Articles

Preventing Authorization Lapses That Trigger Service Gaps and Compliance Failures
Authorization lapses rarely happen because staff forgetโ€”they happen because renewal workflows are poorly designed. This article explains how to build renewal, tracking, and escalation systems that prevent service gaps, protect continuity of care, and withstand payer and audit review. Read more...
Managing Retroactive Authorizations Without Audit Exposure or Service Disruption
Retroactive authorizations are often unavoidable in community services, but they create significant financial and compliance risk if poorly governed. This article sets out a defensible operational model for managing retro authorizations, including trigger rules, evidence standards, escalation logic, and safeguards that protect access while meeting payer and audit expectations. Read more...
Utilization Review Committees: Clinical Governance That Prevents Unsafe Over- or Under-Servicing
Utilization review committees are often treated as bureaucracy, but the best ones prevent both under-service risk and over-service audit exposure. This article explains how to design UR committees with clear decision rights, consistent evidence standards, escalation logic, and measurable outcomes that payers and auditors recognize as real governance. Read more...
Denials Management and Appeals Playbooks for Community Services Providers
Denials are rarely โ€œbad luckโ€โ€”they usually reflect workflow gaps, missing evidence, or misaligned authorization logic. This article sets out a practical denials management and appeals playbook, including root-cause triage, evidence packaging, escalation rules, and governance routines that reduce repeat denials and strengthen audit defensibility. Read more...
Prior Authorization Workflows: Designing Speed Without Losing Compliance
Prior authorization is often blamed for delays, but poorly designed workflows are the real cause. This article explores how to build prior authorization workflows that move quickly without sacrificing compliance, audit readiness, or funding control. Read more...
Service Authorization Criteria That Hold Up Under Payer Review and Audit
Weak authorization criteria are a leading cause of denials, clawbacks, and audit findings in community services. This article explains how to design service authorization criteria that align with payer rules, clinical reality, and audit expectations, while remaining workable for frontline and utilization teams. Read more...
From Eligibility to Authorization: Hand-Off Controls That Prevent Delays, Denials, and Rework
The transition from eligibility determination to service authorization is one of the most failure-prone points in community services delivery. This article examines how structured hand-off controls prevent delays, denials, and costly rework, and why informal transitions undermine access, compliance, and system confidence. Read more...
Utilization Management Fundamentals: Why Authorization Is an Operating System, Not a Paper Exercise
Utilization management is often treated as a compliance task, but in high-performing community services it functions as a core operating system. This article explains how authorization workflows shape access, cost control, clinical safety, and system trust, and why weak utilization design creates failure across delivery, finance, and outcomes. Read more...