Learn what clinical documentation improvement is, why it matters, and how to build a successful CDI program to boost RCM, coding accuracy, and revenue.
December 10, 2025


Key Takeaways:
• Strong CDI programs ensure documentation accurately reflects patient complexity, improving reimbursement and reducing preventable denials.
• Inpatient CDI focuses on concurrent, high-acuity reviews, while outpatient CDI is more retrospective and education-driven.
• The biggest wins of an effective CDI program: cleaner claims, higher CMI, accurate HCC capture, better audit readiness, and faster coding turnaround.
• CDI success requires a defined workflow, the right team (providers, coders, CDI specialists), measurable KPIs, and continuous training.
• AI RCM solutions like CombineHealth's Jessica, Amy, and Taylor help teams scale CDI by capturing complete documentation, reviewing for accuracy, and providing actionable performance insights.
Two providers can deliver identical care, yet walk away with completely different reimbursements.
Ever wondered why that happens?
More often than not, it comes down to one thing: clinical documentation.
CMS reports that nearly 60% of improper payments stem from insufficient documentation. It’s extremely common and surprisingly easy to miss until the revenue is already lost.
That’s exactly why an efficient CDI program matters. It acts like a seal, protecting your practice from preventable revenue leaks.
When a medical record doesn’t clearly capture the diagnosis, the patient’s severity, or the medical necessity behind the service, the claim tells an incomplete story. And an incomplete story may result in lower reimbursement or denials, even when the clinical care was excellent.
That’s exactly where building a solid Clinical Documentation Improvement (CDI) program can help. It helps bridge the gap between the care delivered and what’s captured, ensuring your reimbursement reflects the true complexity of the care.
Clinical Documentation Improvement (CDI) or Clinical Documentation Integrity is a process that involves reviewing patient documentation while ensuring it accurately reflects their clinical condition and the care delivered.
A CDI specialist typically reviews:

The workflow in a hospital (inpatient) differs significantly from that of a private practice (outpatient). Here’s how:
Inpatient CDI is more complex due to higher acuity, longer stays, DRG-based billing, and extensive quality reporting. It typically involves:
Outpatient CDI is mostly retrospective, often reviewed days or weeks after the visit. It includes:
A robust CDI program does more than refine documentation. Here’s what it brings to the table:
When creating a CDI program, simply hiring a CDI specialist doesn’t solve the problem.
What you really need is a structured strategy; one that brings the right people together, follows standardized workflows, and is supported by the right technology.

Here’s a practical, easy-to-follow roadmap for building a CDI program that’s efficient, scalable, and built for long-term success.
First, evaluate your current documentation practices. A baseline assessment can reveal gaps that need attention and opportunities for improvement.
Focus your review on these areas:
This baseline becomes your reference point for measuring CDI performance over time.
Once you've identified your documentation gaps, the next step is turning those insights into measurable goals. Make sure your goals are specific, realistic, and tied to KPIs so you can track progress over time.
Here’s what clear, metric-driven CDI goals should look like:
An effective CDI program is a team effort, for which you'll need a task force with diverse expertise.
Form the right mix of CDI squad that includes:
Once your CDI squad is in place, the next step is building a clear, standardized CDI workflow. This ensures everyone follows the same playbook and the CDI process is consistent across the organization.
Your CDI playbook should outline guidelines for:
A smart way to accelerate CDI success is to make technology your ally. Integrating the right solutions at each stage enhances efficiency and lightens the administrative load.
Here are some tools that boost CDI performance:
With new regulations, coding updates, payer policies, and documentation requirements evolving, ongoing CDI training becomes your greatest advantage.
Offer role-specific, targeted training that keeps everyone in your task force aligned and up to date.
Improvement doesn’t stop once your CDI program goes live. Keep an eye on your core CDI KPIs so you can refine workflows, sharpen templates, refresh training, and support your team. This continuous refinement is what drives long-term program success.

