Combat the Hidden Costs of Vendor Sprawl with Performance Management 

Key Takeaways 

  • For health plans, managing multiple vendors can create compounding operational inefficiencies that inflate costs and impede decision-making. 
  • A single integrated technology partner can help eliminate data silos, reduce administrative burden, and create a unified foundation for scalable growth. 
  • Health plans that consolidate to an integrated platform gain a measurable advantage in cost control, efficiency, and the ability to scale without proportional cost increases. 
  • The shift from multi-vendor complexity to integrated simplicity isn’t just an IT decision—it’s a strategic imperative. 

What is Vendor Sprawl, and How Does it Impact Health Plan Operations? 

Vendor sprawl is what occurs when payers rely on a multitude of point solutions and spend more time managing vendors than achieving results. 

It rarely starts as an obvious problem. A plan selects a best-of-breed solution for claims. Another for provider data management. Another for payment integrity. Each decision makes sense in isolation. But over time, the cumulative weight of managing multiple vendor relationships, integrating disparate systems, and reconciling conflicting data creates a drag on operations that compounds year after year. 

The result of vendor sprawl? Inflated administrative costs, security risks, reduced data transparency, and operational inefficiency. This cluttered technology ecosystem makes it harder for payers to scale business. 

“When you’re managing five, six, seven different vendor relationships, you’re not just managing technology—you’re managing complexity. And complexity is expensive.”
-HealthEdge® Vice President of Delivery 

What Inefficiencies are Common for Payers Managing Multiple Vendors? 

The financial impact of vendor sprawl goes well beyond licensing fees. The true cost shows up in operational overhead that’s easy to underestimate and difficult to untangle. 

For health plans, multi-vendor environments typically require: 

  • Custom and expensive integrations with multiple disparate vendor solutions 
  • Manual reconciliation when data doesn’t flow cleanly between systems, requiring valuable manual review to identify and correct discrepancies. 
  • Fragmented reporting that makes it difficult to get a clear, real-time view of operational performance across the enterprise. 
  • Vendor management overhead, including contract negotiations, Service Level Agreement (SLA)  monitoring, and escalation management across multiple relationships. 
  • Inconsistent data standards that create downstream errors in claims processing, provider directories, and member communications. 

Each of these friction points carries a cost—in staff hours, error rates, delayed decisions, and missed opportunities to automate workflows. 

“Data transparency isn’t just a technical requirement. It’s a business requirement. If your teams can’t see what’s happening across the operation in real time, they can’t act on it.”
-HealthEdge® Vice President of Delivery 

Why Should Payers Refocus from Vendor Management to Performance Management? 

Making the switch from managing vendors to managing performance requires payers to streamline their solutions, so they can focus less on wrangling vendor points of contact and more on achieving outcomes. 

What are the Key Benefits of Adopting an Integrated Ecosystem? 

Working from a single, integrated ecosystem addresses these challenges at the root level rather than managing symptoms as they arise. 

When core administrative processing, provider data management, and prospective payment integrity operate on a connected platform, the operational benefits compound in ways that isolated point solutions simply can’t replicate. 

  1. Efficiency gains become structural. 

Instead of building and maintaining integrations between systems, workflows move seamlessly across functions. Claims data informs payment integrity. Provider data updates flow automatically into member-facing directories. Operational changes disseminate across the platform without requiring updates in multiple systems. 

  1. Cost control becomes more predictable. 

With a unified ecosystem, health plans reduce the operational workarounds that inflate costs in multi-vendor environments. Automation rates improve because the underlying data is consistent and reliable. Manual intervention decreases. Existing resources go further. 

  1. Scalability becomes achievable. 

One of the most significant limitations of multi-vendor environments is that growth requires proportional increases in integration complexity and vendor management overhead. An integrated platform scales differently—adding members, products, or markets doesn’t require rebuilding the technology foundation each time. 

“The plans that are positioned to grow efficiently are the ones that aren’t rebuilding their integration layer every time the business changes.”
-HealthEdge® Vice President of Delivery 

What Competitive Advantages Can Payers Gain from Data Transparency? 

In a fragmented vendor environment, data is often trapped in system-specific formats, updated on different schedules, and reconciled manually before it can be used for reporting or decision-making. By the time leadership has a clear picture of operational performance, the moment to act on it has often passed. 

An integrated platform creates a single source of truth. Claims data, provider data, and payment data exist in a connected environment where operational leaders can access real-time dashboards, identify bottlenecks before they escalate, and make decisions based on current information rather than last week’s reconciled report. 

This level of transparency also supports operational accountability. Clear audit trails make root-cause analysis faster and more accurate. When a claim is processed incorrectly or a provider record is out of date, the integrated environment makes it possible to trace exactly what happened and where the process broke down—without spending days pulling data from multiple systems. 

