
What You Should Know
- RevSpring has released a national survey of 2,024 U.S. adults revealing that 94% of consumers agree healthcare needs to be made easier to navigate.
- Friction begins at the point of entry: 38% of consumers struggle to find an in-network provider.
- Financial uncertainty is a primary driver of disengagement, with 79% of patients reporting they have been surprised by the price of a medical bill.
- 50% of respondents admitted to cutting back on medical care due to cost and confusion over insurance coverage or denials.
- Patient loyalty is at risk: 58% of consumers would consider switching providers if they were unhappy with appointment or billing communications.
Healthcare organizations are increasingly investing in digital self-service, but a new report from RevSpring suggests that technology alone is not solving the industry’s “complexity” problem. The Cost of Confusion: How Friction Shapes the Healthcare Experience finds that despite the widespread adoption of patient portals, consumers remain overwhelmed by the search for in-network care and the lack of upfront cost transparency. This confusion is not just a minor frustration—it is actively causing patients to disengage from the healthcare system.
The research highlights a significant “expectation gap.” While 82% of consumers are comfortable using apps and patient portals, only 29% feel they have the necessary options to manage their healthcare payments effectively. This suggests that while the pipes for digital engagement exist, the content flowing through them—such as straightforward insurance explanations and personalized payment plans—is still missing the mark.
The Financial “Breaking Point” for Patients
The report makes it clear that financial confusion has immediate clinical consequences. When patients cannot predict their out-of-pocket costs, they often make the preemptive decision to delay or avoid treatment entirely. With 39% of consumers struggling to understand insurance denials or coverage details, the “black box” of healthcare billing is now a primary barrier to care access.
Nicole Rogas, President at RevSpring, notes that patients don’t disengage because they don’t want to pay, but rather when the path to paying feels “out of reach.” By the time a patient receives an unexpected bill, the trust in the provider relationship has often already been damaged. RevSpring’s data suggests that providing upfront cost estimates and personalized affordability support “at the right moment” is the key to maintaining patient follow-through.
Loyalty and the Communication Layer
For providers, the report serves as a warning regarding patient retention. More than half of those surveyed indicated they would seek a new provider if they were dissatisfied with how appointments or billing were communicated. This highlights that the “administrative experience” is now just as critical to a provider’s brand as the clinical outcome.
As health systems explore the use of artificial intelligence (AI) to streamline these workflows, the report urges caution. While AI can improve efficiency, consumer trust varies significantly when it comes to high-stakes interactions like billing and insurance. Providers must find a “thoughtful” balance between automated speed and the human support necessary to earn and keep patient trust during the financial journey.
