Book A Strategy Call
15-minute discovery call. No commitment required.
Urgent Care RCM Case Study
4.9 ★★★★★ Google Rating

Urgent Care Network Cuts AR Days 40% and Lifts POS Collections 34% across 22 sites and occupational health

This outsourced revenue cycle management case study covers a 22-site urgent care network running 740,000 visits per year that was carrying 49 AR days, an 11.5% denial rate, and point-of-service collections under 60%,  with occupational health invoices in a separate mess. Staffingly’s dedicated remote team,  a HIPAA-compliant healthcare BPO with named specialists, not a shared offshore pool,  consolidated the work in 14 days.

40%AR Days Reduction
97.6%Clean Claim Rate
34%POS Collection Lift

Get the Urgent Care RCM Audit

Free assessment, no obligation, no high-pressure pitch.

Trusted by 800+ Providers MGMA 2026 Corporate Member HIPAA Compliant SOC 2 Type II BAA Signed $5M Insured
Case Studies
Ask AI About This Page

Practice Type
Urgent Care Network with Occ Health
Size
22 sites, 165 providers, ~740,000 visits/yr
Geography
Multi-state, Southeast and Texas
EHR / Systems
Experity (urgent care) plus a custom occ health invoicing layer
The Challenge

What happens when urgent care revenue cycle management is handled in-house without dedicated outsourcing?

The VP of revenue cycle inherited a high-velocity operation: 740,000 visits a year, an average visit revenue under $190, and roughly 60 commercial payer contracts plus Medicare, Medicaid, and TRICARE. Volume is the friend; complexity is the enemy.

“Recruiting urgent-care-savvy billers in a tight labor market was failing. BLS median wage for medical records specialists is $50,250,  and urgent care billers run higher loaded.” U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics

With in-house hiring stalled and no dedicated outsourcing partner in place, three failure modes kept repeating across the 22 sites,  and a fourth, S9088 coding confusion, was quietly bleeding revenue underneath them.

1

AR drift

AR days had climbed to 49, above the MGMA target of under 40 days, with 18% of AR in the 90+ day bucket. Denials averaged 11.5%.

2

Weak point-of-service collections

Only 58% of patient responsibility was being collected at the desk. The other 42% became patient statement work, where collection rates drop sharply.

3

Occupational health crossover

Pre-employment physicals, drug screens, DOT exams, and workers’ comp were being invoiced out of a spreadsheet. Employer accounts were 60+ days behind, with no clean AR aging visibility.

Financial exposure,  S9088 and POS confusion: Some payers reimburse S9088 (the urgent care facility code) on top of E/M; others bundle it. The internal team was applying it inconsistently, leaving real money on the table. Stacked against 49 AR days, an 11.5% denial rate, and 42% of patient responsibility drifting into low-yield statement work, the leakage compounded on every one of the 740,000 annual visits.

The Staffingly Solution

How does outsourced revenue cycle management work for a multi-site urgent care network?

Staffingly deployed a high-throughput RCM pod plus a dedicated occ health AR analyst, tuned for urgent care economics: low average revenue per visit means the workflow must be fast, automated where possible, and clean on the first pass. The dedicated remote team,  named specialists, not a shared offshore pool,  consolidated six workstreams under three levers.

1

Front-end capture

Eligibility automation: real-time eligibility at registration plus a retro check the morning after each visit, with coverage discovery on self-pays. POS collection playbook: front-desk script for copay, deductible, and prior balance collection, with card-on-file enrollment.

2

Clean-claim logic

Per-payer rules engine for S9088, modifier 25, and global period interactions. Same-day E/M and procedure code review, with AAPC-credentialed leads.

3

Back-end discipline

Occ health AR pod: dedicated workflow for employer invoicing, DOT physicals, drug screens, and workers’ comp first reports. Daily denial triage: top 5 denial reasons reviewed daily, root-cause coded back to the front end.

“On 740,000 visits per year, a 20-point POS collection lift compounds quickly,  the network dropped cost to collect from 4.5% to 2.9% of net collections.” Staffingly 90-day post-pilot results

Compliance posture: All work runs under HIPAA · SOC 2 Type II · ISO 27001 · HITRUST controls, with a BAA signed at onboarding. The dedicated remote team works inside the network’s own Experity instance under role-based access,  not a shared offshore pool.

Results vs Industry Benchmark

Numbers after 90 days vs urgent care benchmarks

Benchmarks: MGMA DataDive (AR days, AR over 90, denial, net collection), HFMA MAP Keys (clean claim rate), AAPC (coding), BLS (wage anchor). Results are this network’s actual 90-day post-pilot numbers.