Creating a CDI program sets the foundation; measuring its performance is what makes it thrive. Here are the key metrics that define CDI success:
We’ve discussed the role of technology in CDI, but AI solves a more immediate challenge: bandwidth.
According to an HFMA survey, 53% of healthcare leaders expect CDI roles to be the hardest to staff over the next three years. The same report notes that 26% struggle with denials and documentation improvement due to tech gaps and poor coordination between clinical and RCM teams.
AI helps close these gaps by acting as a smart scribe and reviewer—lightening the workload, improving documentation accuracy, and ensuring consistency. Best of all, it allows practices to maintain CDI quality even without a fully staffed CDI team.
Here’s how Combine Health’s AI agents step in to support your CDI efforts.
Documentation shouldn’t take over your day, and with Jessica, it doesn’t. Just speak naturally during the patient visit, and she captures everything in real time.
Jessica turns the entire conversation into clean, accurate clinical notes, progress notes, SOAP notes, or visit summaries, all neatly structured and ready for the EHR. And because she understands specialties like cardiology, orthopedics, primary care, and more, the documentation always reflects the details payers look for.
How Jessica helps providers:
Once the note is ready, Amy steps in to handle the coding heavy lifting. She reviews the encounter, suggests the right CPT, ICD-10, E/M levels, and modifiers, and — unlike most AI tools — explains exactly why she picked each code. No black boxes, no guesses.
Amy also spots documentation gaps that could cause denials later, like missing clinical indicators or incorrect diagnosis sequencing. With her 2–4 minute review time and ability to process charts in parallel, your team gets both speed and accuracy without the extra workload.
How Amy helps your team:
Here's a quick example of Amy in action:
Suppose after a patient encounter, a provider documents: “Type 2 diabetes, on insulin.”
Amy reviews the chart and notices additional information already in the record—an A1c of 10.5 and neuropathy symptoms—that isn’t reflected in the provider’s note.
She offers a gentle, context-aware prompt:
“The patient appears to have poorly controlled type 2 diabetes with diabetic neuropathy. If accurate, consider documenting this.”
With that reminder, the provider updates the note to:
“Poorly controlled type 2 diabetes with diabetic neuropathy, on insulin.”
The documentation now includes the level of specificity required for accurate coding. Based on the updated note, Amy suggests the appropriate ICD-10 codes—E11.40 (Type 2 diabetes with diabetic neuropathy) and Z79.4 (long-term use of insulin)—and recommends an E/M level that aligns with the documented clinical complexity.
You may have a wealth of data, yet converting this information into meaningful, actionable insights is often a challenge.
No worries; just ask Taylor, and you’ll get the insight you need in a clean, ready-to-use dashboard. You can simply ask Taylor, “What documentation issues are we running into?” or “Which queries are taking the longest to resolve?” and Taylor gives you instant, actionable answers.
How Taylor helps you:
Together, Jessica, Amy, and Taylor create a complete AI-powered CDI task force that supports every step of documentation, coding, and revenue integrity. This teamwork reduces the workload on providers, coders, and CDI specialists.
The healthcare workforce crunch and regulatory shifts aren’t passing storms; they’re long-term realities that may intensify before they improve. In a landscape this demanding, manual CDI processes are no longer sustainable. Your practice needs support that’s fast, accurate, and scalable—and AI is the only solution that can consistently deliver at that level.
The next era of CDI belongs to teams that embrace intelligent automation. Don’t let your organization fall behind in this competitive race.
Ready to elevate your CDI program? Let’s connect and build the future of documentation together.
CDI is a structured process that enhances the accuracy, completeness, and specificity of clinical documentation, so the medical record reflects patient severity, services provided, and clinical outcomes. This supports high-quality care, accurate coding, and compliant reimbursement.
CDI strengthens RCM by reducing documentation-related denials, improving DRG and HCC accuracy, streamlining coding and billing, and ultimately increasing net revenue and cash flow.
Denials due to inadequate documentation occur due to vague or missing diagnoses, unspecified severity or laterality, incomplete comorbidity capture, conflicting provider notes, and diagnoses not supported by labs, imaging, or exam findings.
A CDI specialist reviews charts for specificity and clinical completeness, issues queries when clarification is needed, partners with coders, and educates providers on documentation practices that support accurate coding, quality reporting, and appropriate reimbursement.
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