, say experts
GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic could cut risk of major heart complications after heart attack, study finds
Study finds Earth may have twice as many vertebrate species as previously thought
NYU Langone orthopedic surgeons present latest clinical findings and research at AAOS 2026
New journal highlights how artificial intelligence can help solve global environmental crises
Study identifies three diverging global AI pathways shaping the future of technology and governance
Machine learning advances non targeted detection of environmental pollutants
ACP advises all adults 75 or older get a protein subunit RSV vaccine
New study finds earliest evidence of big land predators hunting plant-eaters
Newer groundwater associated with higher risk of Parkinson’s disease
New study identifies growth hormone receptor as possible target to improve lung cancer treatment
Routine helps children adjust to school, but harsh parenting may undo benefits
IEEE honors Pitt’s Fang Peng with medal in power engineering
SwRI and the NPSS Consortium release new version of NPSS® software with improved functionality
Study identifies molecular cause of taste loss after COVID
[Press-News.org] How better software choices could cut US health care costsTo reduce claim denials and ensure providers are compensated, hospitals and clinics should ensure their software are compatible, according to a Rutgers researcher