5 Things You Can Do to Reduce Embezzlement in Your Medical Practice

Embezzlement remains one of the most damaging — and most preventable — threats facing physician practices today. The unfortunate reality is that most embezzlement in healthcare is committed by trusted, long-tenured employees who have been given too much financial access with too little oversight.

Studies estimate that as many as 83% of medical practices will experience some form of employee theft during their lifetime, with losses frequently reaching six figures before the fraud is even detected.

In a previous article, we explored the 15 warning signs of embezzlement in medical billing and discussed why outsourcing can be a powerful safeguard. This article takes the next step: five concrete, actionable measures every practice owner can implement to dramatically reduce their exposure to internal fraud.

Separate Financial Duties Across Multiple Staff Members

The single most common factor in medical practice embezzlement is the concentration of financial responsibilities in one person. When the same employee opens the mail, posts payments, makes bank deposits, reconciles statements, and processes refunds, there is virtually no check on their actions. This creates what accountants call a lack of “segregation of duties” — and it is the open door through which most embezzlement walks.

The fix does not require hiring additional staff. It requires distributing tasks so that no one individual controls an entire financial transaction from start to finish. For example, one employee can open the mail and log incoming checks while a different employee prepares and makes the deposit. The person who posts payments in the billing system should not be the same person who reconciles the bank statement at the end of the month.

Even in a small practice where staffing is limited, the physician or office manager can serve as the second set of eyes on critical steps like bank reconciliations and refund approvals.

Embezzlement remains one of the most damaging — and most preventable — threats facing physician practices today. The unfortunate reality is that most embezzlement in healthcare is committed by trusted, long-tenured employees who have been given too much financial access with too little oversight.

Studies estimate that as many as 83% of medical practices will experience some form of employee theft during their lifetime, with losses frequently reaching six figures before the fraud is even detected.

The goal: make it impossible for any single person to both commit and conceal a theft.

Require Dual Authorization for Refunds, Write-Offs, and Adjustments

Refunds, write-offs, and account adjustments are among the most exploited tools in an embezzler’s playbook. A dishonest employee can issue a refund to a patient who never overpaid, write off a balance that was actually collected, or adjust an account to hide a diverted payment — all with a few keystrokes and no paper trail if no one is watching.

Every practice should require dual authorization for these transactions. That means no refund check is issued, no balance is written off, and no account adjustment is posted without a second authorized person reviewing and approving it. Most modern billing software includes the ability to set approval workflows and flag transactions above a certain dollar threshold.

In addition, physicians should review refund and adjustment reports on a monthly basis. Look for patterns: refunds going to the same patient repeatedly, write-offs that spike without explanation, or adjustments posted after hours. These patterns are often the earliest indicators that something is wrong.

Embezzlement remains one of the most damaging — and most preventable — threats facing physician practices today. The unfortunate reality is that most embezzlement in healthcare is committed by trusted, long-tenured employees who have been given too much financial access with too little oversight.

No refund, write-off, or adjustment should ever be processed without a second set of eyes.

Conduct Regular, Unannounced Financial Audits

Scheduled annual audits are valuable, but they have a significant weakness: employees who are committing fraud know when the audit is coming and can prepare accordingly. Unannounced spot audits — even small, informal ones — are a far more effective deterrent because they create ongoing uncertainty.

A spot audit does not need to be elaborate. It can be as simple as the physician personally comparing a week’s worth of appointment schedules against posted charges and payments. Are there patients who were seen but whose charges were never entered? Are there payments posted that do not match the explanation of benefits from the insurer? Even a quarterly review of bank deposit slips against the daily cash log can reveal discrepancies that a motivated embezzler hoped would go unnoticed.

The psychological effect of unannounced audits is just as important as what they uncover. When employees know that financial records can be examined at any time, the perceived risk of committing fraud increases significantly — and that alone prevents many thefts from ever occurring.

