The survey revealed that 57.5% of cardiovascular leaders rank revenue cycle – specifically charge capture, coding and provider education – as a top concern. That number reflects what I hear every week from the MedAxiom community. The common thread is this: we are leaving money on the table not because we are underperforming in the realm of billing and/or clinical coding, but because we are not aligned from an operational perspective.
In cardiology, complexity is built into the care model. Whether it involves structural procedures, complex electrophysiology (EP) services or advanced imaging, every step in the care delivery process presents both a potential clinical gap and a risk of lost revenue if not clearly documented, correctly coded and properly billed. The disconnect between clinical excellence and billing accuracy isn’t just frustrating – it’s costly.
Consider provider documentation: too often, we expect physicians to navigate nuanced billing rules without clear guidance on what matters most. I have seen incredibly skilled cardiologists perform high-value services only for charges to be missed due to vague language, incorrect assumptions or simple electronic health record workflow issues. That is not a physician failure – it's a systems failure.
And let’s not overlook the ramifications of missed or denied charges. . These oversights affect not only collections but also staffing plans, technology investments, quality reporting, capital requests and access for patients. If we want to expand services like EP or structural heart (top growth priorities according to 2025 survey results), we need revenue cycle processes that can keep up with that complexity. Growth without revenue integrity is a fast-track to margin erosion.
This is why we must elevate the revenue cycle to a strategic level. That means:
At a time when organizations are expected to do more with less, we cannot afford to treat revenue cycle as a support function. It is a strategic advantage that directly influences financial sustainability, physician engagement, and the ability to grow and evolve cardiovascular care.
The revenue cycle is no longer about capturing your charges and collections. It’s about performance, alignment and strategy. The organizations that recognize this now will be the ones that sustain the future of cardiovascular care and operational success.
Illustration by: Lee Sauer