For payers, this is the difference between managing operations reactively and leading them proactively. 

How does an Integrated Ecosystem Support Health Plan Scalability? 

Growth is the goal for every health plan. But in a multi-vendor environment, growth often means adding complexity rather than adding capacity. 

Scaling to deliver new lines of business can mean adopting additional platforms or instances to support the higher transaction volume. Scaling to meet increased membership is more complex, requiring payers to reevaluate workflows and operational efficiency in areas like: 

  • Claims intake  
  • Adjudication volume 
  • Eligibility and enrollment processing 
  • Data movement, and  
  • Delivery model  

An integrated platform removes this ceiling. Because the core systems are built to work together, scaling the business doesn’t require scaling the technology at the same rate. Health plans can add members, expand into new markets, and launch new products with confidence that the technology foundation will support the growth rather than constrain it. 

“Scalability isn’t just about whether your systems can handle more volume. It’s about whether your operations team can handle more complexity. Integrated platforms reduce that complexity at the source.”
-HealthEdge® Vice President of Delivery 

5 Questions Payers Should Ask an Integrated Technology Partner 

At HealthEdge, we provide prebuilt integrations that reduce the complexity of implementing new technologies. Our Business Process as a Solution (BPaaS) model weaves together multiple point solutions to create an integrated ecosystem. 

When evaluating technology partnerships, health plan leaders should ask specific questions like: 

  1. Are the solutions natively integrated, or are they connected through third-party middleware? 
  2. Does the platform support real-time data sharing across all areas of the business? 
  3. Does the vendor have a demonstrated track record of supporting health plans through growth, market changes, and regulatory updates? 
  4. What does the upgrade path look like, and does it preserve existing business rules and configurations? 

These questions separate genuine integration from assembled point solutions marketed as a platform. 

What Are the Risks of Adhering to a Multi-Vendor Strategy? 

Health plans that continue to manage fragmented vendor environments will face increasing pressure as administrative costs rise, member and provider expectations grow, and the pace of regulatory change accelerates. The operational overhead of maintaining multiple integrations, reconciling inconsistent data, and managing competing vendor relationships becomes harder to absorb over time. 

Plans that consolidate to an integrated platform position themselves differently. They operate with lower administrative costs per transaction, higher automation rates, and greater visibility into operational performance. They scale more efficiently. And they spend less time managing vendor complexity and more time delivering value to members and providers. 

The case for integrated technology isn’t theoretical. It’s measurable—in claims auto-adjudication rates, in contract maintenance time, in staff productivity, and in the operational cost per transaction. 

Want to hear directly from health plan leaders on how integrated technology environments are reshaping operational strategy? Listen to the full podcast episode to explore how payers are rethinking vendor relationships, driving efficiency, and building the operational foundation for scalable growth. 

 

How NorthWinds Technology Solutions Reached 90% Auto-Adjudication with HealthRules® Payer AI 

Efficiencies in claims processing is a direct driver of cost management, member satisfaction, and competitive positioning. NorthWinds Technology Solutions leadership understood this when they made the decision to move away from legacy platforms and adopt the integrated HealthRules® Payer core administrative processing solution (CAPS).

Key Takeaways

  • NorthWinds increased auto-adjudication rates from the high 60s to mid-90s by replacing legacy platforms with HealthRules Payer.
  • AI-assisted workflows now handle complex tasks like radiographic review and documentation analysis, dramatically reducing manual adjuster workload.
  • Staff efficiency improved significantly, with AI recommendations enabling instant claim payments on approvals and faster reviews on denials.
  • Member experience improved as higher auto-adjudication rates translated to faster claim responses and payment turnaround.

The Problem with Legacy Claims Processing

Before partnering with HealthEdge®, NorthWinds operated on legacy platforms that were simply not built for the demands of modern claims processing. Auto-adjudication rates were stuck in the high 60s to mid-70s—meaning a significant volume of claims required manual intervention at every stage.

The manual workload wasn’t evenly distributed, either. The final 10-15% of claims were the most complex and labor-intensive, representing a disproportionate share of operational costs. Three specific workflow challenges drove the most friction:

  1. Complex clinical reviews: Claims requiring medical necessity checks or radiographic analysis demanded significant time from human reviewers.
  2. Coordination of Benefits (COB): Managing primary and secondary insurance overlap created processing delays and required frequent manual adjustments.
  3. Documentation management: Physical documents for predeterminations required technicians to manually open, review, and update draft claims—a time-consuming, error-prone process.

These weren’t minor inefficiencies. They were structural barriers to growth, cost control, and competitive performance.