Metric Industry Benchmark Staffingly Result Improvement
AR Days MGMA: under 40 days target 29 days 49 to 29 (40% drop)
AR over 90 Days MGMA: 13.5% benchmark 10.6% 18% to 10.6%
Clean Claim Rate HFMA MAP Keys high-performer: 98% 97.6% +6.4 pts
Denial Rate MGMA benchmark near 8% 5.0% 11.5% to 5.0% (57% drop)
Net Collection Rate MGMA benchmark: 96% 98.0% +4.0 pts
POS Collection Rate Urgent care typical: 55% to 65% 78% 58% to 78%
Coding Accuracy AAPC: 95% national benchmark 96.9% Above benchmark
Methodology: Industry benchmark sources cited inline: MGMA DataDive, HFMA MAP Keys, CMS, KFF, AAPC and BLS. Staffingly results are anonymized composites drawn from 800+ providers across our active book of business. Individual practice results vary based on payer mix, EHR, and starting AR position.
Savings Dashboard

How does outsourcing urgent care revenue cycle management change the numbers?

Conservative model: 740,000 visits/yr · BLS median $50,250 for medical records specialists, loaded $58K-$68K · Staffingly team rate $349/week. Run it with your numbers →

$0M
Annualized point-of-service
collection lift
0%
New cost to collect
(down from 4.5%)
0 days
Average AR days cut
(49 down to 29)
0%
Clean claim rate
(HFMA high-performer target: 98%)
AR Days
Before outsourcing
49 days
After (Staffingly)
29 days
40% AR days reduction
MGMA DataDive target: under 40 AR days
POS Collection Rate
78% AT THE DESK
Before: 58%
After: 78%
Net collection: 98%
+20 pp POS improvement
Annual Cost Model (per billing pod)
In-House Billers (3 FTE est., $58K-$68K loaded)
~$190,000 / yr
Staffingly Outsourced (team rate)
~$90,000 / yr
$100K+ estimated annual savings · flat fee, not % of collections
No revenue-share. No hidden fees.
57% Denial-rate drop (11.5% to 5.0%),  daily denial triage is built into every outsourced urgent care RCM pod
Run Your Savings Model
Why Staffingly Wins Revenue Cycle Management

What separates us from typical vendors

We don't name competitors. Ask your current vendor for proof of all four certifications. We will wait.

Capability Typical Vendor Staffingly
Certification Stack HIPAA training only HIPAA + SOC 2 Type II + ISO 27001 + HITRUST
Clinical Credentials General virtual assistants Overseas-licensed MDs, RNs, PharmDs, billers
Risk-Free Pilot No trial period 2-Week Risk-Free Pilot, full refund if not satisfied
Pricing Transparency Quote-only, hidden setup fees $399/wk single, $349/wk team, $299/wk dept
Urgent Care Fluency Generic primary care billing Experity-trained, S9088 logic, occ health AR, DOT workflows
AI + Automation

Real-time eligibility, denial prediction, and occ health invoicing automation

Urgent care wins on speed. Staffingly's AI layer is built for throughput.

  • Real-time eligibility checks at registration plus a retro sweep the next morning.
  • Coverage discovery bot searches for active insurance on self-pay visits before statement drop.
  • CAC pre-codes E/M, procedures, and S9088 by payer rules.
  • Denial pattern model predicts payer-specific denial risk (for example, payer X denies S9088 without modifier 25 on the E/M line).
  • Charge reconciliation matches visits to charges nightly and flags missing slips.
  • Occ health invoicing bot generates employer invoices from drug screen, DOT, and pre-employment workflows.

What humans own: final code sign-off, appeals strategy, employer account relationships, payer contract review, and any documentation conversation with providers.

FAQ

Questions practice operators ask before signing

Our claims keep getting rejected because the payer has us set up as POS 11. Can you actually fix that?

Yes. POS 20 is the CMS code for an urgent care facility, distinct from a physician office (POS 11) or hospital outpatient (POS 22). The most expensive urgent-care billing mistake is when the payer has the center loaded as a physician office in their system, claims drop with POS 20, and the payer auto-rejects them. We audit your payer-side setup at onboarding, file the place-of-service correction with each affected carrier, and stop dropping POS-20 claims into a POS-11 payer record. The fix is administrative but the recovery is real money.

S9088 sometimes pays and sometimes does not. Why?

