Hidden Administrative Tasks In Small Practices
The Hidden Administrative Tasks Draining Small Practices
Small medical practices play a major role in healthcare delivery. However, the growing volume of administrative tasks in small practices is creating operational pressure. Even though staffing shortages and reimbursement challenges often receive the most attention, the majority of practices are also struggling with the accumulation of non-clinical responsibilities that consume time, energy, and resources.
The Invisible Work Happening Behind Patient Care
Surprisingly, a large portion of a physician’s workday is now spent outside direct patient care. According to different studies, for every hour physicians spend with patients, they may spend nearly two additional hours managing electronic health records and other desk work.
These responsibilities include:
- Documentation
- Insurance follow-ups
- Prior authorizations
- Compliance checks
- Data reporting
- Inbox and portal management
Individually, these tasks may seem manageable. Together, they create a constant administrative workload that often falls on a limited number of staff members.
Why Prior Authorizations Create So Much Friction
One of the most commonly cited administrative burdens in healthcare includes prior authorization. What was originally meant to be a utilization management tool has evolved into a complex process involving multiple systems, payer requirements, submissions, follow-ups, and appeals. For small practices, instead of making things easier, these steps
This is one area where automation and workflow improvements can help reduce repetitive tracking and manual follow-up work.
The Growing Burden of Data Reporting
Regulatory and quality reporting requirements continue to expand across healthcare.
Significant time of small practices is spent managing reporting requirements, correcting submission errors, and ensuring data accuracy. To add, when reporting requirements feel disconnected from patient outcomes or operational improvement, they can become another source of frustration and burnout. What can help reduce unnecessary rework and administrative strain is to enable more streamlined reporting workflows and automated data capture.
Administrative Work Also Creates Mental Strain
The impact of administrative tasks in small practices is not limited to just time alone. The constant juggling between patient care and administrative responsibilities places a toll on cognition and emotional exhaustion.
Unfortunately, rather than patient care, physicians now spend most of their time navigating portals, managing inboxes, and handling operational issues that fall outside the core focus of patient care. Over time, this disconnect can affect professional satisfaction and contribute to burnout.
Why Small Practices Feel This More Deeply
Larger healthcare systems often have dedicated departments for administrative functions. However, smaller practices typically do not.
This creates additional pressure in areas such as:
- Staffing flexibility
- Regulatory management
- Claims processing
- Workflow continuity
The same administrative requirement that may be a minor inconvenience for a larger organization can create significant operational disruption for a smaller practice.
Creating More Sustainable Workflows
While administrative burden is likely to stay, workflows can be improved with better structure and support. Most practices are now looking at ways to reduce manual work through process redesign, automation, and improved task management.
With the help of automation, practices can reduce repetitive steps, minimize duplicate data entry, and improve consistency across administrative workflows. With thoughtful implementation, such systems can help practices improve efficiency while allowing providers and staff to focus more attention on patient care.