Why NorthWinds Chose HealthRules® Payer as a Strategic Partner

NorthWinds selected HealthRules Payer as its CAPS, with a specific focus on integrating AI into the claims workflow. The goal wasn’t simply to automate more claims—it was to reduce the cognitive load on adjusters and build a more capable, future-ready operation.

“We are working hard to essentially create the workforce of the future. Both within how we deliver value to our clients, and the capabilities that we’re building into our products.”

-Rob Sanchez, President of NorthWinds Technology Solutions

Three AI-driven capabilities became central to this transformation:

  1. AI-Assisted Radiographic Review: The system analyzes claim images and returns a recommended approval or denial. For human reviewers, it highlights specific areas of interest, accelerating the decision-making process.
  2. Automated Documentation Analysis: Advanced AI reviews predetermination documents, automatically updates the system, and queues the claim for rapid finalization—eliminating the manual steps that previously created bottlenecks.
  3. Real-Time Claims Capabilities: Enabled organizational readiness to meet both member and industry demands for pricing transparency and claims accuracy.

The implementation wasn’t about replacing human judgment. It was about applying AI precisely where it could have the greatest impact.

“Maybe AI doesn’t replace this whole process, but maybe it can replace step two and five and eight, or at least enhance those.”

-Rob Sanchez, President of NorthWinds Technology Solutions

What are the Key Results of NorthWinds’ Partnership with HealthEdge?

The outcomes NorthWinds achieved are measurable and meaningful across three primary areas.

Optimized Staff Efficiency

Manual reviews are now expedited through AI-assisted analysis. When AI recommends approval, the claim is paid instantly. When it suggests denial, the adjuster receives a marked-up image that highlights the relevant areas—making the review faster and more focused. Adjusters spend less time on routine tasks and more time on decisions that genuinely require human expertise.

Enhanced Member Experience

Higher auto-adjudication rates directly translate to faster responses and quicker payments for both members and providers. Reducing the time between claim submission and resolution builds trust and improves satisfaction.

Future-Proofed Operations

NorthWinds is now positioned to push auto-adjudication rates into the mid-90s by continuing to refine its AI applications. As the industry moves toward real-time adjudication, NorthWinds has the platform, the data infrastructure, and the operational model to lead rather than follow.

Why Modernization Is About More Than New Software

The NorthWinds story illustrates something important for any health plan or benefits technology organization evaluating its claims infrastructure: modernization isn’t just a technology decision. It’s a strategic decision about how you deliver value to clients, how you manage operational costs, and how you position your organization for what comes next.

Replacing a legacy platform with a modern, AI-integrated system like HealthRules® Payer doesn’t just improve one metric. It reshapes workflows, reduces administrative burden, accelerates payments, and creates a foundation for continuous improvement.

Want to see the full details of how NorthWinds transformed claims processing? Read the complete case study to explore the challenges, solution, and measurable results.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What is auto-adjudication, and why does it matter for health plans?

Auto-adjudication refers to the automated processing and payment of insurance claims without requiring manual review. Higher auto-adjudication rates reduce administrative costs, speed up payment turnaround, and free staff to focus on complex, high-value tasks.

2. What specific AI capabilities does HealthRules® Payer use to improve auto-adjudication?

HealthRules® Payer integrates AI for radiographic image analysis, automated documentation review for predeterminations, and real-time claims processing. These capabilities reduce the manual workload on adjusters while maintaining accuracy and compliance.

3. How long did it take NorthWinds to see results after implementing HealthRules® Payer?

The case study highlights the outcomes achieved following the transition from legacy platforms to HealthRules® Payer. For specific implementation timelines, the full case study provides additional detail.

4. Can HealthRules® Payer integrate with existing systems and workflows?

Yes. HealthRules® Payer is designed as a core administrative processing solution that supports integration with existing digital ecosystems, enabling organizations to modernize without wholesale disruption to their operations.

5. Is this solution applicable beyond dental benefits organizations?

While NorthWinds operates in the dental benefits space, the core capabilities of HealthRules® Payer—AI-assisted adjudication, automated documentation analysis, and real-time claims processing—are applicable across a range of health plan and benefits administration contexts.

6. What does “future-proofed operations” actually mean in practice?

For NorthWinds, it means having the platform infrastructure and AI capabilities in place to continue improving auto-adjudication rates toward the mid-90s, while also meeting emerging industry requirements around real-time pricing transparency and claims accuracy.

7. How does improved auto-adjudication affect the member experience?

Faster, more accurate claims processing means members and providers receive quicker responses and payments. This reduces frustration, builds trust in the health plan, and contributes directly to higher member satisfaction scores.

 

Closing the Gap: Leveraging Hybrid Records to Propel Medicare Advantage Plans to 5 Stars

Achieving a 4.5-Star rating is a major accomplishment for any Medicare Advantage health plan. But moving from 4.5 to 5 Stars is a different challenge altogether.

