Improving Patient Access: Experian Health Survey Highlights Progress and Gaps
Findings show that the overall patient experience remains steady while healthcare estimates are missing the mark
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2025 State of
Digital services a rocky road for both parties
In recent years providers have made progress in elevating digital services, such as self-scheduling, to remedy patients’ desire to see a provider quickly. While 80 percent of patients surveyed said they want to schedule appointments anytime from their home or mobile device, more than a third of providers (37%) said getting patients to use digital tools is their biggest challenge, and more than half (55%) said patients are unsure how to navigate self-scheduling.
Providers surveyed remain focused on improving the scheduling process with 71 percent saying it’s an urgent priority. More than half (54%) of respondents offer self-scheduling, and another 10 percent plan to offer self-scheduling in the next 6 months.
"It's great to see progress and a positive shift in how people feel about patient access, but there's still more to do to make things smooth and clear for patients," said
Providers are continuing to put effort towards improving patient access, but they are facing some of the same persistent challenges as in previous years:
- Limited appointment slot availability: 70%
- Staffing shortages: 63%
- Long wait times: 54%
Data collection is still a pain point in RCM
In addition to digital access tools, there are challenges with front to end data collection. One in five patients face challenges before they ever see a doctor due to data and information discrepancies — 22 percent experienced care delays due to insurance verification issues and 20 percent encountered errors in their medical records and/or billing information. Providers are feeling the same stressors — 56 percent say patient information errors are a primary cause of denied claims and 48 percent say data collected at registration and check-in is somewhat or not accurate.
While more patients are receiving estimates — 41 percent in 2025 from 29 percent in 2022 — the accuracy is decreasing — from 78 percent in 2022 to 71 percent in 2025. However, providers recognize the importance of accurate estimates with a majority (88%) saying there is urgency to improve or implement accurate estimates.
Encouragingly, 83 percent of providers also say there is an urgency to improve or implement faster, more comprehensive insurance verification. Providers are turning to automation technologies, such as Experian Health’s Patient Access Curator, which captures patient information including eligibility verification, coordination of benefits (COB), Medicare beneficiary identifiers (MBI), insurance discovery and demographics in real time at registration.
Since 2020,
To access the free 2025 State of Patient Access report, visit https://www.experian.com/state-patient-access.
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Sandra.bernardo@experian.com
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