3 min read
2025-07-08
Can error detection be fully automated?
Billing payment errors in a healthcare practice rarely show up as a single big loss. Detection, yes; resolution, no. Automation surfaces the 5-10% of payments that deviate from expected values. A billing coordinator still works exceptions, but only exceptions—not the 90% that posted cleanly. The trick to catching them isn't more scrutiny; it's catching the pattern early, while the claim is still within appeal or refile windows. Here's where errors actually hide and how to find them before the money is gone.
The Error Patterns That Actually Cost You Money
Most preventable payment losses fall into a short list of categories:
Short pays: payer pays less than the contracted rate without a denial code. Often slips past auto-posting because the claim technically closed.
Duplicate posts: the same 835 line item posted twice, once from the clearinghouse and once from a paper EOB.
Missed secondary billing: primary paid, but the claim was never routed to the secondary or tertiary payer.
Patient balance routing errors: contractual adjustment taken when it should have been patient responsibility (or vice versa).
Stale denials: a denial sits in a queue past the appeal window without ever being worked.
Across these five categories, the quiet leakage for a practice with $5M in annual collections typically runs 1-3% — $50,000-$150,000/year. It doesn't feel like a single problem because it's a thousand small problems.
How to Catch Errors Before They Age Out
Three daily and weekly habits catch most of the leakage:
Daily variance report: any posted payment that deviates more than 5% from the contracted rate gets flagged for same-day review.
Weekly unworked denial audit: every denial older than 7 days without action goes on a list. Assign, work, or write off — never leave in limbo.
Monthly deposit-to-835 tie-out: every ACH deposit should match a 835 file with no orphans. Orphans are the most common source of missed secondary billing.
Those three cover the bulk of the loss pattern. The fourth habit — a quarterly payer contract audit — catches systemic short pays where a payer has shifted their allowed amounts and your practice hasn't noticed.
Where Automation Actually Helps
Tools can carry most of the weight if they're set up right. A healthcare-native bank like Lemma pairs every ACH deposit with its matching 835 file automatically, surfaces orphan deposits in real time, and routes variances to a dedicated queue. Combined with an RCM that auto-posts clean 835s and flags denials within 24 hours, a billing coordinator's job shifts from data entry to exception handling — which is where error catching actually lives.
The practices that lose the least aren't the ones with the biggest billing teams. They're the ones whose stack flags deviations automatically, so the human layer only touches the 5-10% that actually needs human judgment.
If errors are compounding across your payers and aged A/R is creeping up, the fix is rarely more headcount. It's tightening the feedback loop between deposit, 835, and claim so errors surface in hours instead of months. Open a free Lemma account in 5 minutes and close the gap between what you were paid and what you expected to be paid.
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