Only a small percentage of plans ever get there. Recent data from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) shows that fewer than 10% of Medicare Advantage contracts achieve a 5-Star rating in a given year, making it one of the most difficult thresholds in the program to reach.

Key Takeaways

  • The 4.5-to-5-Star gap is a data problem, not a care problem. At the highest performance levels, missed documentation — not missed care — is the primary driver of lost Star Rating points.
  • Hybrid records are the decisive variable. Combining administrative claims with clinical documentation creates the complete member picture that HEDIS requires for accurate measure credit.
  • Provider friction is a solvable bottleneck. Targeting high-impact providers, simplifying record requests and reducing duplication directly improves submission rates and data completeness.
  • MRR timing is unforgiving. Plans that automate ingestion and validation earlier in the cycle recover more records — and more numerator opportunities — before the window closes.
  • Precision tooling matters at 5 Stars. Integrated HEDIS engines like Quality360® reduce variability in abstraction, surface gaps earlier and keep data audit-ready, making the difference in a margin-thin rating environment.

Why is the Final Half-Star the Hardest for Payers to Earn?

At such an advanced level, most health plans have already addressed obvious gaps. What remains are incremental improvements that require far greater precision, particularly in how clinical data is captured, validated, and submitted.

The financial stakes are just as significant. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, health plans that reach 5 stars unlock year-round enrollment flexibility and higher Quality Bonus Payments, often translating into millions in additional revenue and meaningful competitive advantage.

The progression from 4.5 to 5 Stars becomes exponentially more difficult because performance is already tightly optimized across most measures. But to improve ratings from 4.5 to 5 Stars, payers should know:

  • Small numerator gains can determine overall rating movement
  • A limited number of members can materially impact outcomes
  • Missed documentation (not missed care) becomes the primary driver of performance gaps

Plans operating at this level are no longer solving for broad improvement. They are solving for precision in data capture and submission, particularly during Medical Record Review (MRR).

What is the “Golden” Hybrid Record? Where 5-Star Performance Is Won or Lost

At the center of that effort is the “golden” hybrid record: a complete, accurate representation of a member’s care that bridges administrative claims and clinical documentation. For high-impact HEDIS measures like Comprehensive Diabetes Care and Controlling High Blood Pressure, claims data alone rarely tells the full story.

Consider this common scenario: A member receives appropriate care during a provider visit, but there is no claim to support the compliant data. From a HEDIS standpoint, that care does not count. When multiplied across a member population, small documentation gaps translate into measurable performance loss.

To succeed, there are two key areas that can drive the greatest impact.

1. Reduce Provider Friction to Improve Data Capture

Strong MRR performance depends on provider participation—and that is often where plans encounter resistance.

Providers are already managing significant administrative burden. According to the American Medical Association, physicians spend nearly two hours on administrative work for every hour of patient care. Additional record requests during HEDIS season can quickly create friction.

Plans that consistently perform well take a more targeted approach:

  • Prioritizing high-impact providers based on member volume
  • Streamlining record request workflows to reduce duplication
  • Providing clear, concise guidance on documentation requirements

The goal is to make it easier for providers to participate without adding unnecessary burden. When that friction is reduced, submission rates improve and data quality follows.

2. Streamline Record Collection in a Compressed Timeline

MRR operates within a narrow window. Delays early in the process limit what information can be recovered later.

Relying on traditional approaches to record collection—which include manual chart retrieval, disconnected systems, and batch processing—can cause payers to struggle to keep pace with the volume and speed required. Leading plans are focusing on more connected, real-time approaches:

  • Automated record ingestion from multiple data sources
  • Continuous validation of incoming clinical data
  • Centralized data environments that create a single source of truth

Integrated solutions and services, such as those offered by HealthEdge®, are helping abstractors identify relevant clinical elements more efficiently and consistently.

Closing the Final Gap: Where 5-Star Performance Is Decided

For plans already operating at a 4.5-Star level, the path to 5 Stars comes down to execution during MRR. At this stage, performance depends on:

  • Identifying the members most likely to impact measure outcomes
  • Capturing complete and accurate clinical documentation
  • Validating and submitting data within a compressed timeline

Quality360 from HealthEdge®, an NCQA-certified HEDIS engine, supports this level of precision by integrating clinical and claims data, automating record retrieval workflows, and providing real-time visibility into measure performance.

Quality360® is built to support the realities of HEDIS season, where timing, accuracy, and completeness all matter. It centralizes clinical and claims data into a single, normalized dataset, allowing teams to identify measure gaps earlier and prioritize the members most likely to impact outcomes. Integrated abstraction workflows guide chart reviewers to the exact data elements needed for each measure, reducing variability and rework.