S9088 is the urgent-care-specific HCPCS surcharge intended to capture the higher cost of seeing an unscheduled patient. Some payers reimburse S9088 stacked on top of the E/M with modifier 25 on the office visit, others bundle it into the E/M, and many state Medicaid and commercial contracts have weekend-only or after-hours-only rules. We build the per-payer logic into the claim scrub so the correct combination fires automatically by carrier and by day-of-week, and we report S9088 capture rate by payer weekly so you can see which contracts are actually honoring the surcharge.

Our occ-med and urgent care billing are tangled together. Can you separate the lines?

Yes, and they almost always need to be separate. Occupational medicine is billed to the employer directly (drug screens, DOT physicals, pre-employment exams, return-to-work) or to workers comp, with very different fee schedules and submission rules than commercial urgent-care claims. Mixing them in the same workflow is how employer invoices age past 90 days while staff are chasing commercial denials. We run a parallel employer-AR workflow with named account managers per employer, hold the same aging discipline as commercial, and pull a monthly occ-med margin report so you can see which employer contracts are actually profitable.

Self-pay collections at the front desk are weak. What actually moves the number?

Three things move it. First, payment at time of service, not after. Co-pays, coinsurance estimates, deductible balances, and the full self-pay rate all get collected at registration or at discharge, not mailed as a statement. Second, card-on-file authorization for any balance under a fixed threshold, with the patient signature captured digitally. Third, weekly POS collection-rate reporting by site so the manager can see whose front desk is actually executing. We rebuild the script, set the technology, and 20-point lifts are typical inside the first 60 days.

We run Experity. Can you actually work in it or will you make us switch?

We work in your stack. Our urgent care pod is trained on Experity (workflow, scheduling, billing, reporting), and we also support DocuTAP-era instances and Practice Velocity. We staff to the EHR, not the other way around, and we will not ask you to migrate as a precondition. If your data is messy we will tell you, but we will work in it.

Are you HIPAA, SOC 2, ISO 27001, and HITRUST certified?

Yes, all four. Most billing vendors carry HIPAA training only, which is not the same as a third-party audited control framework. See our HIPAA & security page for active certificate evidence for each.

What does the 2-week pilot look like for an urgent care group?

We take a defined slice (one region, one payer, one Experity instance, or your aged AR over 60 days) and run full urgent-care RCM for two weeks at no fee. POS audit, S9088 capture, occ-med separation, and POS collection rebuild all run live. You get the before-and-after report on day 15. If the numbers do not move, you walk and you keep the cleanup.

Staffingly charges a flat per-specialist weekly fee,  $399/week for one dedicated remote RCM specialist, $349/week for five or more (volume), and $299/week for ten or more (enterprise). There is no percentage of collections, no percentage of revenue recovered, and no revenue share. The outsourcing model is designed for urgent care operators who want predictable costs and a dedicated, HIPAA-compliant team rather than a shared offshore pool or a software subscription that still requires in-house staff to run it.

Dan Nandan, CEO Staffingly Inc
Written By
Dan Nandan
President & CEO, Staffingly, Inc.

Dan Nandan is the President and CEO of Staffingly, Inc. With 25+ years in IT consulting and healthcare BPO operations, he was one of the earliest U.S. operators to set up an RPO/BPO delivery network in India over 20 years ago. Today his work centers on AI-driven healthcare workflows and helping practices across North America cut administrative costs without compromising care.

2026 Compliance Verified: HIPAA, SOC 2 Type II, HITRUST, ISO 27001 aligned workflows
Bincy Kuriakose, MSN, RN, Clinical Content Reviewer at Staffingly Inc.
Reviewed By
Bincy Kuriakose, MSN, RN
Clinical Content Reviewer, Staffingly, Inc.
State of Illinois · Registered Professional Nurse
Illinois Dept. of Financial & Professional Regulation

Bincy Shiiju Kuriakose is a Clinical Content Reviewer at Staffingly and a U.S. Licensed Registered Nurse (MSN, RN). NCLEX-RN certified with expertise in hospital nursing, telehealth, and nursing education. PhD scholar in Nursing at Peoples' College of Nursing, Bhopal. Reviews every service page for medical accuracy, compliance, and evidence-based best practices.

Run urgent care RCM at the speed urgent care actually moves

Book a 2-week pilot on one region or one payer. We will show you the POS, S9088, and occ health leaks your current setup is missing.

LIVE Monica
Meet Monica AI
Online · Agent ready