Admin Drag Map (MD / Clinic)
Healthcare-MD | playbook | Updated 2026-03-01
Tags
big-costs, admin-drag, workflow, mapping
Admin Drag Map (MD / Clinic)
Purpose: identify where time goes, who owns the delay, and what could be reduced safely.
Categories to map
- documentation
- billing/coding
- prior auth / denials
- referrals
- patient messaging
- medication management
- compliance checklists
- duplicate entry / portal hopping
Output
A list of:
- high-frequency time sinks
- root causes (payer rule, system design, regulation, habit, nobody owning the handoff)
- safe automation opportunities
- “never automate” zones (risk, dignity, accountability)
- delays that are really ownership problems, not staffing problems
- evidence for where the time tax actually lives
Quick mapping prompt (10 minutes)
For each category, answer:
- What is the task? (in one sentence)
- How often? (per day/week)
- How long? (minutes each)
- Who does it today? (MD/RN/MA/admin)
- Who should own it? (if different)
- Constraint type? (payer / regulation / EHR / staffing / policy / habit / unclear ownership)
- Why does it exist? (payer rule, EHR friction, habit, legal, missing standard)
- Proof source? (EHR report, time sample, message counts, denial codes, 10-chart audit)
- What is the failure mode? (what goes wrong if rushed)
- What is the safest next move? (remove / standardize / delegate / automate draft)
- What is the handoff? (who has the ball now, and what counts as done?)
The move-the-work ladder (cheapest safe role)
Try in this order:
- Remove the step entirely
- Standardize with a checklist/template
- Delegate to the lowest safe role
- Automate drafting/assembly with human sign-off
- Only then consider deeper workflow automation
Rule: if it requires clinical judgment, it stays human-owned.
A useful extra question
Ask: “Is this slow because the work is hard, or because the handoff is fuzzy?”
A lot of the worst drag comes from nobody owning the next move.