At the same time, automated record ingestion and validation help ensure that supplemental data and medical records are complete, compliant, and audit-ready before submission, which minimizes the risk of missed numerator opportunities late in the cycle.

This level of control and visibility allows plans to focus effort where it matters most: on the relatively small number of records that ultimately determine whether the gap to 5 Stars is closed.

Why the Time to Act is Now

If your organization is looking to strengthen its MRR strategy and close the gap to 5 Stars, now is the time to evaluate how your current approach is performing.

Learn how the Quality360® HEDIS® Engine, within the integrated HealthEdge risk adjustment and quality solution, can help payers improve data accuracy, streamline workflows, and drive measurable improvements in Star Ratings performance.

See how to advance Risk Adjustment & Quality strategy at your health plan.

  • Precision tooling matters at 5 Stars. Integrated HEDIS engines like Quality360® reduce variability in abstraction, surface gaps earlier and keep data audit-ready, making the difference in a margin-thin rating environment.

Frequently Asked Questions

What percentage of Medicare Advantage plans achieve a 5-Star rating? Fewer than 10% of Medicare Advantage contracts achieve a 5-Star rating in a given year, according to CMS data — making it one of the most difficult thresholds in the program to reach.

What is the “golden” hybrid record in Medicare Advantage? The “golden” hybrid record is a complete, accurate representation of a member’s care that bridges administrative claims and clinical documentation. For high-impact HEDIS measures like Comprehensive Diabetes Care and Controlling High Blood Pressure, claims data alone rarely tells the full story — the hybrid record closes that gap.

Why is the jump from 4.5 to 5 Stars so difficult? At the 4.5-Star level, most health plans have already addressed obvious gaps. Performance is already tightly optimized across most measures, so what remains are incremental improvements that require far greater precision in how clinical data is captured, validated and submitted. Small numerator gains and a limited number of members can determine overall rating movement.

What happens when care is delivered but there is no supporting claim? From a HEDIS standpoint, that care does not count. When that scenario is multiplied across a member population, small documentation gaps translate into measurable performance loss — which is why building accurate hybrid records during Medical Record Review is so critical.

How does provider friction affect MRR performance? Physicians already spend nearly two hours on administrative work for every hour of patient care. Additional record requests during HEDIS season can quickly create friction, reducing provider participation and lowering submission rates. Plans that prioritize high-impact providers, streamline request workflows and provide clear documentation guidance see better data quality as a result.

What does Quality360® do to support 5-Star performance? Quality360® integrates clinical and claims data, automates record retrieval workflows and provides real-time visibility into measure performance. It centralizes data into a single, normalized dataset, guides abstractors to the exact data elements needed for each measure and ensures records are complete, compliant and audit-ready before submission.

Is Your Health Plan Ready for Touchless Claims Processing?

Is Your Health Plan Ready for Touchless Claims Processing?

The pace of change in healthcare continues to accelerate. Don’t let outdated technology keep your organization from seizing new opportunities to expand business offerings and stay competitive.

Relying on legacy core administrative processing systems (CAPS) means relying on rigid manual workflows and data trapped in silos, drastically limiting efficiency and scalability. To keep up with shifting regulatory demands and new industry norms, payers must understand their current technological capabilities and operational bottlenecks.

This is exactly why we created the next generation CAPS readiness assessment. By evaluating your organization’s current position on the automation continuum, you can uncover strategic opportunities to reduce member healthcare expenses, boost regulatory compliance scores, and unify the member experience.

Key Takeaways

  • Legacy CAPS solutions rely on manual workflows and data silos that limit efficiency and scalability
  • Health plans can reduce member healthcare expenses, boost regulatory compliance scores and unify the member experience by modernizing their CAPS
  • HealthEdge’s five-question readiness assessment helps organizations identify where they fall on the automation continuum
  • McLaren Health Plan operated at a 0% auto-adjudication rate before implementing HealthRules Payer
  • Continuing to rely on outdated technology poses a greater risk than transitioning to an integrated solution

What Are the 3 Hidden Costs of Relying on Legacy Claims Processing?

Managing a health plan on a legacy or outdated CAPS solution can create significant operational barriers. These systems lack the integration and flexibility required to adapt to modern healthcare demands.

1. Manual IT Requirements

When state or federal regulatory changes occur, legacy systems require time-intensive IT intervention and manual workarounds. Manual interventions also increase the risk of payment errors, driving up administrative costs and requiring rework.

2. Internal Data Silos

Legacy platforms heavily depend on batch processing. This creates data silos that prevent health plans from seeing and leveraging real-time insights. Without a unified view of population health data and claims information, predicting chronic disease trends or optimizing cost management becomes nearly impossible.

