Chiropractic Billing Leakage: 7 Workflow Warning Signs
Billing Insights: Chiropractic Billing Leakage: 7 Workflow Warning Signs is a workflow question before it is a reporting question. Small practices usually need clearer ownership, cadence, and next-action visibility before they can tell whether billing work is truly moving.
Start with the workflow symptom
Look at what the team is seeing in AR, denials, posting, benefits, authorizations, or payer follow-up. The goal is to define the stuck point without using patient-level examples.
Ask who owns the next action
Every open billing issue should have a next action, an owner, and a follow-up date. Without those three items, work can be touched without moving forward.
Separate activity from progress
Notes and touches are useful only when they lead to a decision, correction, appeal, posting action, documentation request, or payer follow-up milestone.
Use a no-PHI first pass
A first-pass review can begin with counts, categories, age buckets, and workflow symptoms. Aloha’s billing workflow help focuses on where work may be getting stuck across AR, denials, posting, benefits, authorizations, and follow-up.
Get an outside workflow look
For a practical no-PHI review, request a Free Billing Leakage Review and describe the workflow symptoms your practice is seeing.
No-PHI reminder: Do not send patient names, dates of birth, claim numbers, EOBs, portal screenshots, medical records, or login credentials through a web form.
This article is educational and is not legal, compliance, coding, clinical, or payment advice. A review does not guarantee recovery, collections, payer decisions, or specific outcomes.
