Prior authorizations are not standardized. One of the biggest challenges is that every insurance company has different rules, portals, requirements, and workflows. A medication approved easily through one insurer may require different forms, specific chart documentation, step therapy proof, phone calls, peer-to-peer discussions, or appeals. These requirements also change constantly, and AI systems struggle when processes are inconsistent and continuously evolving across hundreds of insurance plans.
Many Prior Authorizations Require Human Judgment
Prior authorizations are rarely just "submit and approve" tasks. Experienced specialists often need to interpret denial letters, determine what documentation is missing, recognize insurer-specific patterns, communicate with clinical staff, decide how to strengthen an appeal, and explain medical necessity in a persuasive way. These decisions rely heavily on real-world experience and critical thinking — something AI still cannot fully replicate in healthcare administration.
Insurance Companies Often Require Direct Human Interaction
Even with electronic prior authorization systems, many approvals still involve phone calls, live representatives, peer-to-peer reviews, clarification requests, and manual appeals. AI cannot independently navigate complex conversations with insurers the way experienced prior authorization specialists can.
Medical Documentation Is Complex
Clinical notes are not always simple or uniform. Providers document differently, patients have unique histories, and insurers may request very specific wording or supporting information. A human specialist can recognize relevant treatment failures, important diagnosis details, missing supporting documentation, and opportunities to strengthen submissions. AI may assist with organizing data, but accuracy and context still require human oversight.
Healthcare Requires Accountability
When delays or denials impact patient care, practices need accountability and communication. Patients and providers often want updates on status, clarification about delays, help understanding denials, and fast responses to urgent requests. That level of communication and problem-solving still depends heavily on people.
Where AI Can Help
AI will likely continue improving parts of the prior authorization process by helping with data organization, form population, workflow automation, tracking submissions, identifying missing information, and predicting approval trends. But AI works best as a tool that supports experienced prior authorization teams — not as a complete replacement.
The Human Element Still Matters
Prior authorizations sit at the intersection of healthcare, insurance, patient care, and clinical decision-making. While technology can improve efficiency, the process still requires human experience, persistence, and judgment to navigate successfully. At Visional, we combine efficient workflows with real human expertise to help healthcare practices manage prior authorizations accurately, efficiently, and with the level of attention patients and providers deserve.