3. Member Satisfaction

Relying on manual claims reviews can lead to operational bottlenecks, strained provider relations, and member dissatisfaction. To keep processing times low and reduce abrasion with members and providers, payers need an integrated solution with advanced automation.

Why Take a Readiness Assessment for a CAPS Solution?

Transitioning to a modern, automated system requires strategic planning. Our readiness assessment is a targeted, five-question evaluation designed to help you determine exactly where your organization falls on the automation continuum.

Three Benefits of Taking a Readiness Assessment

  1. Immediate clarity on your current operational maturity
  2. Help identify critical gaps in your claims processing workflows
  3. Highlights specific areas where advanced automation can drive return on investment

By analyzing your readiness for touchless claims processing, you can prioritize technology investments that directly impact your key success indicators. Whether your primary goal is reducing manual overrides, improving compliance scores, or enhancing member engagement metrics, the assessment serves as your baseline for strategic transformation.

Realizing the Benefits: A Client Success Story

Understanding the benefits of automated claims process is important, but seeing its practical application proves its value. Consider McLaren Health Plan: Operating on a 30-year-old legacy technology system, they relied entirely on manual claims processing review, with a 0% auto-adjudication rate.

McLaren’s legacy CAPS solution was notoriously difficult to configure, not user-friendly, and severely lacked scalability. Relying on this outdated infrastructure resulted in massive inefficiencies, poor data accessibility, and high administrative overhead.

By implementing HealthRules Payer, McLaren Health Plan was able to:

  • “Drastically improve” reporting capabilities
  • Automated data entry and review
  • Reduce administrative costs

Take the Next Step Toward Transformation

Traditionally, healthcare is a risk-averse industry—but continuing to rely on outdated technology poses a greater risk than leaning into integrated solutions.

Are you ready to optimize claims processing, control costs, and reallocate resources to high-impact initiatives? Evaluate your infrastructure and embrace the future of core administration.

Take the five-question HealthRules Payer readiness assessment today to discover how you can improve efficiency, reduce administrative costs, and achieve regulatory excellence.

Take the Assessment

Not ready to take a full assessment? See 5 signs your health plan has outgrown its legacy CAPS platform. Download the brochure.


Frequently Asked Questions

What are the hidden costs of legacy claims processing? The three primary costs are: time-intensive manual IT intervention when regulatory changes occur, internal data silos created by batch processing that prevent real-time insights, and operational bottlenecks from manual claims review that strain provider relations and member satisfaction.

Why do legacy CAPS systems have low auto-adjudication rates? Legacy CAPS platforms rely on rigid, manually maintained rules that cannot adapt quickly to regulatory changes or new benefit configurations. Their dependence on batch processing — rather than real-time data — prevents the continuous validation needed for high auto-adjudication rates.

AI in Healthcare: Why Regulatory Momentum Is a Wake-Up Call for Health Plans 

Artificial intelligence (AI) is no longer a future consideration for health plans. AI-powered tools are already reshaping how organizations operate, how members seek information, and how leaders are making decisions across clinical and administrative workflows.

Recent increases in regulatory scrutiny signal a clear shift in AI adoption, from a phase of experimentation into a more structured, accountable environment. For health plan leaders, this moment is less about whether to adopt AI and more about how to do so responsibly—balancing innovation with patient safety, transparency, and AI governance.

The 2026 HealthEdge® Payer Survey shows that 94% of health plans are already live with or actively adopting AI, yet only 31% report having fully defined governance models and controls.

Healthcare AI Regulation Is Accelerating at the State Level

California has emerged as an early trailblazer when it comes to regulating AI tools in healthcare, demonstrating where wider-reaching compliance could be headed.

The recent Assembly Bill 489, supported by the California Medical Association, aims to protect patients from misleading information delivered by healthcare chatbots. New requirements help ensure these AI-powered tools are deployed in ways that protect patient safety and help maintain trust in healthcare providers and payers.

One of the primary concerns behind this legislation is that AI systems, especially those that consumers interact with directly, can present information in a way that members perceive as authoritative, but may lack proper context.

The new Assembly Bill builds on earlier requirements, such as Assembly Bill 3030, which mandates disclosure when generative AI is used in clinical communications and ensures patients have access to human providers.

At a national level, activity is accelerating. The National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) reports that all 50 states introduced AI-related legislation in 2025, with healthcare among the primary areas of focus.

The signals are clear: health plan AI strategies must now account for regulatory oversight, auditability, and compliance from the outset.

