A specialty practice call center audit reviews your phone work to find the high-volume, repetitive calls worth automating. You pull two to four weeks of call logs, categorize them by reason, and measure the time spent on scheduling, recall and reactivation, referral intake, drug and procedure prior authorization, and pre-visit prep. Specialty groups have two patterns a primary care office does not: very high scheduling and recall volume, and a steady load of drug or procedure prior authorizations, such as biologics in dermatology or injections in ophthalmology. Those are your automation targets. You then build voice agents for them inside the specialty EHR your staff use, whether that is Nextech, ModMed (EMA), gGastro, Compulink, RevolutionEHR, or Exscribe. The result is a schedule that stays full and prior-authorization work taken off clinical staff, who spend about 13 hours per physician each week on it.
What makes a specialty practice call center different?
A specialty call center carries two heavy, distinct loads. The first is throughput: specialties like dermatology, ophthalmology, and gastroenterology book a high number of short visits, so scheduling, reminders, and recall are the difference between a full and a light day. The second is drug and procedure authorization: biologics, injectables, and scoped procedures each require prior authorization with detailed documentation and step therapy. That second load is concentrated, the AMA survey found 40 percent of physicians have staff working exclusively on prior authorization. An audit shows how your phone time splits between these two patterns.
How do you audit specialty call logs?
Audit specialty call logs by category and by specialty workflow. Pull two to four weeks of records, categorize each call by reason, and measure volume, handle time, and hold time. Then split the categories into the two specialty patterns: front-office throughput calls, scheduling, confirmation, recall, referral intake, and back-office payer calls, drug and procedure prior authorization, eligibility, and claim status. Tag the system used for each, your specialty EHR or the payer or pharmacy benefit portal. The output is a ranked list that usually shows scheduling and recall dominating by volume, and drug authorization dominating by time per call.
Which specialty calls should you automate first?
Automate by both volume and time burden, which means two tracks. On the front office, automate scheduling, confirmation, and recall, because the volume is large and the calls are scripted, and recall directly recovers revenue from lapsed patients. On the back office, automate eligibility and drug or procedure prior authorization status, because each call is long and rules-based, a manual claim status inquiry alone takes about 24 minutes per the CAQH Index. Start with whichever track your audit shows consumes the most hours. The specialty pages for dermatology and ophthalmology cover the clinical detail behind these calls.
How much staff time can a specialty group reclaim?
Estimate reclaimed time from the audit by multiplying each automatable category by its volume and handle time. Specialty groups tend to find two large pools: front-desk hours lost to scheduling and recall, and clinical-staff hours lost to drug authorization. Automating both commonly returns the equivalent of one or more roles, time that can move to complex appeals and patient care. The system-wide opportunity is sized at more than $20 billion a year by the CAQH Index for administrative transactions still done manually, and specialty drug authorization is among the most manual of them.
How do voice agents work inside Nextech, ModMed, and gGastro?
Voice agents work inside your specialty EHR, not beside it. For scheduling and recall, the agent books and confirms visits and runs recall campaigns in Nextech, ModMed (EMA), gGastro, Compulink, RevolutionEHR, or Exscribe, with every action written back to the chart. For drug authorization, it assembles the step-therapy history and clinical documentation, submits the prior authorization, and tracks it to a decision, then routes denials to appeal. Because we build the agent around your specific EHR and your real call patterns, the work lands where your staff already operate. See AI for Nextech and AI for ModMed for platform examples.
Want this on your own call data? Book a 30-minute specialty contact center audit, or read the audit-then-automate approach.