In the sophisticated healthcare environment of the modern era, where payers, providers, and patients navigate a labyrinth of regulations and data, the promise of streamlined claims processing continues to elude. The industry faces a daunting challenge: interoperability and compliance in the face of skyrocketing costs and growing denials. The latest data from Experian’s State of Claims 2024 report paints a concerning picture: denial rates are rising, complicating revenue collection and creating a cascade of operational challenges. Providers now face denial rates as high as 10% to 15%, putting significant strain on their revenue cycles.
According to a 2019 survey, claim denials cost U.S. healthcare organizations an estimated $262 billion annually. These inefficiencies drain resources, delay care, and destroy trust. But here, in this complexity, solutions are emerging, fueled by visionaries like Haritha Murari, a Senior System Architect with a Master’s in Computer Science and more than 12 years of experience. Her work, recognized through her IEEE Senior Member status (2025), PEGA certifications (Certified Senior System Architect 7.1, Decision Consultant 8.4, System Architect 7.1), and recent conference presentations (GINOTECH 2025, AGRETA2024), offers a roadmap for transforming healthcare IT into a scaleable, patient-centric ecosystem.
The Industry’s Ongoing Challenges
Healthcare IT is confronted with a collision of challenges: fragmented systems, stringent federal regulation, and increasing administrative expenses. Legacy systems, based on batch processing, are not designed to facilitate real-time sharing of data, and thus eligibility verification is inaccurate and claims are denied. Approximately 15% of claims are denied due to eligibility, costing billions of dollars a year. Compliance with standards such as EDI X12 270/271 transactions introduces another level of complexity, necessitating seamless integration with outside payers. Existing solutions, manual verification, partial automation, and stand-alone databases are not adequate, introducing bottlenecks that delay reimbursements and irritate providers. The revenue cycle is therefore slowed down by inefficiencies, distracting from patient care to administration.
These system issues extend beyond finances. Delayed claims interrupt provider-payer relationships, and patients are confronted with billing disputes that erode confidence in the healthcare system. The global market for healthcare claims management is projected to expand in coming years, fueled by the demand for automation and interoperability. Without scalable and compliant systems, however, the industry may sustain an inefficient and untrustworthy cycle.
Building Solutions through Innovation
Haritha Murari’s project, rooted in her experience with Pega PRPC, addresses these issues directly. Her demonstration project, a real-time eligibility verification processor, redefines claims adjudication. With connectivity to external payers’ systems via EDI X12 270/271 transactions, the system automates eligibility verification and routing determinations. Designed using modular case types, decision tables, and data pages, it maximizes data exchange while ensuring compliance. The payoff is quantifiable: claim rejections are down 35%, eligibility checks have been sped up 40%, and first-pass resolution rates have increased over 20%. These improvements, realized for a health plan covering federal employees, have liberated resources for care delivery and lowered provider-payer friction.
“Educational efficiency is not all about numbers—it’s about providing providers with the means to put patients ahead of the process,” Haritha remembers.
Aside from eligibility, Haritha’s predictive model and adaptive analytics improve decision-making. By combining limited generative AI, she streamlined outbound contacts and self-service, increasing member response rates by 15%. This reduced call center volumes, giving patients more precise, quicker information. Her roster and transaction case type designs, rooted in SOAP and REST integration, also standardized workflows, reducing reporting cycles from weeks to days. These capabilities, constructed on reusable rule sets and queue processors, were templates for billing and provider credentialing, with scalability by domain. Her administration features automated deployment, where exception-handling routines and job schedulers help reduce downtime.
“Scalable systems need vision, developing for today’s requirements but looking ahead to tomorrow’s needs,” she observes.
Her debugging abilities, utilizing tools like Pega’s Clipboard and Tracer, ensure system stability, and her mentoring of junior developers fostered an environment of excellence. Her frameworks, deployed throughout departments, delineate standards for enterprise systems.
A Ripple Effect on Industry and Community
Haritha’s work has its impact far beyond a single organization. By reducing manual examination of thousands of claims each day, her systems reduced the cost of operations and accelerated reimbursements, enabling federal employees and retirees to count on timely care. Her streamlined workflows enhanced provider satisfaction, building community trust. World-wide, her strategy, focusing on modularity, compliance, and automation provides a model for minimizing administrative waste, enabling healthcare systems to concentrate resources on prevention and community health.
Her own work outside of her firm further amplifies its influence. Peer-reviewed journal articles like one at the 2025 GINOTECH Conference on data imputation techniques and one at the 2024 AGRETA2024 Conference on classification algorithms further advance industry standards. She impacts the future of healthcare IT as a reviewer for Brandon Hall and Globee Awards, and as a competition judge for global IT competitions. Her IEEE Senior Member designation further underscores her impact, placing her in the top 10% of nearly half a million professionals.
Haritha says, “My goal is to create systems that evolve with the industry so that care can be reachable and fair,” because she envisions a future in which technology can close gaps in healthcare delivery.
Looking Ahead: A Vision for Change
Haritha’s designs pave the way for addressing emerging challenges, ranging from AI-driven diagnostics to telehealth expansion. Her modularity supports systems to respond to evolving regulations, and her emphasis on performance optimization supports scalability. Through resource repurposing, her designs facilitate investments in community health initiatives, thereby supporting the industry evolution towards value-based care. Her conference presentations and certifications reflect an emphasis on continuous learning, positioning her to facilitate innovations that reconcile technology with human intent.
Healthcare IT is at a fork in the road. Increasing denials and delays require interoperable, compliant, and scalable systems. Haritha Murari’s contribution based on technical accuracy and a vision for efficiency is lighting the way. Her contribution shows that innovative attention to detail can unravel complexity, saving time, money, and trust. As the industry progresses, her road map for efficient claims processing promises a future where technology drives care, not bureaucracy.