Why Ethical AI Matters for Health Plans Now

For health plans, the implications extend well beyond compliance. AI is increasingly shaping how members:

  • Search for health information
  • Interpret symptoms and treatment options
  • Form perceptions about their health plan experience

At the same time, health plan AI applications are expanding across claims processing, care management, and payment integrity workflows. This creates a dual responsibility. Health plans must ensure that:

  • AI-driven member interactions are accurate, transparent, and clinically appropriate
  • Operational AI supports compliant and auditable decision-making
  • Clinical and administrative workflows remain aligned

Without the right controls in place, AI in healthcare introduces new risks, particularly when outputs are generated without sufficient clinical context or oversight.

Preparing for What’s Next in Healthcare AI

As expectations evolve, ethical AI in healthcare is becoming an operational requirement. Three principles are emerging as foundational to responsible AI adoption:

1. Transparency in AI

Members and providers must understand when AI is being used and how it influences outcomes. This is central to both trust and regulatory compliance.

2. Patient Safety in AI-Driven Healthcare

AI outputs must be grounded in clinically appropriate, validated information. Inaccurate or incomplete guidance can introduce downstream clinical and operational risk.

3. AI Governance in Healthcare

Health plans must be able to explain how AI systems function, how decisions are made, and how performance is monitored over time. This includes data governance, model oversight, and auditability.

These principles define what responsible, scalable AI in healthcare looks like in practice.

Preparing Health Plan AI Strategies for What Comes Next

The regulatory environment surrounding AI in healthcare will continue to evolve. Requirements will become more specific, enforcement will increase, and expectations around accountability will grow.

Health plans that take a reactive approach may find themselves continuously adjusting. Those that embed AI governance, transparency, and clinical alignment into their strategy early will be better positioned to scale.

This includes asking the right questions of technology partners:

  • How is AI governed across the platform?
  • How are outputs validated and monitored?
  • How does the solution support healthcare AI compliance and auditability?
  • How are clinical and operational workflows connected?

A More Sustainable Approach to AI in Healthcare

The future of AI in healthcare will be defined by trust.

Health plans need solutions that balance innovation with accountability, connecting data, workflows, and governance to support both operational performance and regulatory expectations.

At HealthEdge, this approach is grounded in a clear commitment to ethical AI development. This includes a focus on transparency, regulatory alignment, and embedded governance, ensuring that AI capabilities are designed to operate safely within healthcare environments from day one.

As AI continues to evolve, the organizations that succeed will be those that treat it not as a standalone capability but as part of a broader, connected model that can be trusted by members, providers, and regulators alike.

Learn more about how your health plan can leverage integrated AI to improve clinical outcomes and enhance operational efficiency. Read the data sheet.

Mastering CMS Compliance: Bridging X12 and FHIR 

Shifts in healthcare regulations continually push health plans to adjust their strategies. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) introduced sweeping mandates that fundamentally shift how health plans handle clinical documentation. Adjusting to these concurrent regulatory changes requires attention to detail and access to real-time data.

Here, we break down the strategic integration of two major rules: the Health Care Claims Attachments Transactions and Electronic Signatures Final Rule (CMS-0053-F) and the Interoperability and Prior Authorization Final Rule (CMS-0057-F).

By understanding these complex mandates, health plan leaders can proactively manage population health, reduce administrative waste, and achieve regulatory excellence. In this article, we explore the technical requirements of both rules, outline the projected operational benefits, and provide actionable strategies to align your compliance architecture.

Interoperability Drives New Regulations

The two major goals driving the new CMS regulations are to reduce administrative burden and improve health information exchange. These dual mandates represent a coordinated effort to transition from traditional manual workflows to a fully digital-first, automated ecosystem that puts members at the center.

By standardizing electronic attachments and prior authorizations, CMS aims to help eliminate friction between payers and providers. Health plans that embrace this vision will not only comply with federal mandates but also have a better opportunity to optimize cost management, accelerate claims processing, and ultimately deliver a superior member experience. Structured data exchange lays the groundwork for predictive analytics, empowering plans to deploy proactive health management strategies that improve long-term member health outcomes.

CMS-0053-F: Modernizing Claims Attachments

The CMS-0053-F rule targets a longstanding gap in healthcare administration: no federal standard for electronically transmitting clinical documentation for adjudication. This groundbreaking rule establishes the first-ever HIPAA-adopted standards for supporting clinical documentation.

To achieve compliance by the May 26, 2028 deadline, health plans must modernize their administrative systems and data integration capabilities.

Leveraging X12 and HL7 Standards Together

Historically, health care providers relied on manual methods like faxing or physical mail to submit any additional documentation required by health plans. Under CMS-0053-F, health plans must implement both X12 and Health Level 7 (HL7) standards to facilitate secure, efficient electronic data exchanges.

Specifically, this rule requires the adoption of Version 6020 of the X12N 275 and X12N 277 standards. Crucially, the final rule also adopts HL7 Consolidated Clinical Document Architecture (C-CDA) Implementation Guides (IGs) alongside the X12 standards. Health plans must support the HL7 C-CDA IG Volume One, Volume Two, and the HL7 Attachments IG. By integrating these precise standards, health plans create a single source of truth for both structured clinical content and unstructured documents.

