Healthcare
Clinics, labs, insurance claims.Healthcare businesses run on relationships, regulations, and timing. CORTX takes the operational weight off so the clinical work can stay the focus.
What healthcare operations actually look like.
A small healthcare business is not one operation. It is several, running in parallel, all on the same week.
There is the clinical schedule — the actual appointments, the actual treatments, the actual procedures. There is the insurance side — pre-approvals, claims, denials, resubmissions, payment reconciliation. There is the supply side — orders, deliveries, inventory, warranties. There is the patient communication side — confirmations, reminders, follow-ups, balances. There is the administrative side — licensing, compliance, reporting.
Most of these functions run on whatever combination of phone calls, spreadsheets, paper forms, and proprietary software the business adopted years ago. The system works. It also wears people out.
The recurring pain points.
- Insurance follow-up.
The work that nobody wants to own. Pre-approvals that take days. Claims that come back rejected for reasons no one can decode. Payments that arrive on schedules nobody can predict. The volume is steady; the unpredictability is constant.
- Patient coordination.
Reminders that need to go out, in the right tone, at the right time. Follow-ups that have to happen but never do. Balances that age until someone calls. The work is easy individually and impossible at scale.
- Cross-system data entry.
The same patient information typed into the practice management system, the imaging software, the lab portal, the insurance form. Every entry is a chance for an error. Every error is a chance for a denial.
- Knowledge concentration.
The senior coordinator knows everything. When they're out, the office slows. When they leave, things break. The knowledge has never been written down because nobody has time to write it down.
Where CORTX deployments tend to land.
CORTX deployments in healthcare typically begin in the function that hurts most. Across many businesses, that turns out to be insurance.
- Insurance operations. Pre-approval submission, status tracking, claims, denials, resubmissions, payment reconciliation. The full lifecycle from submission to payment.
- Patient coordination. Reminders, follow-ups, balance communications, reactivation outreach. The work that surrounds the appointment but is not the appointment.
- Procurement and inventory. Supplier orders, delivery tracking, inventory, warranty management. The operational backbone.
- Scheduling exceptions. Cancellations, no-shows, rebooking, capacity rebalancing. The work that happens when the schedule doesn't go to plan.
- Period-end administration. Reports, reconciliations, regulatory filings, closing tasks. The work that piles up at the end of every month.
One vertical first. Others added as the deployment matures.
Who works inside the system.
The person who knows the insurance carriers, the codes, the exceptions, the workarounds. The one whose absence the office feels immediately. CORTX captures their knowledge before it leaves with them.
The person who handles the front of the practice — scheduling, patient calls, reminders, balances. CORTX takes the volume off their queue.
The person who runs the business and is also the practitioner. CORTX gives them the operational visibility they need without making them learn another system.
The blocks healthcare deployments lean on.
The senior coordinator's knowledge becomes the system's knowledge.
Read MCP Model Context Protocol layer.Each function — insurance, scheduling, procurement — becomes its own MCP.
Read On-prem LLM Models that run on your hardware.Patient data does not leave the building. The agent runs on local infrastructure.
ReadWhere deployments tend to start.
A first deployment in a healthcare business does not replace the staff. It does not replace the practice management software. It does not deliver a finished system on day one.
What it delivers, in the first sixty to ninety days, is one function — usually the most painful one — running through a CORTX-instrumented workflow. The agent is doing the work. The operator is approving and handling exceptions. The owner is seeing volume and bottlenecks they couldn't see before.
The rest of the business follows on its own schedule.