Artificial intelligence is no longer sitting quietly in the background of the revenue cycle. It is assigning codes, shaping clinical narratives, flagging claims, and influencing denial logic in ways that directly impact reimbursement and compliance exposure. In 2026, the real issue is not whether AI can improve efficiency. The issue is whether those AI-driven decisions can withstand audit, appeal, and legal scrutiny. This session takes a direct look at how AI is being used in coding and claims today, and what that means when those decisions are challenged by payers, regulators, or opposing counsel.
As adoption accelerates, so does oversight. Agencies like the Office of Inspector General are paying closer attention to technology-enabled billing practices, and enforcement risk under the False Claims Act continues to expand. The presence of AI does not reduce liability. If anything, it raises new questions around authorship, validation, and accountability. If an algorithm assigns a higher-level code, what supports that decision? If a claim is denied based on automated logic, where is the defensible rationale? This session breaks down these questions in practical terms, grounded in real audit findings and litigation trends that are already surfacing across the industry.
AI may assist in making decisions, but it does not absorb the risk. Every coded service and every submitted claim must still be supported, explainable, and defensible. If an organization cannot clearly stand behind an AI-driven outcome, it becomes a liability rather than an advantage.
Webinar Objectives
Webinar Agenda
Artificial intelligence has moved quickly from a back-end efficiency tool to an active participant in coding and claims decision-making, influencing everything from code selection to denial logic and payment outcomes. What started as automation for repetitive tasks is now shaping clinical narratives, medical necessity determinations, and audit triggers, often without clear visibility into how those decisions are made. At the same time, regulators and enforcement agencies, including the Office of Inspector General, are paying closer attention to whether these tools align with established coding guidelines, payer policies, and documentation standards. The legal pressure is building under frameworks like the False Claims Act, where liability does not disappear just because a machine was involved. This creates a new reality where organizations must not only use AI effectively but also prove that its outputs are accurate, supported, and defensible under audit and legal scrutiny.
Webinar Highlights
Who Should Attend?

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