No refund, write-off, or adjustment should ever be processed without a second set of eyes.

Implement Strong Access Controls and Activity Logging

Your billing software is both your practice’s financial engine and one of its most vulnerable points. If every staff member has administrative-level access, the ability to track who did what — and when — is virtually eliminated. Proper access controls are not about distrusting your team; they are about protecting everyone, including honest employees who could otherwise be wrongly suspected.

Start by assigning role-based permissions. Front desk staff should be able to schedule and check in patients but should not have the ability to post payments or issue refunds. Billing staff should be able to work claims but should not have the authority to modify fee schedules or delete transactions. Administrative functions like adjusting accounts, voiding charges, or generating refund checks should be restricted to senior staff with supervisory oversight.

Equally important is enabling and regularly reviewing audit logs. Most billing platforms maintain a record of every action taken in the system — who logged in, what they changed, and when. These logs are useless, however, if no one ever looks at them. Designate someone — ideally the physician or an outside billing partner — to review audit logs monthly, paying special attention to deleted transactions, after-hours activity, and changes made to patient accounts that were not accompanied by a corresponding clinical encounter.

An audit log that nobody reads is the same as no audit log at all.

Outsource Your Medical Billing to a Trusted Third Party

Of all the strategies available to reduce embezzlement risk, outsourcing medical billing to an experienced, reputable billing company may be the most effective. Outsourcing creates a structural firewall between the clinical operation and the financial operation of the practice, making it extraordinarily difficult for any single person to manipulate the revenue cycle.

When billing is handled externally, payments from insurers are deposited directly into the practice’s bank account — the billing company never touches the money. The billing company posts payments, follows up on unpaid claims, and generates detailed financial reports that give the physician clear visibility into every dollar flowing through the practice. This separation of duties is built into the relationship by design, not dependent on internal policies that can be circumvented.

A professional billing partner also brings a level of expertise and oversight that most in-house billing departments cannot match. Experienced billing companies monitor for unusual patterns, benchmark your practice’s financial performance against industry standards, and flag anomalies before they become serious problems. In effect, outsourcing adds a permanent, independent layer of financial accountability to your practice — one that operates every day, not just during an annual audit.

Outsourcing builds separation of duties into the relationship by design — not by policy.

Protecting Your Practice Is an Ongoing Commitment

No single measure can eliminate the risk of embezzlement entirely, but implementing these five strategies together creates a layered defense that makes fraud far more difficult to commit and far easier to detect. Separation of duties, dual authorization, unannounced audits, access controls, and outsourcing work in concert to close the gaps that embezzlers exploit.

The most important step is also the simplest: stay engaged with your practice’s finances. Physicians who review their own bank statements, read their monthly financial reports, and ask questions when something does not look right are far less likely to become victims. Embezzlement thrives on trust without verification. By building verification into every layer of your financial operations, you protect your practice, your patients, and the team members who are working hard to help you succeed.

Billing For Health Care

We are a Florida Medical Billing Services Provider with a team of experienced, veteran medical billers in Panama City, Florida. We specialize in medical billing, revenue cycle management, reimbursement, insurance claims filing, detailed coding and accounts receivable.

Partner with us and our medical billing services and coding can reduce your team’s stress, increase your cash flow and improve overall productivity. Let Billing For Health Care Care take a close look at your practice and create a medical billing plan that will improve your revenue cycle and bring results.


Sign Up for our Mailing List

We publish articles on issues and events concerning medical billing and coding. These highly informative articles are an important source of information for your business – Subscribe Today!

* indicates required

Intuit Mailchimp

About Us

Medical Billing Since 2002
Serving Florida, Assurance Health Care Financial Services is committed to optimizing billing for medical practices.

Follow Us

Contact Us

Email: ahcfsusa@gmail.com
Tel: 850-522-5000

Assurance Health Care Financial Services
3003 S Highway 77, Suite F
Lynn Haven, Florida
32444-5627

Scroll to Top