Unlocking Operational and Financial Benefits

Eliminating manual claims attachment processes can deliver profound financial and operational returns. CMS projects that these updates will generate roughly $781 million in annual savings across the healthcare industry.

Beyond optimized cost management, standardizing these transactions enables faster care delivery and accelerates claims processing. The rule also establishes rigorous electronic signature requirements, ensuring that all health care claims attachment transactions are secure, authenticated, and compliant with federal security standards.

CMS-0057-F: Revolutionizing Prior Authorization

While CMS-0053-F focuses strictly on claims adjudication, the CMS-0057-F rule addresses the administrative friction inherent in the prior authorization process. Applying to Medicare Advantage, Medicaid managed care, Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), and Qualified Health Plan (QHP) issuers, this mandate shifts prior authorization workflows into real-time, point-of-care transactions.

Health plans must implement native Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR)-based Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) built on Da Vinci implementation guides. The required APIs include Coverage Requirements Discovery (CRD), Documentation Templates and Rules (DTR), and Prior Authorization Support (PAS). Compliance with these specific API requirements is mandated by January 1, 2027.

NSG Enforcement Discretion

A critical nuance for health plans involves the regulatory flexibility provided by the National Standards Group (NSG) regarding CMS-0057-F. The NSG announced an enforcement discretion for HIPAA-covered entities that implement FHIR-based Prior Authorization APIs.

Specifically, the NSG will not take HIPAA Administrative Simplification enforcement action against entities that choose not to use the X12 278 standard, provided they utilize an all-FHIR-based electronic prior authorization process. This crucial enforcement discretion empowers health plans to innovate faster, build more cohesive API architectures, and avoid the friction of maintaining redundant transaction standards for the same workflow.

Streamlining Communication and Authorization

While CMS-0053-F and CMS-0057-F address different operational functions, they support each other at the infrastructure level. Both rules require health plans to exchange clinical documentation with providers in a uniform and accurate way, and both depend heavily on accurate and real-time data.

CMS is deliberately introducing advanced FHIR standards alongside established X12 and HL7 standards. This is the new operating environment for health plans. Attempting to treat these implementations as sequential projects instead of a concurrent integration are likely to face compliance risks and resource bottlenecks. Because CRD, DTR, and PAS require active deployment by January 2027, the implementation phases for both rules must occur simultaneously. This parallel processing a requires robust, flexible system architecture that facilitates seamless integration.

4 Actionable Implementation Strategies for Health Plans

Health plans must adopt a proactive, data-driven approach to abide by these regulations. These technical and operational strategies are our recommendations for maintaining compliance.

1. Accelerate FHIR API Readiness

January 1, 2027, represents an active implementation deadline, not a distant planning horizon. To mitigate risk, health plans must fund and initiate FHIR investments immediately. Vendor conformance testing against Da Vinci implementation guides and provider pilot programs must become fully operational. Early adoption of these data-driven solutions guarantees smoother integration and higher regulatory compliance scores.

2. Develop X12 and HL7 Capabilities in Parallel

While advancing FHIR APIs, plans must simultaneously upgrade their platform capabilities to support the updated X12 275 and HL7 C-CDA implementation guides natively. Technology infrastructure must be able to ingest, enrich, and process complex clinical content seamlessly. This capability enhancement runs alongside FHIR investments without displacing them, ensuring a comprehensive approach to documentation management.

3. Establish Unified Program Governance

Siloing CMS-0053-F and CMS-0057-F into distinct, isolated workstreams increases the risk of redundant efforts and operational blind spots. Health plans can avoid this by assigning a unified program governance structure to oversee both initiatives. This model helps ensure strict alignment on shared data assets, vendor commitments, and provider enablement strategies, enabling enhanced cost efficiency.

4. Demand Strict Vendor Conformance

Hold technology partners accountable to precise conformance standards rather than broad capability promises. Evaluate vendors based on their support for specific Da Vinci Implementation Guide versions, proven testing environments, and documented readiness for pilot programs. Ensure your partners provide seamless integration pathways that minimize disruption to existing core administrative processing systems.

Outperform Compliance Expectations with HealthEdge®

The pace of healthcare transformation will only accelerate. The simultaneous adoption of complex interoperability standards presents a formidable challenge, but it also offers a distinct opportunity for health plans to embrace innovation. By designing scalable, integrated platforms that natively support X12, HL7, and FHIR standards, health plans can dramatically reduce administrative waste and lower healthcare costs.

Start aligning your data infrastructure today to outperform compliance expectations, drive strategic cost management, and deliver unmatched value to your members.

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